Absence of memory operands is treated as "aliasing everything", so
dropping them is sufficient.
Recommit r326256 with a fixed testcase.
llvm-svn: 326262
Qualifiers on a pointer or reference type may apply to either the
pointee or the pointer itself. Consider 'const char *' and 'char *
const'. In the first example, the pointee data may not be modified
without casts, and in the second example, the pointer may not be updated
to point to new data.
In the general case, qualifiers are applied to types with LF_MODIFIER
records, which support the usual const and volatile qualifiers as well
as the __unaligned extension qualifier.
However, LF_POINTER records, which are used for pointers, references,
and member pointers, have flags for qualifiers applying to the
*pointer*. In fact, this is the only way to represent the restrict
qualifier, which can only apply to pointers, and cannot qualify regular
data types.
This patch causes LLVM to correctly fold 'const' and 'volatile' pointer
qualifiers into the pointer record, as well as adding support for
'__restrict' qualifiers in the same place.
Based on a patch from Aaron Smith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43060
llvm-svn: 326260
When attempting to compile the following Objective-C++ code with
CodeView debug info:
void (^b)(void) = []() {};
The generated debug metadata contains a structure like the following:
!43 = !DICompositeType(tag: DW_TAG_structure_type, name: "__block_literal_1", scope: !6, file: !6, line: 1, size: 168, elements: !44)
!44 = !{!45, !46, !47, !48, !49, !52}
...
!52 = !DIDerivedType(tag: DW_TAG_member, scope: !6, file: !6, line: 1, baseType: !53, size: 8, offset: 160, flags: DIFlagPublic)
!53 = !DIDerivedType(tag: DW_TAG_const_type, baseType: !54)
!54 = !DICompositeType(tag: DW_TAG_class_type, file: !6, line: 1, flags: DIFlagFwdDecl)
Note that the member node (!52) is unnamed, but rather than pointing to
a DICompositeType directly, it points to a DIDerivedType with tag
DW_TAG_const_type, which then points to the DICompositeType. However,
the CodeView assembly printer currently assumes that the base type for
an unnamed member will always be a DICompositeType, and attempts to
perform that cast, which triggers an assertion failure, since in this
case the base type is actually a DIDerivedType, not a DICompositeType
(and we would have to get the base type of the DIDerivedType to reach
the DICompositeType). I think the debug metadata being generated by the
frontend is correct (or at least plausible), and the CodeView printer
needs to handle this case.
This patch teaches the CodeView printer to unwrap any qualifier types.
The qualifiers are just dropped for now. Ideally, they would be applied
to the added indirect members instead, but this occurs infrequently
enough that adding the logic to handle the qualifiers correctly isn't
worth it for now. A FIXME is added to note this.
Additionally, Reid pointed out that the underlying assumption that an
unnamed member must be a composite type is itself incorrect and may not
hold for all frontends. Therefore, after all qualifiers have been
stripped, check if the resulting type is in fact a DICompositeType and
just return if it isn't, rather than assuming the type and crashing if
that assumption is violated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43803
llvm-svn: 326255
Currently when abort is enabled, we get a diagnostic saying "Fallback
path used .... " and the program terminates. To actually figure out what
the reason is, we need to run again with another verbose argument
"-pass-remarks-missed=gisel". Instead, when we are going to abort,
we might as well print expensive remarks.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43796
llvm-svn: 326215
Re-enable commit r323991 now that r325931 has been committed to make
MachineOperand::isRenamable() check more conservative w.r.t. code
changes and opt-in on a per-target basis.
llvm-svn: 326208
AVX512 used to promote v32i1 to v32i8 during legalization when BWI was disabled. So this code was added to improve legalization of v32i1 concat_vectors of v16i1 by extending the v16i1 to v16i8 to avoid scalarization.
X86 has since switched to legalizing v32i1 by splitting to v16i1 instead. This has rendered this code unnecessary and its no longer exercised.
llvm-svn: 326153
Currently we assert that only non target specific opcodes can have
missing RegisterClass constraints in the MCDesc. The backend can have
instructions with register operands but don't have RegisterClass
constraints (say using unknown_class) in which case the instruction
defining the register will constrain it.
Change the assert to only fire if a def has no regclass.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43409
llvm-svn: 326142
In r322867, we introduced IsStandalone when printing MIR in -debug
output. The default behaviour for that was:
1) If any of MBB, MI, or MO are -debug-printed separately, don't omit any
redundant information.
2) When -debug-printing a MF entirely, don't print any redundant
information.
3) When printing MIR, don't print any redundant information.
I'd like to change 2) to:
2) When -debug-printing a MF entirely, don't omit any redundant information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43337
llvm-svn: 326094
Summary:
In the test case, the machine scheduler moves a dead write to a subreg
up into the middle of a segment of the overall reg's live range, where
the segment had liveness only for other subregs in the reg.
handleMoveUp created an invalid live range, causing an assert a bit
later.
This commit fixes it to handle that situation. The segment is split in
two at the insertion point, and the part after the split, and any
subsequent segments up to the old position, are changed to be defined by
the moved def.
V2: Better test.
Subscribers: MatzeB, nhaehnle, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43478
Change-Id: Ibc42445ddca84e79ad1f616401015d22bc63832e
llvm-svn: 326087
In DWARF v5 the Line Number Program Header is extensible, allowing values with
new content types. In this extension a content type is added,
DW_LNCT_LLVM_source, which contains the embedded source code of the file.
Add new optional attribute for !DIFile IR metadata called source which contains
source text. Use this to output the source to the DWARF line table of code
objects. Analogously extend METADATA_FILE in Bitcode and .file directive in ASM
to support optional source.
Teach llvm-dwarfdump and llvm-objdump about the new values. Update the output
format of llvm-dwarfdump to make room for the new attribute on file_names
entries, and support embedded sources for the -source option in llvm-objdump.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42765
llvm-svn: 325970
Summary:
Add a target option AllowRegisterRenaming that is used to opt in to
post-register-allocation renaming of registers. This is set to 0 by
default, which causes the hasExtraSrcRegAllocReq/hasExtraDstRegAllocReq
fields of all opcodes to be set to 1, causing
MachineOperand::isRenamable to always return false.
Set the AllowRegisterRenaming flag to 1 for all in-tree targets that
have lit tests that were effected by enabling COPY forwarding in
MachineCopyPropagation (AArch64, AMDGPU, ARM, Hexagon, Mips, PowerPC,
RISCV, Sparc, SystemZ and X86).
Add some more comments describing the semantics of the
MachineOperand::isRenamable function and how it is set and maintained.
Change isRenamable to check the operand's opcode
hasExtraSrcRegAllocReq/hasExtraDstRegAllocReq bit directly instead of
relying on it being consistently reflected in the IsRenamable bit
setting.
Clear the IsRenamable bit when changing an operand's register value.
Remove target code that was clearing the IsRenamable bit when changing
registers/opcodes now that this is done conservatively by default.
Change setting of hasExtraSrcRegAllocReq in AMDGPU target to be done in
one place covering all opcodes that have constant pipe read limit
restrictions.
Reviewers: qcolombet, MatzeB
Subscribers: aemerson, arsenm, jyknight, mcrosier, sdardis, nhaehnle, javed.absar, tpr, arichardson, kristof.beyls, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, escha, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43042
llvm-svn: 325931
Summary:
There are transformation that change setcc into other constructs, and transform that try to reconstruct a setcc from the brcond condition. Depending on what order these transform are done, the end result differs.
Most of the time, it is preferable to get a setcc as a brcond argument (and this is why brcond try to recreate the setcc in the first place) so we ensure this is done every time by also doing it at the setcc level when the only user is a brcond.
Reviewers: spatel, hfinkel, niravd, craig.topper
Subscribers: nhaehnle, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41235
llvm-svn: 325892
isCondCodeLegal internally checked Legal or Custom which is misleading. Though no targets set any cond code action to Custom today.
So I've renamed isCondCodeLegal to isCondCodeLegalOrCustom and added a real isCondCodeLegal that only checks Legal.
I've changed legalization code to use isCondCodeLegalOrCustom and left things reachable via DAG combine as isCondCodeLegal. I've also changed some places that called getCondCodeAction and compared to Legal to just use isCondCodeLegal.
I'm looking at trying to keep SETCC all the way to isel for the AVX512 integer comparisons and I suspect I'll need to make some condition codes Custom to stop DAG combine from changing things post LegalizeOps. Prior to this only Expand stopped DAG combine, but that causes LegalizeOps to try to swap operands or invert rather than calling our Custom handler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43607
llvm-svn: 325829
This patch reverts r325440 and r325438 because it triggers an
assertion in SelectionDAGBuilder.cpp. Also having debug enabled
may unintentionally affect code-gen. The patch is reverted until
we find a better solution.
llvm-svn: 325825
This allows us to improve vector constant matching in more DAG code (backends, TargetLowering etc.).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43466
llvm-svn: 325815
Summary:
If there is no debug info for macros, do not emit labels for empty
macinfo sections.
Reviewers: probinson, echristo
Subscribers: aprantl, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43589
llvm-svn: 325803
We looked through a BITCAST, but the bitcast might be a from a scalar type rather than a vector.
I don't have a test case. I stumbled onto it while prototyping another change that isn't ready yet.
llvm-svn: 325750
Spilling may cause previously non-empty intervals (both for the spilled vreg
and others) to become empty. Moving the pruning into initializeGraph catches
these cases and fixes PR33038.
llvm-svn: 325632
This is split off from D42948 and includes just the cases that constant fold to true or false. It also includes some refactoring to keep predicate checks together.
This supports things like
(setcc uge X, 0) -> true
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43489
llvm-svn: 325627
DAGCombiner and SimplifySetCC both use getPointerTy for shift amounts pre-legalization. DAGCombiner uses a single helper function to hide this. SimplifySetCC does it in multiple places.
This patch adds a defaulted parameter to getShiftAmountTy that can make it return getPointerTy for scalar types. Use this parameter to simplify the SimplifySetCC and DAGCombiner.
Additionally, there were two places in SimplifySetCC that were creating shifts using the target's preferred shift amount pre-legalization. If the target uses a narrow type and the type is illegal, this can cause SimplfiySetCC to create a shift with an amount that can't represent all possible shift values for the type. To fix this we should use pointer type there too.
Alternatively we could make getScalarShiftAmountTy for each target return a safe value for large types as proposed in D43445. And maybe we should still do that, but fixing the SimplifySetCC code keeps other targets from tripping over this in the future.
Fixes PR36250.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43449
llvm-svn: 325602
ExpandUINT_TO_FLOAT can accept vXi32 or vXi64 inputs, so we need to use a uint64_t shift to generate the 2^(BW/2) constant.
No test case unfortunately as no upstream target uses this, but its affecting a downstream target.
llvm-svn: 325578
This is the second part of recommit of r325224. The previous part was
committed in r325426, which deals with C++ memory allocation. Solution
for C memory allocation involved functions `llvm::malloc` and similar.
This was a fragile solution because it caused ambiguity errors in some
cases. In this commit the new functions have names like `llvm::safe_malloc`.
The relevant part of original comment is below, updated for new function
names.
Analysis of fails in the case of out of memory errors can be tricky on
Windows. Such error emerges at the point where memory allocation function
fails, but manifests itself when null pointer is used. These two points
may be distant from each other. Besides, next runs may not exhibit
allocation error.
In some cases memory is allocated by a call to some of C allocation
functions, malloc, calloc and realloc. They are used for interoperability
with C code, when allocated object has variable size and when it is
necessary to avoid call of constructors. In many calls the result is not
checked for null pointer. To simplify checks, new functions are defined
in the namespace 'llvm': `safe_malloc`, `safe_calloc` and `safe_realloc`.
They behave as corresponding standard functions but produce fatal error if
allocation fails. This change replaces the standard functions like 'malloc'
in the cases when the result of the allocation function is not checked
for null pointer.
Finally, there are plain C code, that uses malloc and similar functions. If
the result is not checked, assert statement is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43010
llvm-svn: 325551
If we have a clamp pattern, SMIN(SMAX(X, LO),HI) or SMAX(SMIN(X, HI),LO) then we can deduce that the number of signbits (zeros/ones) will be at least the minimum of the LO and HI constants.
ComputeKnownBits equivalent of D43338.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43463
llvm-svn: 325521
Summary:
This commit separates the abstract accelerator table data structure
from the code for writing out an on-disk representation of a specific
accelerator table format. The idea is that former (now called
AccelTable<T>) can be reused for the DWARF v5 accelerator tables
as-is, without any further customizations.
Some bits of the emission code (now living in the EmissionContext class)
can be reused for DWARF v5 as well, but the subtle differences in the
layout of various subtables mean the sharing is not always possible.
(Also, the individual emit*** functions are fairly simple so there's a
tradeoff between making a bigger general-purpose function, and two
smaller targeted functions.)
Another advantage of this setup is that more of the serialization logic
can be hidden in the .cpp file -- I have moved declarations of the
header and all the emission functions there.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Subscribers: echristo, clayborg, vleschuk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43285
llvm-svn: 325516
If we have a clamp pattern, SMIN(SMAX(X, LO),HI) or SMAX(SMIN(X, HI),LO) then we can deduce that the number of signbits will be at least the minimum of the LO and HI constants.
I haven't bothered with the UMIN/UMAX equivalent as (1) we don't have any current use cases and (2) I wonder if we'd be better off immediately falling back for ComputeKnownBits for UMIN/UMAX which already has optimization patterns useful for unsigned cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43338
llvm-svn: 325450
Summary:
https://llvm.org/PR36263 shows that when compiling at -O0 a dbg.value()
instruction (that remains from an original dbg.declare()) is dropped
by FastISel. Since FastISel selects instructions by iterating a basic
block backwards, it drops the dbg.value if one of its operands is not
yet instantiated by a previously selected instruction.
Instead of calling 'lookUpRegForValue()' we can call 'getRegForValue()'
instead that will insert a placeholder for the operand to be filled in
when continuing the instruction selection.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits, dstenb, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43386
llvm-svn: 325438
This makes sure that alloca() function calls properly probe the
stack as needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42356
llvm-svn: 325433
Summary:
The assert for a DISubrange's CountVarDIE to be available fails
when the dbg.value() has been optimized away for any reason.
Having the assert for that is a little heavy, so instead removing
it now in favor of not generating the 'count' expression.
Addresses http://llvm.org/PR36263 .
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, llvm-commits, dstenb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43387
llvm-svn: 325427
This reverts commit r323991.
This commit breaks target that don't model all the register constraints
in TableGen. So far the workaround was to set the
hasExtraXXXRegAllocReq, but it proves that it doesn't cover all the
cases.
For instance, when mutating an instruction (like in the lowering of
COPYs) the isRenamable flag is not properly updated. The same problem
will happen when attaching machine operand from one instruction to
another.
Geoff Berry is working on a fix in https://reviews.llvm.org/D43042.
llvm-svn: 325421
Sadly, r324359 caused at least PR36312. There is a patch out for review
but it seems to be taking a bit and we've already had these crashers in
tree for too long. We're hitting this PR in real code now and are
blocked on shipping new compilers as a consequence so I'm reverting us
back to green.
Sorry for the churn due to the stacked changes that I had to revert. =/
llvm-svn: 325420
Based off the DemandedElts mask the and UNDEF elements returned from the SimplifyDemandedVectorElts calls to the shuffle operands, we can attempt to simplify the shuffle mask.
I had to be very conservative here as accepting post-legalized shuffle masks could cause problems for targets that legalize UNDEF mask elements back to inrange values (PowerPC), similarly combining to identity shuffle masks could cause too much UNDEF information to disappear for later combines.
llvm-svn: 325354
Summary:
Currently when expanding a SETCC node into a SELECT_CC, LLVM uses
an incorrect type for determining BooleanContent of the result. This
patch fixes the issue.
Fixes PR36079.
Reviewers: rogfer01, javed.absar, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43282
llvm-svn: 325325
Same for the sign extend case.
Currently we check for multiple uses on the binop. Then we call ExtendUsesToFormExtLoad to capture SetCCs that use the load. So we only end up finding any setccs when the and has additional uses and the load is used by a setcc. I don't think the and having multiple uses is relevant here. I think we should only be checking for the load having multiple uses.
This changes an NVPTX test because we now find that the load has a second use by a truncate, but ExtendUsesToFormExtLoad only looks at setccs it can extend. All other operations just check isTruncateFree. Maybe we should allow widening of an existing truncate even if its not free?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43063
llvm-svn: 325289
This is mainly a move of simplifyShuffleOperands from DAGCombiner::visitVECTOR_SHUFFLE to create a more general purpose TargetLowering::SimplifyDemandedVectorElts implementation.
Further features can be moved/added in future patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42896
llvm-svn: 325232
Analysis of fails in the case of out of memory errors can be tricky on
Windows. Such error emerges at the point where memory allocation function
fails, but manifests itself when null pointer is used. These two points
may be distant from each other. Besides, next runs may not exhibit
allocation error.
Usual programming practice does not require checking result of 'operator
new' because it throws 'std::bad_alloc' in the case of allocation error.
However, LLVM is usually built with exceptions turned off, so 'new' can
return null pointer. This change installs custom new handler, which causes
fatal error in the case of out of memory. The handler is installed
automatically prior to call to 'main' during construction of a static
object defined in 'lib/Support/ErrorHandling.cpp'. If the application does
not use this file, the handler may be installed manually by a call to
'llvm::install_out_of_memory_new_handler', declared in
'include/llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h".
There are calls to C allocation functions, malloc, calloc and realloc.
They are used for interoperability with C code, when allocated object has
variable size and when it is necessary to avoid call of constructors. In
many calls the result is not checked against null pointer. To simplify
checks, new functions are defined in the namespace 'llvm' with the
same names as these C function. These functions produce fatal error if
allocation fails. User should use 'llvm::malloc' instead of 'std::malloc'
in order to use the safe variant. This change replaces 'std::malloc'
in the cases when the result of allocation function is not checked against
null pointer.
Finally, there are plain C code, that uses malloc and similar functions. If
the result is not checked, assert statements are added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43010
llvm-svn: 325224
Summary:
This patch adds templated functions to MachineIRBuilder for some opcodes
and adds pattern matcher support for G_AND and G_OR.
Reviewers: aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43309
llvm-svn: 325162
Previously we only invalidated the pressure set limit cached when the TargetRegisterInfo pointer changes. But as reserved regs and callee saved regs are used as part of calculating the limits we should invalidate when those change too.
I encountered this when reverting a patch from the 6.0 branch. One of the x86 test files had a function that used rbp as a frame pointer, making it reserved. It was followed by another function which didn't use rbp but had the same TRI so the pressure set limit cache was not invalidated. If i removed the function that used rbp as a frame pointer from the file, the remaining function then got a different register pressure limit for the GR16 pressure set. This caused the machine scheduler to change the scheduling for the function. This was an unexpected change from just deleting a function.
I don't have a test case for trunk because the particular x86 test case is different enough from the 6.0 branch to not be affected now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43274
llvm-svn: 325153
The prologue-end line record must be emitted after the last
instruction that is part of the function frame setup code and before
the instruction that marks the beginning of the function body.
Patch by Carlos Alberto Enciso!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41762
llvm-svn: 325143
When creating high MachineMemOperand for MSTORE/MLOAD we supply
it with the original PointerInfo, while the pointer itself had been incremented.
The patch adds the proper offset to the PointerInfo.
llvm-svn: 325135
Preserve debug info from a dead 'and' instruction with a constant.
Patch by Djordje Todorovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43163
llvm-svn: 325119
Making a width of GEP Index, which is used for address calculation, to be one of the pointer properties in the Data Layout.
p[address space]:size:memory_size:alignment:pref_alignment:index_size_in_bits.
The index size parameter is optional, if not specified, it is equal to the pointer size.
Till now, the InstCombiner normalized GEPs and extended the Index operand to the pointer width.
It works fine if you can convert pointer to integer for address calculation and all registered targets do this.
But some ISAs have very restricted instruction set for the pointer calculation. During discussions were desided to retrieve information for GEP index from the Data Layout.
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120416.html
I added an interface to the Data Layout and I changed the InstCombiner and some other passes to take the Index width into account.
This change does not affect any in-tree target. I added tests to cover data layouts with explicitly specified index size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42123
llvm-svn: 325102
* Document most API's
* Delete a useless function call
* Fix a discrepancy between the single and multi-opcode variants of
getActionDefinitions().
The multi-opcode variant now requires that more than one opcode is requested.
Previously it acted much like the single-opcode form but unnecessarily
enforced the requirements of the multi-opcode form.
llvm-svn: 325067
Also make a drive-by-fix of a bug in the subregister scan code that
only triggers with an incomplete or otherwise very irregular machine
description.
rdar://problem/37404493
This re-applies r324972 with an early exit in the case of a complete
failure to make this commit NFC again as intended.
llvm-svn: 325041
Summary:
If the and has an additional use we shouldn't invert it. That creates an additional instruction.
While there add a one use check to the transform above that looked similar.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43225
llvm-svn: 325019
The bug has been lying dormant, but apparently was never exposed, until
after rL324941 because we didn't return the correct result
for shifts with undef operands.
llvm-svn: 325010
Here are the number of additional debug values salvaged in a stage2
build of clang:
63 SALVAGE: MUL
1250 SALVAGE: SDIV
(No values were salvaged from `srem` instructions in this experiment,
but it's a simple case to handle so we might as well.)
llvm-svn: 324976
Here are the number of additional debug values salvaged in a stage2
build of clang:
1912 SALVAGE: ASHR
405 SALVAGE: LSHR
249 SALVAGE: SHL
llvm-svn: 324975
Also make a drive-by-fix of a bug in the subregister scan code that
only triggers with an incomplete or otherwise very irregular machine
description.
rdar://problem/37404493
llvm-svn: 324972
Summary:
This change is part of step five in the series of changes to remove alignment argument from
memcpy/memmove/memset in favour of alignment attributes. In particular, this changes the
creation of memcpys in the SafeStack pass to set the alignment of the destination object to
its stack alignment while separately setting the source byval arguments alignment to its
alignment.
Steps:
Step 1) Remove alignment parameter and create alignment parameter attributes for
memcpy/memmove/memset. ( rL322965, rC322964, rL322963 )
Step 2) Expand the IRBuilder API to allow creation of memcpy/memmove with differing
source and dest alignments. ( rL323597 )
Step 3) Update Clang to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rC323617 )
Step 4) Update Polly to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rL323618 )
Step 5) Update LLVM passes that create memcpy/memmove calls to use the new IRBuilder API,
and those that use use MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() to use [get|set]DestAlignment()
and [get|set]SourceAlignment() instead. (rL323886, rL323891, rL324148, rL324273, rL324278,
rL324384, rL324395, rL324402, rL324626, rL324642, rL324653, rL324654, rL324773, rL324774,
rL324781, rL324784 )
Step 6) Remove the single-alignment IRBuilder API for memcpy/memmove, and the
MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() methods.
Reference
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-August/089384.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html
Reviewers: eugenis, bollu
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42710
llvm-svn: 324955
This started by noticing that scalar and vector types were producing different results with div ops in PR36305:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36305
...but the problem is bigger. I couldn't keep it straight without a table, so I'm attaching that as a PDF to
the review. The x86 tests in undef-ops.ll correspond to that table.
Green means that instsimplify and the DAG agree on the result for all types.
Red means the DAG was returning undef when IR was not.
Yellow means the DAG was returning a non-undef result when IR returned undef.
This patch assumes that we're currently doing the right thing in IR.
Note: I couldn't find any problems with lowering vector constants as the code comments were warning,
but those comments were written long ago in rL36413 .
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43141
llvm-svn: 324941
If merging them, the dllexport attribute needs to be brought along
to the new GlobalAlias.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43192
llvm-svn: 324937
Rather than encode the absence of a checksum with a Kind variant, instead put
both the kind and value in a struct and wrap it in an Optional.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D43043
llvm-svn: 324928
Armv8.1-A added an atomic load-clear instruction (which performs bitwise
and with the complement of it's operand), but not a load-and
instruction. Our current code-generation for atomic load-and always
inserts an MVN instruction to invert its argument, even if it could be
folded into a constant or another instruction.
This adds lowering early in selection DAG to convert a load-and
operation into an xor with -1 and a load-clear, allowing the normal DAG
optimisations to work on it.
To do this, I've had to add a new ISD opcode, ATOMIC_LOAD_CLR. I don't
see any easy way to do this with an AArch64-specific ISD node, because
the code-generation for atomic operations assumes the SDNodes are of
type AtomicSDNode.
I've left the old tablegen patterns in because they are still needed for
global isel.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42478
llvm-svn: 324908
Add a common -trap-unreachable option, similar to the target
specific hexagon equivalent, which has been replaced. This
turns unreachable instructions into traps, which is useful for
debugging.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42965
llvm-svn: 324880
Instead of reserving 0xF00 bytes for the fixed length portion of the CodeView
symbol name, calculate the actual length of the fixed length portion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42125
llvm-svn: 324850
This reverses instcombine's demanded bits' transform which always tries to clear bits in constants.
As noted in PR35792 and shown in the test diffs:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35792
...we can do better in codegen by trying to form -1. The x86 sub test shows a missed opportunity.
I did investigate changing instcombine's behavior, but it would be more work to change
canonicalization in IR. Clearing bits / shrinking constants can allow killing instructions,
so we'd have to figure out how to not regress those cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42986
llvm-svn: 324839
This allows us to recognise more saturation patterns and also simplify some MINMAX codegen that was failing to combine CMPGE comparisons to a legal CMPGT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43014
llvm-svn: 324837
SelectionDAG::getBoolConstant was recently introduced. At the time I didn't know getConstTrueVal existed, but I think getBoolConstant is better as it will use the source VT to make sure it can properly detect floating point if it is configured differently.
llvm-svn: 324832
Extend salvageDebugInfo to preserve the debug info from a dead 'or'
with a constant.
Patch by Ismail Badawi!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43129
llvm-svn: 324764
* Use uleb128 for code offsets in the LSDA call site table.
* Omit the TTBase offset if the type table is empty.
This change can reduce the size of the DWARF/Itanium LSDA by about half.
Patch by Ryan Prichard!
llvm-svn: 324750
Rely on the assembler to finalize the layout of the DWARF/Itanium
exception-handling LSDA. Rather than calculate the exact size of each
thing in the LSDA, use assembler directives:
To emit the offset to the TTBase label:
.uleb128 .Lttbase0-.Lttbaseref0
.Lttbaseref0:
To emit the size of the call site table:
.uleb128 .Lcst_end0-.Lcst_begin0
.Lcst_begin0:
... call site table entries ...
.Lcst_end0:
To align the type info table:
... action table ...
.balign 4
.long _ZTIi
.long _ZTIl
.Lttbase0:
Using assembler directives simplifies the compiler and allows switching
the encoding of offsets in the call site table from udata4 to uleb128 for
a large code size savings. (This commit does not change the encoding.)
The combination of the uleb128 followed by a balign creates an unfortunate
dependency cycle that the assembler must sometimes resolve either by
padding an LEB or by inserting zero padding before the type table. See
PR35809 or GNU as bug 4029.
Patch by Ryan Prichard!
llvm-svn: 324749
r314974 introduced insertion of DEBUG_VALUEs after
each redefinition of debug value register in the slot index range.
In case the instruction redefining the debug value register
was a terminator, machine verifier would complain since it
enforces the rule of no non-terminator instructions
following the first terminator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42801
llvm-svn: 324734
When adding operands to machine instructions in case of
RegisterSDNodes, generate a COPY node in case the register class
does not match the one in the instruction definition.
Differental Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35561
llvm-svn: 324733
Summary:
The class contained arrays of two structures (DataArray and HashData).
These structures were in 1:1 correspondence, and one of them contained
pointers to the other (and *both* contained a "Name" field). By merging
these two structures into one, we can save a bit of space without
negatively impacting much of anything.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43073
llvm-svn: 324724
Add verification for copies involving generic registers if they are
compatible - ie if it is a generic copy, then the types are the
same, and if a COPY b/w generic and target virtual register, then
the sizes should be the same. Only checks if there are no sub registers
involved for now.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37775
llvm-svn: 324696
This addresses review feedback for D42940. The topological sort is
slightly more expensive but it can now also detect cycles in the
dependencies and actually works correctly.
rdar://problem/37217988
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43036
llvm-svn: 324677
Many in SimplifySetCC and FoldSetCC try to create true or false constants. Some of them query getBooleanContents to figure out whether to use all ones or just 1 for true. But many places do not check and just use 1 without ensuring the VT has an i1 scalar type. Note sure if those places only trigger before type legalization so they only see an i1
type?
To cleanup the inconsistency and reduce some duplicated code, this patch adds a getBoolConstant method to SelectionDAG that takes are of querying getBooleanContents and doing the right thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43037
llvm-svn: 324634
We're passing the binary op that uses the load instead of the load.
Noticed by inspection. Not sure how to test this because this just prevents the introduction of an extend that will later be truncated and will probably be combined out.
llvm-svn: 324568
The truncate is being used to replace other users of of the load, but we checked that the load only has one use so there are no other uses to replace.
llvm-svn: 324567
Instead of:
%bb.1: derived from LLVM BB %for.body
print:
bb.1.for.body:
Also use MIR syntax for MBB attributes like "align", "landing-pad", etc.
llvm-svn: 324563
The truncate is only needed if the load has additional users. It used to get passed to extendSetCCUses so was created early, but that's no longer the case.
llvm-svn: 324562
Travel all chains paths to first non-tokenfactor node can be
exponential work. Add simple redundency check to avoid this.
Fixes PR36264.
llvm-svn: 324491
This patch is the LLVM part of fixing the issues, described in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36168
* The representation of enumerator values in the debug info metadata now
contains a boolean flag isUnsigned, which determines how the bits of
the value are interpreted.
* The DW_TAG_enumeration type DIE now always (for DWARF version >= 3)
includes a DW_AT_type attribute, which refers to the underlying
integer type, as suggested in DWARFv4 (5.7 Enumeration Type Entries).
* The debug info metadata for enumeration type contains (in flags)
indication whether this is a C++11 "fixed enum".
* For C++11 enumeration with a fixed underlying type, the DIE also
includes the DW_AT_enum_class attribute (for DWARF version >= 4).
* Encoding of enumerator constants uses DW_FORM_sdata for signed values
and DW_FORM_udata for unsigned values, as suggested by DWARFv4 (7.5.4
Attribute Encodings).
The changes should be backwards compatible:
* the isUnsigned attribute is optional and defaults to false.
* if the underlying type for the enumeration is not available, the
enumerator values are considered signed.
* the FixedEnum flag defaults to clear.
* the bitcode format for DIEnumerator stores the unsigned flag bit #1 of
the first record element, so the format does not change and the zero
previously stored there is consistent with the false default for
IsUnsigned.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42734
llvm-svn: 324489
With fixes from rL324341.
Original commit message:
[MergeICmps] Enable the MergeICmps Pass by default.
Summary: Now that PR33325 is fixed, this should always improve the generated code.
Reviewers: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42793
llvm-svn: 324465
X86 currently has a late DAG combine after cttz/ctlz are turned into BSR+BSF+CMOV to detect this and remove the CMOV. But we should be able to do this much earlier and avoid creating the cmov all together.
For the changed AMDGPU test case it appears that previously the i8 cttz was type legalized to i16 which introduced an OR with 256 in order to limit the result to 8 on the widened type. At this point the result is known to never be zero, but nothing checked that. Then operation legalization is told to promote all i16 cttz to i32. This introduces an extend and a truncate and another OR with 65536 to limit the result to 16. With the DAG combiner change we are able to prevent the creation of the second OR since the opcode will have been changed to cttz_zero_undef after the first OR. I the lack of the OR caused the instruction to change to v_ffbl_b32_sdwa
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42985
llvm-svn: 324427
n Rust, an enum that carries data in the variants is, essentially, a
discriminated union. Furthermore, the Rust compiler will perform
space optimizations on such enums in some situations. Previously,
DWARF for these constructs was emitted using a hack (a magic field
name); but this approach stopped working when more space optimizations
were added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45225.
This patch changes LLVM to allow discriminated unions to be
represented in DWARF. It adds createDiscriminatedUnionType and
createDiscriminatedMemberType to DIBuilder and then arranges for this
to be emitted using DWARF's DW_TAG_variant_part and DW_TAG_variant.
Note that DWARF requires that a discriminated union be represented as
a structure with a variant part. However, as Rust only needs to emit
pure discriminated unions, this is what I chose to expose on
DIBuilder.
Patch by Tom Tromey!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42082
llvm-svn: 324426
See D42509 for the original version of this.
Basically, there are two significant changes to behavior here:
- addLiveOuts always adds all pristine registers (even if a block has
no successors).
- addLiveOuts and addLiveOutsNoPristines always add all callee-saved
registers for return blocks (including conditional return blocks).
I cleaned up the functions a bit to make it clear these properties hold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42655
llvm-svn: 324422
VLAs may refer to a previous DIE to express the DW_AT_count of their
type. Clang generates an artificial "vla_expr" variable for this. If
this DIE hasn't been created yet LLVM asserts. This patch fixes this
by sorting the local variables so that dependencies come before they
are needed. It also replaces the linear scan in DWARFFile with a
std::map, which can be faster.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42940
llvm-svn: 324412
Instruction Selection
Cleanup cycle/validity checks in ISel (IsLegalToFold,
HandleMergeInputChains) and X86 (isFusableLoadOpStore). Now do a full
search for cycles / dependencies pruning the search when topological
property of NodeId allows.
As part of this propogate the NodeId-based cutoffs to narrow
hasPreprocessorHelper searches.
Reviewers: craig.topper, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41293
llvm-svn: 324359
Summary: Now that PR33325 is fixed, this should always improve the generated code.
Reviewers: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42793
llvm-svn: 324317
Summary:
This method is trying to use the truncate node to find which SETCC operand should be replaced directly with the extended load.
This used to work correctly because all uses of the original load were replaced by the truncate before this function was called. So this was used to effectively bypass the truncate and find the load under it.
All but one of the callers now call this before the truncate has replaced the laod so the setcc doesn't yet use the truncate. To account for this we should pass the original load instead.
I changed the order of that one caller to make this work there too.
I don't have a test case because this is probably hidden by later DAG combines causing the extend and truncate to cancel out. I assume this way is a little more efficient and matches what was originally intended.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, niravd
Reviewed By: niravd
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42878
llvm-svn: 324311
Summary:
If the load is already an extended load we should be using the memory VT for the legality check, not just the VT of the current extension.
I don't have a test case, just noticed it while investigating some load extension improvements.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, niravd
Reviewed By: niravd
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42783
llvm-svn: 324181
Better to assume that any value type may be commuted, not just MVTs.
No test case right now, but discovered while investigating possible shuffle combines.
llvm-svn: 324179
When handling vectors with non byte-sized elements, reverse the order of the
elements in the built integer if the target is Big-Endian.
SystemZ tests updated.
Review: Eli Friedman, Ulrich Weigand.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D42786
llvm-svn: 324063
When getNode() is called to create an EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT, assert that
the result VT is at least as wide as the vector element type.
Review: Eli Friedman
llvm-svn: 324061
Example situation:
```
BB0:
%0 = ...
use %0
; ...
condjump BB1
jmp BB2
BB1:
%0 = ... ; rematerialized def from above (from earlier split step)
jmp BB2
BB2:
; ...
use %0
```
%0 will have a live interval with 3 value numbers (for the BB0, BB1 and
BB2 parts). Now SplitKit tries and succeeds in rematerializing the value
number in BB2 (This only works because it is a secondary split so
SplitKit is can trace this back to a single original def).
We need to recompute all live ranges affected by a value number that we
rematerialize. The case that we missed before is that when the value
that is rematerialized is at a join (Phi VNI) then we also have to
recompute liveness for the predecessor VNIs.
rdar://35699130
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42667
llvm-svn: 324039
We were only checking the element count, but not the total width. This could cause illegal bitcasts to be created if for example the output was 512-bits, but N1 is 256 bits, and the extraction size was 128-bits.
Fixes PR36199
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42809
llvm-svn: 324002
Until we support extending loads properly we're going to fall back for these.
We already handle stores in the same way, so this is just being consistent.
llvm-svn: 324001
Increment the field list member count for base classes and virtual base
classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41874
llvm-svn: 324000
Summary:
This change extends MachineCopyPropagation to do COPY source forwarding
and adds an additional run of the pass to the default pass pipeline just
after register allocation.
This version of this patch uses the newly added
MachineOperand::isRenamable bit to avoid forwarding registers is such a
way as to violate constraints that aren't captured in the
Machine IR (e.g. ABI or ISA constraints).
This change is a continuation of the work started in D30751.
Reviewers: qcolombet, javed.absar, MatzeB, jonpa, tstellar
Subscribers: tpr, mgorny, mcrosier, nhaehnle, nemanjai, jyknight, hfinkel, arsenm, inouehrs, eraman, sdardis, guyblank, fedor.sergeev, aheejin, dschuff, jfb, myatsina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41835
llvm-svn: 323991
As shown in the example in PR34994:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34994
...we can return a very wrong answer (inf instead of 0.0) for square root when
using a reciprocal square root estimate instruction.
Here, I've conditionalized the filtering out of denorms based on the function
having "denormal-fp-math"="ieee" in its attributes. The other options for this
attribute are 'preserve-sign' and 'positive-zero'.
So we don't generate this extra code by default with just '-ffast-math' (because
then there's no denormal attribute string at all), but it works if you specify
'-ffast-math -fdenormal-fp-math=ieee' from clang.
As noted in the review, there may be other problems in clang that affect the
results depending on platform (Linux x86 at least), but this should allow
creating the desired codegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42323
llvm-svn: 323981
Summary:
In Instruction Selection UpdateChains replaces all matched Nodes'
chain references including interior token factors and deletes them.
This may allow nodes which depend on these interior nodes but are not
part of the set of matched nodes to be left with a dangling dependence.
Avoid this by doing the replacement for matched non-TokenFactor nodes.
Fixes PR36164.
Reviewers: jonpa, RKSimon, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42754
llvm-svn: 323977
Summary:
This change expands the amount of registers stashed by the entry and
`__xray_CustomEvent` trampolines.
We've found that since the `__xray_CustomEvent` trampoline calls can show up in
situations where the scratch registers are being used, and since we don't
typically want to affect the code-gen around the disabled
`__xray_customevent(...)` intrinsic calls, that we need to save and restore the
state of even the scratch registers in the handling of these custom events.
Reviewers: pcc, pelikan, dblaikie, eizan, kpw, echristo, chandlerc
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: chandlerc, echristo, hiraditya, davide, dblaikie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40894
llvm-svn: 323940
Discussed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120320.html
In preparation for adding support for named vregs we are changing the sigil for
physical registers in MIR to '$' from '%'. This will prevent name clashes of
named physical register with named vregs.
llvm-svn: 323922
Summary:
Call MRI.freezeReservedRegs() on functions created during outlining so
that calls to isReserved() by the verifier called after this pass won't
assert.
Reviewers: MatzeB, qcolombet, paquette
Subscribers: mcrosier, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42749
llvm-svn: 323905
Summary:
This change is part of step five in the series of changes to remove alignment argument from
memcpy/memmove/memset in favour of alignment attributes. In particular, this changes the
CodeGenPrepare pass to be more aggressive in improving the source and destination alignments
of memcpy/memmove/memset by exploiting our new ability to record independent alignments
for each argument.
Steps:
Step 1) Remove alignment parameter and create alignment parameter attributes for
memcpy/memmove/memset. ( rL322965, rC322964, rL322963 )
Step 2) Expand the IRBuilder API to allow creation of memcpy/memmove with differing
source and dest alignments. ( rL323597 )
Step 3) Update Clang to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rC323617 )
Step 4) Update Polly to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rL323618 )
Step 5) Update LLVM passes that create memcpy/memmove calls to use the new IRBuilder API,
and those that use use MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() to use [get|set]DestAlignment()
and [get|set]SourceAlignment() instead. ( rL323886 )
Step 6) Remove the single-alignment IRBuilder API for memcpy/memmove, and the
MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() methods.
Reference
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-August/089384.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html
llvm-svn: 323891
This commit came as a result for revert of patch r317579 (originally
committed as r317100). The patch made CFI instructions duplicable, because
their existence in the epilogue block was affecting the Tail duplication
pass. However, duplicating blocks with CFI instructions was an issue for
compact unwind info on Darwin, which is why the patch was reverted.
This patch allows duplicating tails with CFI instructions, though they are
not duplicable, by copying them 'manually'.
Patch by Djordje Kovacevic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40979
llvm-svn: 323883
Summary:
Instruction Selection preserves relative orders of all nodes save
TokenFactors which we treat specially. As a result Node Ids for
TokenFactors may violate the topological ordering and should not be
considered as valid pruning candidates in predecessor search.
Fixes PR35316.
Reviewers: RKSimon, hfinkel
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42701
llvm-svn: 323880
In D41587, @mssimpso discovered that the order of some patterns for
AArch64 was sub-optimal. I thought a bit about how we could avoid that
case in the future. I do not think there is a need for evaluating all
patterns for now. But this patch adds an extra (expensive) check, that
evaluates the latencies of all patterns, and ensures that the latency
saved decreases for subsequent patterns.
This catches the sub-optimal order fixed in D41587, but I am not
entirely happy with the check, as it only applies to sub-optimal
patterns seen while building with EXPENSIVE_CHECKS on. It did not
discover any other sub-optimal pattern ordering.
Reviewers: Gerolf, spatel, mssimpso
Reviewed By: Gerolf, mssimpso
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41766
llvm-svn: 323873
When selecting a split candidate for region splitting, the register allocator tries to predict which candidate will have the cheapest spill cost.
Global splitting may cause the creation of local intervals, and they might spill.
This patch makes RA take into account the spill cost of local split intervals in use blocks (we already take into account the spill cost in through blocks).
A flag ("-condsider-local-interval-cost") controls weather we do this advanced cost calculation (it's on by default for X86 target, off for the rest).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41585
Change-Id: Icccb8ad2dbf13124f5d97a18c67d95aa6be0d14d
llvm-svn: 323870
In Thumb 1, with the new ADDCARRY / SUBCARRY the scheduler may need to do
copies CPSR ↔ GPR but not all Thumb1 targets implement them.
The schedule can attempt, before attempting a copy, to clone the instructions
but it does not currently do that for nodes with input glue. In this patch we
introduce a target-hook to let the hook decide if a glued machinenode is still
eligible for copying. In this case these are ARM::tADCS and ARM::tSBCS .
As a follow-up of this change we should actually implement the copies for the
Thumb1 targets that do implement them and restrict the hook to the targets that
can't really do such copy as these clones are not ideal.
This change fixes PR35836.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42051
llvm-svn: 323857
Sometimes users do not specify data layout in LLVM assembly and let llc set the
data layout by target triple after loading the LLVM assembly.
Currently the parser checks alloca address space no matter whether the LLVM
assembly contains data layout definition, which causes false alarm since the
default data layout does not contain the correct alloca address space.
The parser also calls verifier to check debug info and updating invalid debug
info. Currently there is no way to let the verifier to check debug info only.
If the verifier finds non-debug-info issues the parser will fail.
For llc, the fix is to remove the check of alloca addr space in the parser and
disable updating debug info, and defer the updating of debug info and
verification to be after setting data layout of the IR by target.
For other llvm tools, since they do not override data layout by target but
instead can override data layout by a command line option, an argument for
overriding data layout is added to the parser. In cases where data layout
overriding is necessary for the parser, the data layout can be provided by
command line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41832
llvm-svn: 323826
Introduce an extension to support passing linker options to the linker.
These would be ignored by older linkers, but newer linkers which support
this feature would be able to process the linker.
Emit a special discarded section `.linker-option`. The content of this
section is a pair of strings (key, value). The key is a type identifier for
the parameter. This allows for an argument free parameter that will be
processed by the linker with the value being the parameter. As an example,
`lib` identifies a library to be linked against, traditionally the `-l`
argument for Unix-based linkers with the parameter being the library name.
Thanks to James Henderson, Cary Coutant, Rafael Espinolda, Sean Silva
for the valuable discussion on the design of this feature.
llvm-svn: 323783
PR36061 showed that during the expansion of ISD::FPOWI, that there
was an incorrect zero extension of the integer argument which for
MIPS64 would then give incorrect results. Address this with the
existing mechanism for correcting sign extensions.
This resolves PR36061.
Thanks to James Cowgill for reporting the issue!
Reviewers: atanasyan, hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42537
llvm-svn: 323781
Legal if we have hardware support for floating point, libcalls
otherwise.
Also add the necessary support for libcalls in the legalizer helper.
llvm-svn: 323726
When a function return value can't be directly lowered, such as
returning an i128 on WebAssembly, as indicated by the CanLowerReturn
target hook, SelectionDAGBuilder can translate it to return the
value through a hidden sret-like argument.
If such a function has an argument with the "returned" attribute,
the attribute can't be automatically lowered, because the function
no longer has a normal return value. For now, just discard the
"returned" attribute.
This fixes PR36128.
llvm-svn: 323715
When RAFast sees liveins in on a basic block, it uses that information
to initialize the availability of the registers. The called
method uses an instruction as one of its argument and in the liveins
case, RAFast was dereferencing MBB::begin which can be MBB::end for
empty basic block.
Change the API of definePhysReg to use MachineBasicBlock::iterator
instead of MachineInstr so that we don't dereference an
invalid iterator while making the call.
rdar://problem/36952401
llvm-svn: 323710
Summary:
Apparently, we missed on constraining register classes of VReg-operands of all the instructions
built from a destination pattern but the root (top-level) one. The issue exposed itself
while selecting G_FPTOSI for armv7: the corresponding pattern generates VTOSIZS wrapped
into COPY_TO_REGCLASS, so top-level COPY_TO_REGCLASS gets properly constrained,
while nested VTOSIZS (or rather its destination virtual register to be exact) does not.
Fixing this by issuing GIR_ConstrainSelectedInstOperands for every nested GIR_BuildMI.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35965
rdar://problem/36886530
Patch by Roman Tereshin
Reviewers: dsanders, qcolombet, rovka, bogner, aditya_nandakumar, volkan
Reviewed By: dsanders, qcolombet, rovka
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42565
llvm-svn: 323692
Prior to committing r323681, we decided to change pick() to identity() since
it wasn't clear from the name what pick() did. However, identity() isn't a very
good name either since it implies that no changes are made. For some reason,
naming it changeTo() didn't occur to me until just after the commit. This
should resolve the lack of clarity that pick() had while still implying that
it changes the MIR.
llvm-svn: 323689
Rafael pointed out that `hasInternalLinkage() || hasPrivateLinkage()` is
equivalent to `hasLocalLinkage()` in post-commit review.
I'm intentionally not updating the comment, partly because I like it
being explicit, and partly because "global symbols with local linkage"
sounds like an oxymoron.
llvm-svn: 323688
Summary:
As discussed in D42244, we have difficulty describing the legality of some
operations. We're not able to specify relationships between types.
For example, declaring the following
setAction({..., 0, s32}, Legal)
setAction({..., 0, s64}, Legal)
setAction({..., 1, s32}, Legal)
setAction({..., 1, s64}, Legal)
currently declares these type combinations as legal:
{s32, s32}
{s64, s32}
{s32, s64}
{s64, s64}
but we currently have no means to say that, for example, {s64, s32} is
not legal. Some operations such as G_INSERT/G_EXTRACT/G_MERGE_VALUES/
G_UNMERGE_VALUES have relationships between the types that are currently
described incorrectly.
Additionally, G_LOAD/G_STORE currently have no means to legalize non-atomics
differently to atomics. The necessary information is in the MMO but we have no
way to use this in the legalizer. Similarly, there is currently no way for the
register type and the memory type to differ so there is no way to cleanly
represent extending-load/truncating-store in a way that can't be broken by
optimizers (resulting in illegal MIR).
It's also difficult to control the legalization strategy. We've added support
for legalizing non-power of 2 types but there's still some hardcoded assumptions
about the strategy. The main one I've noticed is that type0 is always legalized
before type1 which is not a good strategy for `type0 = G_EXTRACT type1, ...` if
you need to widen the container. It will converge on the same result eventually
but it will take a much longer route when legalizing type0 than if you legalize
type1 first.
Lastly, the definition of legality and the legalization strategy is kept
separate which is not ideal. It's helpful to be able to look at a one piece of
code and see both what is legal and the method the legalizer will use to make
illegal MIR more legal.
This patch adds a layer onto the LegalizerInfo (to be removed when all targets
have been migrated) which resolves all these issues.
Here are the rules for shift and division:
for (unsigned BinOp : {G_LSHR, G_ASHR, G_SDIV, G_UDIV})
getActionDefinitions(BinOp)
.legalFor({s32, s64}) // If type0 is s32/s64 then it's Legal
.clampScalar(0, s32, s64) // If type0 is <s32 then WidenScalar to s32
// If type0 is >s64 then NarrowScalar to s64
.widenScalarToPow2(0) // Round type0 scalars up to powers of 2
.unsupported(); // Otherwise, it's unsupported
This describes everything needed to both define legality and describe how to
make illegal things legal.
Here's an example of a complex rule:
getActionDefinitions(G_INSERT)
.unsupportedIf([=](const LegalityQuery &Query) {
// If type0 is smaller than type1 then it's unsupported
return Query.Types[0].getSizeInBits() <= Query.Types[1].getSizeInBits();
})
.legalIf([=](const LegalityQuery &Query) {
// If type0 is s32/s64/p0 and type1 is a power of 2 other than 2 or 4 then it's legal
// We don't need to worry about large type1's because unsupportedIf caught that.
const LLT &Ty0 = Query.Types[0];
const LLT &Ty1 = Query.Types[1];
if (Ty0 != s32 && Ty0 != s64 && Ty0 != p0)
return false;
return isPowerOf2_32(Ty1.getSizeInBits()) &&
(Ty1.getSizeInBits() == 1 || Ty1.getSizeInBits() >= 8);
})
.clampScalar(0, s32, s64)
.widenScalarToPow2(0)
.maxScalarIf(typeInSet(0, {s32}), 1, s16) // If type0 is s32 and type1 is bigger than s16 then NarrowScalar type1 to s16
.maxScalarIf(typeInSet(0, {s64}), 1, s32) // If type0 is s64 and type1 is bigger than s32 then NarrowScalar type1 to s32
.widenScalarToPow2(1) // Round type1 scalars up to powers of 2
.unsupported();
This uses a lambda to say that G_INSERT is unsupported when type0 is bigger than
type1 (in practice, this would be a default rule for G_INSERT). It also uses one
to describe the legal cases. This particular predicate is equivalent to:
.legalFor({{s32, s1}, {s32, s8}, {s32, s16}, {s64, s1}, {s64, s8}, {s64, s16}, {s64, s32}})
In terms of performance, I saw a slight (~6%) performance improvement when
AArch64 was around 30% ported but it's pretty much break even right now.
I'm going to take a look at constexpr as a means to reduce the initialization
cost.
Future work:
* Make it possible for opcodes to share rulesets. There's no need for
G_LSHR/G_ASHR/G_SDIV/G_UDIV to have separate rule and ruleset objects. There's
no technical barrier to this, it just hasn't been done yet.
* Replace the type-index numbers with an enum to get .clampScalar(Type0, s32, s64)
* Better names for things like .maxScalarIf() (clampMaxScalar?) and the vector rules.
* Improve initialization cost using constexpr
Possible future work:
* It's possible to make these rulesets change the MIR directly instead of
returning a description of how to change the MIR. This should remove a little
overhead caused by parsing the description and routing to the right code, but
the real motivation is that it removes the need for LegalizeAction::Custom.
With Custom removed, there's no longer a requirement that Custom legalization
change the opcode to something that's considered legal.
Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar, volkan, reames, bogner
Reviewed By: bogner
Subscribers: hintonda, bogner, aemerson, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42251
llvm-svn: 323681
Summary:
Fix a few places that were modifying code after register
allocation to set the renamable bit correctly to avoid failing the
validation added in D42449.
llvm-svn: 323675
Summary:
The improvements to the LegalizerInfo discussed in D42244 require that
LegalizerInfo::LegalizeAction be available for use in other classes. As such,
it needs to be moved out of LegalizerInfo. This has been done separately to the
next patch to minimize the noise in that patch.
llvm-svn: 323669
Microsoft Visual Studio rejects the static constexpr static list of
atoms even though it's valid C++. This provides a workaround to unbreak
the bots.
llvm-svn: 323667
MSVC complains that the constexpr "expression did not evaluate to a
constant". Trying to make it happy by adding a `const` specifier as
suggested in https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37574343.
llvm-svn: 323659
This patch adds support for generating accelerator tables in dsymutil.
This feature was already present in our internal repository but not yet
upstreamed because it requires changes to the Apple accelerator table
implementation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42501
llvm-svn: 323655
This patch renames DwarfAccelTable.{h,cpp} to AccelTable.{h,cpp} and
moves the header to the include dir so it is accessible by the
dsymutil implementation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42529
llvm-svn: 323654
This patch refactors the way data is stored in the accelerator table and
makes them truly generic. There have been several attempts to do this in
the past:
- D8215 & D8216: Using a union and partial hardcoding.
- D11805: Using inheritance.
- D42246: Using a callback.
In the end I didn't like either of them, because for some reason or
another parts of it felt hacky or decreased runtime performance. I
didn't want to completely rewrite them as I was hoping that we could
reuse parts for the successor in the DWARF standard. However, it seems
less and less likely that there will be a lot of opportunities for
sharing code and/or an interface.
Originally I choose to template the whole class, because it introduces
no performance overhead compared to the original implementation.
We ended up settling on a hybrid between a templated method and a
virtual call to emit the data. The motivation is that we don't want to
increase code size for a feature that should soon be superseded by the
DWARFv5 accelerator tables. While the code will continue to be used for
compatibility, it won't be on the hot path. Furthermore this does not
regress performance compared to Apple's internal implementation that
already uses virtual calls for this.
A quick summary for why these changes are necessary: dsymutil likes to
reuse the current implementation of the Apple accelerator tables.
However, LLDB expects a slightly different interface than what is
currently emitted. Additionally, in dsymutil we only have offsets and no
actual DIEs.
Although the patch suggests a lot of code has changed, this change is
pretty straightforward:
- We created an abstract class `AppleAccelTableData` to serve as an
interface for the different data classes.
- We created two implementations of this class, one for type tables and
one for everything else. There will be a third one for dsymutil that
takes just the offset.
- We use the supplied class to deduct the atoms for the header which
makes the structure of the table fully self contained, although not
enforced by the interface as was the case for the fully templated
approach.
- We renamed the prefix from DWARF- to Apple- to make space for the
future implementation of .debug_names.
This change is NFC and relies on the existing tests.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42334
llvm-svn: 323653
Summary:
When emitting the location for a global variable with fragmented debug
expressions, make sure that the offset pieces, which represent
optimized-out parts of the variable, are emitted before their succeeding
fragments' expressions. Previously, if the succeeding fragment's
location was a symbol, the offset piece was emitted after, rather than
before, that symbol's expression. This effectively meant that the symbols
were associated with the wrong parts of the variable.
This fixes PR36085.
Patch by: David Stenberg
Reviewers: aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42527
llvm-svn: 323644
Summary:
There's a check in the code to only check getSetCCResultType after LegalOperations or if the type is MVT::i1. But the i1 check is only allowing scalar types through. I think it should check that the scalar type is MVT::i1 so that it will work for vectors.
The changed test already does this combine with AVX512VL where getSetCCResultType returns vXi1. But with avx512f and no VLX getSetCCResultType returns a type matching the width of the input type.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42619
llvm-svn: 323631
This patch moves the DJB hash to support. This is consistent with other
hashing algorithms living there. The hash is used by the DWARF
accelerator tables. We're doing this now because the hashing function is
needed by dsymutil and we don't want to link against libBinaryFormat.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42594
llvm-svn: 323616
The code was using getValueSizeInBits and combining with the result of a call to DAG.ComputeNumSignBits. But for vector types getValueSizeInBits returns the width of the full vector while ComputeNumSignBits is going to give a number no larger than the width of a single element. So we should be using getScalarValueSizeInBits to get the element width.
llvm-svn: 323583
We weren't converting the immediate ConstantFP during legalization, which caused
the wrong bit patterns to be emitted for half type FP constants.
Fixes PR36106.
llvm-svn: 323582
One common source of blocks with no successors is calls to noreturn
functions; we want to preserve pristine registers in case they throw an
exception.
The whole pristine register thing is messy (we should really prefer to
explicitly model registers), but this fills a hole in the model for now.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36073.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42509
llvm-svn: 323559
Previously some targets printed their own message at the start of Select to indicate what they were selecting. For the targets that didn't, it means there was no print of the root node before any custom handling in the target executed. So if the target did something custom and never called SelectNodeCommon, no print would be made. For the targets that did print a message in Select, if they didn't custom handle a node SelectNodeCommon would reprint the root node before walking the isel table.
It seems better to just print the message before the call to Select so all targets behave the same. And then remove the root node printing from SelectNodeCommon and just leave a message that says we're starting the table search.
There were also some oddities in blank line behavior. Usually due to a \n after a call to SelectionDAGNode::dump which already inserted a new line.
llvm-svn: 323551
Summary: This is the producer side for DWARF v5 string offsets tables. The reader/consumer
side was committed with r321295. All compile and type units in a module share a
contribution to the string offsets table. Indirect strings use the strx{1,2,3,4} index forms.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, JDevliegehere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42021
llvm-svn: 323546
Add support for printing / parsing the addrspace of a MachineMemOperand.
Fixes PR35970.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42502
llvm-svn: 323521
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41373
The various components are
GICombinerHelper contains transformations that are common to all
targets. Targets can pick and choose which transformations (at
function/opcode granularity) each pass uses via configuring a
GICombinerInfo.
GICombiner contains some common code and it does the traversal,
driving of combines, worklist management and iterating until
convergence.
GICombinerInfo is an interface with a virtual method called combine.
The combiner info will allow targets to pick and choose (or
implement their own specific combines). CombineInfos can make
use of available combines in GICombineHelper to configure the
transformations for a particular pass. Currently this approach allows
cherry picking transformations from helpers (at function/opcode
granularity) and also allows early returning on specific
transformations. Targets also get to prioritize whether target specific
combines run before/after the opt-in generic combines. Ideally we would
like this part to be configured by both C++ and Tablegen. The
CombinerInfo also has a field which indicates how to deal with
IllegalOps (ie - should we allow to create them/or legalize them?).
A CombinerPass would configure a CombinerInfo, create the GICombiner
with the Info, and call
GICombiner::combineMachineInstrs(MachineFunction&).
This organization is very similar to the GISelLegalizer.
llvm-svn: 323392
Apparently checking the pass structure isn't enough to ensure that we don't fall
back to FastISel, as it's set up as part of the SelectionDAGISel.
llvm-svn: 323369
Summary:
`getAction(const InstrAspect &) const` breaks encapsulation by exposing
the smaller components that are used to decide how to legalize an
instruction.
This is a problem because we need to change the implementation of
LegalizerInfo so that it's able to describe particular type combinations
rather than just cartesian products of types.
For example, declaring the following
setAction({..., 0, s32}, Legal)
setAction({..., 0, s64}, Legal)
setAction({..., 1, s32}, Legal)
setAction({..., 1, s64}, Legal)
currently declares these type combinations as legal:
{s32, s32}
{s64, s32}
{s32, s64}
{s64, s64}
but we currently have no means to say that, for example, {s64, s32} is
not legal. Some operations such as G_INSERT/G_EXTRACT/G_MERGE_VALUES/
G_UNMERGE_VALUES has relationships between the types that are currently
described incorrectly.
Additionally, G_LOAD/G_STORE currently have no means to legalize non-atomics
differently to atomics. The necessary information is in the MMO but we have no
way to use this in the legalizer. Similarly, there is currently no way for the
register type and the memory type to differ so there is no way to cleanly
represent extending-load/truncating-store in a way that can't be broken by
optimizers (resulting in illegal MIR).
This patch introduces LegalityQuery which provides all the information
needed by the legalizer to make a decision on whether something is legal
and how to legalize it.
Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar, volkan, reames, bogner
Reviewed By: bogner
Subscribers: bogner, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42244
llvm-svn: 323342
Summary:
This patch implements the codegen of DWARF debug info for non-constant
'count' fields for DISubrange.
This is patch [2/3] in a series to extend LLVM's DISubrange Metadata
node to support debugging of C99 variable length arrays and vectors with
runtime length like the Scalable Vector Extension for AArch64. It is
also a first step towards representing more complex cases like arrays
in Fortran.
Reviewers: echristo, pcc, aprantl, dexonsmith, clayborg, kristof.beyls, dblaikie
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: fhahn, aemerson, rengolin, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41696
llvm-svn: 323323
Summary:
This patch extends the DISubrange 'count' field to take either a
(signed) constant integer value or a reference to a DILocalVariable
or DIGlobalVariable.
This is patch [1/3] in a series to extend LLVM's DISubrange Metadata
node to support debugging of C99 variable length arrays and vectors with
runtime length like the Scalable Vector Extension for AArch64. It is
also a first step towards representing more complex cases like arrays
in Fortran.
Reviewers: echristo, pcc, aprantl, dexonsmith, clayborg, kristof.beyls, dblaikie
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: rnk, probinson, fhahn, aemerson, rengolin, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41695
llvm-svn: 323313
For the included test case, the DAG transformation
concat_vectors(scalar, undef) -> scalar_to_vector(sclr)
would attempt to create a v2i32 vector for a v9i8
concat_vector. Bail out to avoid creating a bitcast with
mismatching sizes later on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42379
llvm-svn: 323312
Merging such globals loses the dllexport attribute. Add a test
to check that normal globals still are merged.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42127
llvm-svn: 323307
https://reviews.llvm.org/D42402
A lot of these copies are useless (copies b/w VRegs having the same
regclass) and should be cleaned up.
llvm-svn: 323291
Summary:
This adds an -mllvm flag that forces the use of a runtime function call to
get the unsafe stack pointer, the same that is currently used on non-x86, non-aarch64 android.
The call may be inlined.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: aemerson, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37405
llvm-svn: 323259
Fix a bug in ScheduleDAGMILive::scheduleMI which causes BotRPTracker not tracking CurrentBottom in some rare cases involving llvm.dbg.value.
This issues causes amdgcn target to assert when compiling some user codes with -g.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42394
llvm-svn: 323214
If in complex addressing mode the difference is in GV then
base reg should not be installed because we plan to use
base reg as a merge point of different GVs.
This is a fix for PR35980.
Reviewers: reames, john.brawn, santosh
Reviewed By: john.brawn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42230
llvm-svn: 323192
Summary:
First, we need to explain the core of the vulnerability. Note that this
is a very incomplete description, please see the Project Zero blog post
for details:
https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2018/01/reading-privileged-memory-with-side.html
The basis for branch target injection is to direct speculative execution
of the processor to some "gadget" of executable code by poisoning the
prediction of indirect branches with the address of that gadget. The
gadget in turn contains an operation that provides a side channel for
reading data. Most commonly, this will look like a load of secret data
followed by a branch on the loaded value and then a load of some
predictable cache line. The attacker then uses timing of the processors
cache to determine which direction the branch took *in the speculative
execution*, and in turn what one bit of the loaded value was. Due to the
nature of these timing side channels and the branch predictor on Intel
processors, this allows an attacker to leak data only accessible to
a privileged domain (like the kernel) back into an unprivileged domain.
The goal is simple: avoid generating code which contains an indirect
branch that could have its prediction poisoned by an attacker. In many
cases, the compiler can simply use directed conditional branches and
a small search tree. LLVM already has support for lowering switches in
this way and the first step of this patch is to disable jump-table
lowering of switches and introduce a pass to rewrite explicit indirectbr
sequences into a switch over integers.
However, there is no fully general alternative to indirect calls. We
introduce a new construct we call a "retpoline" to implement indirect
calls in a non-speculatable way. It can be thought of loosely as
a trampoline for indirect calls which uses the RET instruction on x86.
Further, we arrange for a specific call->ret sequence which ensures the
processor predicts the return to go to a controlled, known location. The
retpoline then "smashes" the return address pushed onto the stack by the
call with the desired target of the original indirect call. The result
is a predicted return to the next instruction after a call (which can be
used to trap speculative execution within an infinite loop) and an
actual indirect branch to an arbitrary address.
On 64-bit x86 ABIs, this is especially easily done in the compiler by
using a guaranteed scratch register to pass the target into this device.
For 32-bit ABIs there isn't a guaranteed scratch register and so several
different retpoline variants are introduced to use a scratch register if
one is available in the calling convention and to otherwise use direct
stack push/pop sequences to pass the target address.
This "retpoline" mitigation is fully described in the following blog
post: https://support.google.com/faqs/answer/7625886
We also support a target feature that disables emission of the retpoline
thunk by the compiler to allow for custom thunks if users want them.
These are particularly useful in environments like kernels that
routinely do hot-patching on boot and want to hot-patch their thunk to
different code sequences. They can write this custom thunk and use
`-mretpoline-external-thunk` *in addition* to `-mretpoline`. In this
case, on x86-64 thu thunk names must be:
```
__llvm_external_retpoline_r11
```
or on 32-bit:
```
__llvm_external_retpoline_eax
__llvm_external_retpoline_ecx
__llvm_external_retpoline_edx
__llvm_external_retpoline_push
```
And the target of the retpoline is passed in the named register, or in
the case of the `push` suffix on the top of the stack via a `pushl`
instruction.
There is one other important source of indirect branches in x86 ELF
binaries: the PLT. These patches also include support for LLD to
generate PLT entries that perform a retpoline-style indirection.
The only other indirect branches remaining that we are aware of are from
precompiled runtimes (such as crt0.o and similar). The ones we have
found are not really attackable, and so we have not focused on them
here, but eventually these runtimes should also be replicated for
retpoline-ed configurations for completeness.
For kernels or other freestanding or fully static executables, the
compiler switch `-mretpoline` is sufficient to fully mitigate this
particular attack. For dynamic executables, you must compile *all*
libraries with `-mretpoline` and additionally link the dynamic
executable and all shared libraries with LLD and pass `-z retpolineplt`
(or use similar functionality from some other linker). We strongly
recommend also using `-z now` as non-lazy binding allows the
retpoline-mitigated PLT to be substantially smaller.
When manually apply similar transformations to `-mretpoline` to the
Linux kernel we observed very small performance hits to applications
running typical workloads, and relatively minor hits (approximately 2%)
even for extremely syscall-heavy applications. This is largely due to
the small number of indirect branches that occur in performance
sensitive paths of the kernel.
When using these patches on statically linked applications, especially
C++ applications, you should expect to see a much more dramatic
performance hit. For microbenchmarks that are switch, indirect-, or
virtual-call heavy we have seen overheads ranging from 10% to 50%.
However, real-world workloads exhibit substantially lower performance
impact. Notably, techniques such as PGO and ThinLTO dramatically reduce
the impact of hot indirect calls (by speculatively promoting them to
direct calls) and allow optimized search trees to be used to lower
switches. If you need to deploy these techniques in C++ applications, we
*strongly* recommend that you ensure all hot call targets are statically
linked (avoiding PLT indirection) and use both PGO and ThinLTO. Well
tuned servers using all of these techniques saw 5% - 10% overhead from
the use of retpoline.
We will add detailed documentation covering these components in
subsequent patches, but wanted to make the core functionality available
as soon as possible. Happy for more code review, but we'd really like to
get these patches landed and backported ASAP for obvious reasons. We're
planning to backport this to both 6.0 and 5.0 release streams and get
a 5.0 release with just this cherry picked ASAP for distros and vendors.
This patch is the work of a number of people over the past month: Eric, Reid,
Rui, and myself. I'm mailing it out as a single commit due to the time
sensitive nature of landing this and the need to backport it. Huge thanks to
everyone who helped out here, and everyone at Intel who helped out in
discussions about how to craft this. Also, credit goes to Paul Turner (at
Google, but not an LLVM contributor) for much of the underlying retpoline
design.
Reviewers: echristo, rnk, ruiu, craig.topper, DavidKreitzer
Subscribers: sanjoy, emaste, mcrosier, mgorny, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41723
llvm-svn: 323155
1. ReachingDefsAnalysis - Allows to identify for each instruction what is the “closest” reaching def of a certain register. Used by BreakFalseDeps (for clearance calculation) and ExecutionDomainFix (for arbitrating conflicting domains).
2. ExecutionDomainFix - Changes the variant of the instructions in order to minimize domain crossings.
3. BreakFalseDeps - Breaks false dependencies.
4. LoopTraversal - Creatws a traversal order of the basic blocks that is optimal for loops (introduced in revision L293571). Both ExecutionDomainFix and ReachingDefsAnalysis use this to determine the order they will traverse the basic blocks.
This also included the following changes to ExcecutionDepsFix original logic:
1. BreakFalseDeps and ReachingDefsAnalysis logic no longer restricted by a register class.
2. ReachingDefsAnalysis tracks liveness of reg units instead of reg indices into a given reg class.
Additional changes in affected files:
1. X86 and ARM targets now inherit from ExecutionDomainFix instead of ExecutionDepsFix. BreakFalseDeps also was added to the passes they activate.
2. Comments and references to ExecutionDepsFix replaced with ExecutionDomainFix and BreakFalseDeps, as appropriate.
Additional refactoring changes will follow.
This commit is (almost) NFC.
The only functional change is that now BreakFalseDeps will break dependency for all register classes.
Since no additional instructions were added to the list of instructions that have false dependencies, there is no actual change yet.
In a future commit several instructions (and tests) will be added.
This is the first of multiple patches that fix bugzilla https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33869
Most of the patches are intended at refactoring the existent code.
Additional relevant reviews:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40331https://reviews.llvm.org/D40332https://reviews.llvm.org/D40333https://reviews.llvm.org/D40334
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40330
Change-Id: Icaeb75e014eff96a8f721377783f9a3e6c679275
llvm-svn: 323087
This was completely broken, but hopefully fixed by this patch.
In cases where it is needed, a vector with non byte-sized elements is stored
by extracting, zero-extending, shift:ing and or:ing the elements into an
integer of the same width as the vector, which is then stored.
Review: Eli Friedman, Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D42100#inline-369520https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35520
llvm-svn: 323042
`llvm.used` contains a list of pointers to named values which the
compiler, assembler, and linker are required to treat as if there is a
reference that they cannot see. Ensure that the symbols are preserved
by adding an explicit `-include` reference to the linker command.
llvm-svn: 323017
Previously, the DIBuilder didn't expose functionality to set its compile unit
in any other way than calling createCompileUnit. This meant that the outliner,
which creates new functions, had to create a new compile unit for its debug
info.
This commit adds an optional parameter in the DIBuilder's constructor which
lets you set its CU at construction.
It also changes the MachineOutliner so that it keeps track of the DISubprograms
for each outlined sequence. If debugging information is requested, then it
uses one of the outlined sequence's DISubprograms to grab a CU. It then uses
that CU to construct the DISubprogram for the new outlined function.
The test has also been updated to reflect this change.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D42254 for more information. Also see the e-mail
discussion on D42254 in llvm-commits for more context.
llvm-svn: 322992
The second return value of ATOMIC_CMP_SWAP_WITH_SUCCESS is known to be a
boolean, and should therefore be treated by computeKnownBits just like
the second return values of SMULO / UMULO.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42067
llvm-svn: 322985
This avoids playing games with pseudo pass IDs and avoids using an
unreliable MRI::isSSA() check to determine whether register allocation
has happened.
Note that this renames:
- MachineLICMID -> EarlyMachineLICM
- PostRAMachineLICMID -> MachineLICMID
to be consistent with the EarlyTailDuplicate/TailDuplicate naming.
llvm-svn: 322927
Split TailDuplicatePass into EarlyTailDuplicate and TailDuplicate. This
avoids playing games with fake pass IDs and using MRI::isSSA() to
determine pre-/post-RA state.
llvm-svn: 322926
Re-commit of r322200: The testcase shouldn't hit machineverifiers
anymore with r322917 in place.
Large callframes (calls with several hundreds or thousands or
parameters) could lead to situations in which the emergency spillslot is
out of range to be addressed relative to the stack pointer.
This commit forces the use of a frame pointer in the presence of large
callframes.
This commit does several things:
- Compute max callframe size at the end of instruction selection.
- Add mirFileLoaded target callback. Use it to compute the max callframe size
after loading a .mir file when the size wasn't specified in the file.
- Let TargetFrameLowering::hasFP() return true if there exists a
callframe > 255 bytes.
- Always place the emergency spillslot close to FP if we have a frame
pointer.
- Note that `useFPForScavengingIndex()` would previously return false
when a base pointer was available leading to the emergency spillslot
getting allocated late (that's the whole effect of this callback).
Which made no sense to me so I took this case out: Even though the
emergency spillslot is technically not referenced by FP in this case
we still want it allocated early.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40876
llvm-svn: 322919
r322086 removed the trailing information describing reg classes for each
register.
This patch adds printing reg classes next to every register when
individual operands/instructions/basic blocks are printed. In the case
of dumping MIR or printing a full function, by default don't print it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42239
llvm-svn: 322867
Follow-up to r322120 which can cause assertions for AArch64 because
v1f64 and v1i64 are legal types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42097
llvm-svn: 322823
For example, a build_vector of i64 bitcasted from v2i32 can be turned into a concat_vectors of the v2i32 vectors with a bitcast to a vXi64 type
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42090
llvm-svn: 322811
Right now, it is not possible to run MachineCSE in the middle of the
GlobalISel pipeline. Being able to run generic optimizations between the
core passes of GlobalISel was one of the goals of the new ISel framework.
This is the first attempt to do it.
The problem is that MachineCSE pass assumes all register operands have a
register class, which, in GlobalISel context, won't be true until after the
InstructionSelect pass. The reason for this behaviour is that before
replacing one virtual register with another, MachineCSE pass (and most of
the other optimization machine passes) must check if the virtual registers'
constraints have a (sufficiently large) intersection, and constrain the
resulting register appropriately if such intersection exists.
GlobalISel extends the representation of such constraints from just a
register class to a triple (low-level type, register bank, register
class).
This commit adds MachineRegisterInfo::constrainRegAttrs method that extends
MachineRegisterInfo::constrainRegClass to such a triple.
The idea is that going forward we should use:
- RegisterBankInfo::constrainGenericRegister within GlobalISel's
InstructionSelect pass
- MachineRegisterInfo::constrainRegClass within SelectionDAG ISel
- MachineRegisterInfo::constrainRegAttrs everywhere else regardless
the target and instruction selector it uses.
Patch by Roman Tereshin. Thanks!
llvm-svn: 322805
Before, it wasn't possible to get backtraces inside outlined functions. This
commit adds DISubprograms to the IR functions created by the outliner which
makes this possible. Also attached a test that ensures that the produced
debug information is correct. This is useful to users that want to debug
outlined code.
llvm-svn: 322789
Every known PE COFF target emits /EXPORT: linker flags into a .drective
section. The AsmPrinter should handle this.
While we're at it, use global_values() and emit each export flag with
its own .ascii directive. This should make the .s file output more
readable.
llvm-svn: 322788
Summary:
This patch adds a new target option in order to control GlobalISel.
This will allow the users to enable/disable GlobalISel prior to the
backend by calling `TargetMachine::setGlobalISel(bool Enable)`.
No test case as there is already a test to check GlobalISel
command line options.
See: CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel/gisel-commandline-option.ll.
Reviewers: qcolombet, aemerson, ab, dsanders
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: rovka, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42137
llvm-svn: 322773
The code wasn't zero-extending correctly, so the comparison could
spuriously fail.
Adds some AArch64 tests to cover this case.
Inspired by D41791.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41798
llvm-svn: 322767
Mark G_FPEXT and G_FPTRUNC as legal or libcall, depending on hardware
support, but only for conversions between float and double.
Also add the necessary boilerplate so that the LegalizerHelper can
introduce the required libcalls. This also works only for float and
double, but isn't too difficult to extend when the need arises.
llvm-svn: 322651
Summary:
Currently -glldb turns on emission of apple tables on all targets, but
lldb is only really capable of consuming them on darwin. Furthermore,
making lldb consume these tables is not straight-forward because of the
differences in how the debug info is distributed on darwin vs. elf
targets.
The darwin debug model assumes that the debug info (along with
accelerator tables) will either remain in the .o files or it will be
linked into a dsym bundle by a linker that knows how to merge these
tables. In the elf world, all present linkers will simply concatenate
these accelerator tables into the shared object. Since the tables are
not self-terminating, this renders the tables unusable, as the debugger
cannot pry the individual tables apart anymore.
It might theoretically be possible to make the tables work with split
dwarf, as that is somewhat similar to the apple .o model, but
unfortunately right now the combination of -glldb and -gsplit-dwarf
produces broken object files.
Until these issues are resolved there is no point in emitting the apple
tables for these targets. At best, it wastes space; at worst, it breaks
compilation and prevents the user from getting other benefits of -glldb.
Reviewers: probinson, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: emaste, dim, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41986
llvm-svn: 322633
Change symbol values in the stack_size section from being 8 bytes, to being a target dependent size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42108
llvm-svn: 322619
r320606 checked for MI.isMetaInstruction which skips all DBG_VALUEs.
This also skips IMPLICIT_DEFs and other instructions that may def / read
a register.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42119
llvm-svn: 322584
Current condition for spill instruction recognition in LiveDebugValues does
not recognize case when register is spilled and killed in next instruction.
Patch by Nikola Prica.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41226
llvm-svn: 322554
*Mostly* NFC. Still updating the test though just for completeness.
This moves the hasAddressTaken check to MachineOutliner.cpp and replaces it
with a per-basic block test rather than a per-function test. The old test was
too conservative and was preventing functions in C programs from being
outlined even though they were safe to outline.
This was mostly a problem in C sources.
llvm-svn: 322425
Summary:
In preparation for https://reviews.llvm.org/D41675 this NFC changes this
prototype of MemIntrinsicInst::setAlignment() to accept an unsigned instead
of a Constant.
llvm-svn: 322403
Pass MD5 checksums through from IR to assembly/object files.
After this, getting Clang to compute the MD5 should be the last step
to supporting MD5 in the DWARF v5 line table header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41926
llvm-svn: 322391
For hard float with VFP4, it is legal. Otherwise, we use libcalls.
This needs a bit of support in the LegalizerHelper for soft float
because we didn't handle G_FMA libcalls yet. The support is trivial, as
the only difference between G_FMA and other libcalls that we already
handle is that it has 3 input operands rather than just 2.
llvm-svn: 322366
- Less unnecessary use of `auto`
- Add early `using RegSubRegPair(AndIdx) =` to avoid countless
`TargetInstrInfo::` qualifications.
- Use references instead of pointers where possible.
- Remove unused parameters.
- Rewrite the CopyRewriter class hierarchy:
- Pull out uncoalescable copy rewriting functionality into
PeepholeOptimizer class.
- Use an abstract base class to make it clear that rewriters are
independent.
- Remove unnecessary \brief in doxygen comments.
- Remove unused constructor and method from ValueTracker.
- Replace UseAdvancedTracking of ValueTracker with DisableAdvCopyOpt use.
llvm-svn: 322325
The PeepholeOptimizer would fail for vregs without a definition. If this
was caused by an undef operand abort to keep the code simple (so we
don't need to add logic everywhere to replicate the undef flag).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40763
llvm-svn: 322319
When replacing a PHI the PeepholeOptimizer currently takes the register
class of the register at the first operand. This however is not correct
if this argument has a subregister index.
As there is currently no API to query the register class resulting from
applying a subregister index to all registers in a class, we can only
abort in these cases and not perform the transformation.
This changes findNextSource() to require the end of all copy chains to
not use a subregister if there is any PHI in the chain. I had to rewrite
the overly complicated inner loop there to have a good place to insert
the new check.
This fixes https://llvm.org/PR33071 (aka rdar://32262041)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40758
llvm-svn: 322313
Summary:
Fold cases such as:
(v8i8 truncate (v8i32 extract_subvector (v16i32 sext (v16i8 V), Idx)))
->
(v8i8 extract_subvector (v16i8 V), Idx)
This can be generalized to cases where the truncate and extend do not
fully cancel each other out, but it may require querying the target
about profitability.
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper, spatel, efriedma
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41927
llvm-svn: 322300
The code that is supposed to "Round odd types to the next pow of two" seems
broken and as well completely unused (untested). It also seems that
ExpandStore really shouldn't ever change the memory VT, which this in fact
does.
As a first step in fixing the broken handling of vector stores (of irregular
types, e.g. an i1 vector), this code is removed. For discussion, see
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35520.
Review: Eli Friedman
llvm-svn: 322275
Summary:
- MSVC uses the none type for a variadic argument in CodeView
- Add a unit test
Reviewers: zturner, llvm-commits
Reviewed By: zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41931
llvm-svn: 322257
Revert for now as the testcase is hitting a pre-existing verifier error
that manifest as a failure when expensive checks are enabled (or
-verify-machineinstrs) is used.
This reverts commit r322200.
llvm-svn: 322231
Simplify the code slightly: Instead of creating empty subranges in one
case and immediately removing them, do not create them in the first
place.
llvm-svn: 322226
Make sure I really get back to the beahvior before my rewrite in r321035
which turned out not to be completely NFC as I changed the behavior for
the ios simulator environment.
llvm-svn: 322223
Currently we infer the scale at isel time by analyzing whether the base is a constant 0 or not. If it is we assume scale is 1, else we take it from the element size of the pass thru or stored value. This seems a little weird and I think it makes more sense to make it explicit in the DAG rather than doing tricky things in the backend.
Most of this patch is just making sure we copy the scale around everywhere.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40055
llvm-svn: 322210
Large callframes (calls with several hundreds or thousands or
parameters) could lead to situations in which the emergency spillslot is
out of range to be addressed relative to the stack pointer.
This commit forces the use of a frame pointer in the presence of large
callframes.
This commit does several things:
- Compute max callframe size at the end of instruction selection.
- Add mirFileLoaded target callback. Use it to compute the max callframe size
after loading a .mir file when the size wasn't specified in the file.
- Let TargetFrameLowering::hasFP() return true if there exists a
callframe > 255 bytes.
- Always place the emergency spillslot close to FP if we have a frame
pointer.
- Note that `useFPForScavengingIndex()` would previously return false
when a base pointer was available leading to the emergency spillslot
getting allocated late (that's the whole effect of this callback).
Which made no sense to me so I took this case out: Even though the
emergency spillslot is technically not referenced by FP in this case
we still want it allocated early.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40876
llvm-svn: 322200
Prefetches used to always be chained between any previous and following
memory accesses. The problem with this was that later optimizations, such as
folding of a load into the user instruction, got disrupted.
This patch relaxes the chaining of prefetches in order to remedy this.
Reveiw: Hal Finkel
https://reviews.llvm.org/D38886
llvm-svn: 322163
Planning to add support for named vregs. This puts is in a conundrum since
physregs are named as well. To rectify this we need to use a sigil other than
'%' for physregs in MIR. We've settled on using '$' for physregs but first we
must repurpose it from external symbols using it, which is what this commit is
all about. We think '&' will have familiar semantics for C/C++ users.
llvm-svn: 322146
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
The original patch didn't have the lit.local.cfg file that restricts the new
test to x86, thus the new test was failing on the non-x86 bots.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
The reverts r322008, which was a revert of r322005.
This reverts commit a05b89f9aca70597dc79fe97bc49b50b51f525ba.
llvm-svn: 322136
Summary:
In the case of an fp_extend of v1f16 to v1f32 where the v1f16 is the
result of a bitcast from i16, avoid creating an illegal fp16_to_fp where
the input is not a vector and the result is a v1f32.
V2: The fix is now to avoid vector scalarization creating a v1->scalar
bitcast.
Reviewers: srhines, t.p.northover
Subscribers: nhaehnle, llvm-commits, dstuttard, t-tye, yaxunl, wdng, kzhuravl, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41126
llvm-svn: 322120
In -debug output we print "pred:" whenever a MachineOperand is a
predicate operand in the instruction descriptor, and "opt:" whenever a
MachineOperand is an optional def in the instruction descriptor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41870
llvm-svn: 322096
Currently the MachineInstr::print function prints the
frame-setup/frame-destroy differently than it does in MIR.
Instead of:
%x21 = LDR %sp, -16; flags: FrameDestroy
print:
%x21 = frame-destroy LDR %sp, -16
llvm-svn: 322088
Ingredients in this patch:
1. Add HANDLE_LIBCALL defs for finite mathlib functions that correspond to LLVM intrinsics.
2. Plumbing to send TargetLibraryInfo down to SelectionDAGLegalize.
3. Relaxed math and library checking in SelectionDAGLegalize::ConvertNodeToLibcall() to choose finite libcalls.
There was a bug about determining the availability of the finite calls that should be fixed with:
rL322010
Not in this patch:
This doesn't resolve the question/bug of clang creating the intrinsic IR in the first place.
There's likely follow-up work needed to support the long double variants better.
There's room for improvement to reduce the code duplication.
Create finite calls that don't originate from a corresponding intrinsic or DAG node?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41338
llvm-svn: 322087
Since register classes and banks are already printed with the register
definition, don't print it at the end of every instruction anymore.
This follows MIR in this regard and is another step to the unification
of the two formats.
llvm-svn: 322086
We are printing / parsing the `frame-setup` MachineInstr flag but not
the `frame-destroy` one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41509
llvm-svn: 322071
If the offset is differ in two addressing mode we can continue only if
ScaleReg is not set due to we will use it as merge of different offsets.
It should fix PR35799 and PR35805.
Reviewers: john.brawn, reames
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41227
llvm-svn: 322056
This commit does two things. Firstly, it adds a collection of flags which can
be passed along to the target to encode information about the MBB that an
instruction lives in to the outliner.
Second, it adds some of those flags to the AArch64 outliner in order to add
more stack instructions to the list of legal instructions that are handled
by the outliner. The two flags added check if
- There are calls in the MachineBasicBlock containing the instruction
- The link register is available in the entire block
If the link register is available and there are no calls, then a stack
instruction can always be outlined without fixups, regardless of what it is,
since in this case, the outliner will never modify the stack to create a
call or outlined frame.
The motivation for doing this was checking which instructions are most often
missed by the outliner. Instructions like, say
%sp<def> = ADDXri %sp, 32, 0; flags: FrameDestroy
are very common, but cannot be outlined in the case that the outliner might
modify the stack. This commit allows us to outline instructions like this.
llvm-svn: 322048
The last iterator of MBB should be recognized as MBB.end() not as
MBB.instr_end() which could return bundled instruction that is not iterable
with basic iterator.
Patch by Nikola Prica.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41626
llvm-svn: 322015
The new test fails on the Hexagon bot. Reverting while I investigate.
This reverts https://reviews.llvm.org/rL322005
This reverts commit b7e0026b4385180c378edc658ec91a39566f2942.
llvm-svn: 322008
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
llvm-svn: 322005
Allow SimplifyDemandedBits to use TargetLoweringOpt::computeKnownBits to look through bitcasts. This can help simplifying in some cases where bitcasts of constants generated during or after legalization can't be folded away, and thus didn't get picked up by SimplifyDemandedBits. This fixes PR34620, where a redundant pand created during legalization from lowering and lshr <16xi8> wasn't being simplified due to the presence of a bitcasted build_vector as an operand.
Committed on the behalf of @sameconrad (Sam Conrad)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41643
llvm-svn: 321969
Summary:
There are few oddities that occur due to v1i1, v8i1, v16i1 being legal without v2i1 and v4i1 being legal when we don't have VLX. Particularly during legalization of v2i32/v4i32/v2i64/v4i64 masked gather/scatter/load/store. We end up promoting the mask argument to these during type legalization and then have to widen the promoted type to v8iX/v16iX and truncate it to get the element size back down to v8i1/v16i1 to use a 512-bit operation. Since need to fill the upper bits of the mask we have to fill with 0s at the promoted type.
It would be better if we could just have the v2i1/v4i1 types as legal so they don't undergo any promotion. Then we can just widen with 0s directly in a k register. There are no real v4i1/v2i1 instructions anyway. Everything is done on a larger register anyway.
This also fixes an issue that we couldn't implement a masked vextractf32x4 from zmm to xmm properly.
We now have to support widening more compares to 512-bit to get a mask result out so new tablegen patterns got added.
I had to hack the legalizer for widening the operand of a setcc a bit so it didn't try create a setcc returning v4i32, extract from it, then try to promote it using a sign extend to v2i1. Now we create the setcc with v4i1 if the original setcc's result type is v2i1. Then extract that and don't sign extend it at all.
There's definitely room for improvement with some follow up patches.
Reviewers: RKSimon, zvi, guyblank
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41560
llvm-svn: 321967
Summary:
I believe legalization is really expecting that ReplaceNodeResults will return something with the same type as the thing that's being legalized. Ultimately, it uses the output to replace the uses in the DAG so the type should match to make that work.
There are two relevant cases here. When crbits are enabled, then i1 is a legal type and getSetCCResultType should return i1. In this case, the truncate will be between i1 and i1 and should be removed (SelectionDAG::getNode does this). Otherwise, getSetCCResultType will be i32 and the legalizer will promote the truncate to be i32 -> i32 which will be similarly removed.
With this fixed we can remove some code from PromoteIntRes_SETCC that seemed to only exist to deal with the intrinsic being replaced with a larger type without changing the other operand. With the truncate being used for connectivity this doesn't happen anymore.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: nemanjai, llvm-commits, kbarton
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41654
llvm-svn: 321959
This is the last step needed to fix PR33325:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33325
We're trading branch and compares for loads and logic ops.
This makes the code smaller and hopefully faster in most cases.
The 24-byte test shows an interesting construct: we load the trailing scalar
elements into vector registers and generate the same pcmpeq+movmsk code that
we expected for a pair of full vector elements (see the 32- and 64-byte tests).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41714
llvm-svn: 321934
This had been reverted because the new test failed on non-X86 bots. I moved
the new test to the appropriate subdirectory to correct this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41264
Original submission: r321122 (which was reverted by r321125)
This reverts commit 3c1639b5703c387a0d8cba2862803b4e68dff436.
llvm-svn: 321911
Summary:
This commit updates the BufferByteStreamer, used by DebugLocStream
to buffer bytes/comments to put in the debug_loc section, to
make sure that the Buffer and Comments vectors are synced.
Previously, when an SLEB128 or ULEB128 was emitted together with
a comment, the vectors could be out-of-sync if the LEB encoding
added several entries to the Buffer vectors, while we only added
a single entry to the Comments vector.
The goal with this is to get the comments in the debug_loc
section in the .s file correctly aligned.
Example (using ARM as target):
Instead of
.byte 144 @ sub-register DW_OP_regx
.byte 128 @ 256
.byte 2 @ DW_OP_piece
.byte 147 @ 8
.byte 8 @ sub-register DW_OP_regx
.byte 144 @ 257
.byte 129 @ DW_OP_piece
.byte 2 @ 8
.byte 147 @
.byte 8 @
we now get
.byte 144 @ sub-register DW_OP_regx
.byte 128 @ 256
.byte 2 @
.byte 147 @ DW_OP_piece
.byte 8 @ 8
.byte 144 @ sub-register DW_OP_regx
.byte 129 @ 257
.byte 2 @
.byte 147 @ DW_OP_piece
.byte 8 @ 8
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, rnk, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: davide, Ka-Ka, uabelho, aemerson, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41763
llvm-svn: 321907
This implements the DWARF 5 feature described at
http://www.dwarfstd.org/ShowIssue.php?issue=141215.1
This allows a consumer to understand whether a composite data type is
trivially copyable and thus should be passed by value instead of by
reference. The canonical example is being able to distinguish the
following two types:
// S is not trivially copyable because of the explicit destructor.
struct S {
~S() {}
};
// T is a POD type.
struct T {
~T() = default;
};
This patch adds two new (DI)flags to LLVM metadata: TypePassByValue
and TypePassByReference.
<rdar://problem/36034922>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41743
llvm-svn: 321844
The existing version worked incorrectly when inversion of a branch condintion is impossible.
Changed the "fixupConditionalBranch()" function - a new BB (a trampoline) is created to keep the original branch condition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41634
llvm-svn: 321785
Add iterator ranges for machine instruction phis, similar to the IR-level
phi ranges added in r303964. I updated a few places to use this. Besides
general code simplification, this change will allow removing a non-upstream
change from Swift's copy of LLVM (in a better way than my previous attempt
in http://reviews.llvm.org/D19080).
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41672
llvm-svn: 321783
Handle this in DAGCombiner::visitEXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT the same as we already do in SelectionDAG::getNode and use APInt instead of getZExtValue.
This should also fix oss-fuzz #4910
llvm-svn: 321767
The preference only applies to 'memcmp() == 0' expansion, so try to make that clearer.
x86 will likely benefit by increasing the default value from '1' to '2' as seen in PR33325:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33325
...so that is the planned follow-up to this clean-up step.
llvm-svn: 321756
Currently it's not possible to access MCSubtargetInfo from a TgtMCAsmBackend.
D20830 threaded an MCSubtargetInfo reference through
MCAsmBackend::relaxInstruction, but this isn't the only function that would
benefit from access. This patch removes the Triple and CPUString arguments
from createMCAsmBackend and replaces them with MCSubtargetInfo.
This patch just changes the interface without making any intentional
functional changes. Once in, several cleanups are possible:
* Get rid of the awkward MCSubtargetInfo handling in ARMAsmBackend
* Support 16-bit instructions when valid in MipsAsmBackend::writeNopData
* Get rid of the CPU string parsing in X86AsmBackend and just use a SubtargetFeature for HasNopl
* Emit 16-bit nops in RISCVAsmBackend::writeNopData if the compressed instruction set extension is enabled (see D41221)
This change initially exposed PR35686, which has since been resolved in r321026.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41349
llvm-svn: 321692
Previously the code for handling G_SMULO didn't properly check for the signed
multiply overflow, instead treating it the same as the unsigned G_UMULO.
Fixes PR35800.
llvm-svn: 321690
A call may have an intrinsic name but not have a valid intrinsic ID,
for example with llvm.invariant.group.barrier. If so, treat it as a
normal call like FastISel does.
llvm-svn: 321662
Tests updated to explicitly use fast-isel at -O0 instead of implicitly.
This change also allows an explicit -fast-isel option to override an
implicitly enabled global-isel. Otherwise -fast-isel would have no effect at -O0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41362
llvm-svn: 321655
Our internal testing has revealed has discovered bugs in PPC builds.
I have forward reproduction instructions to the original author (Nirav).
llvm-svn: 321649
Currently the promotion for these ignores the normal getTypeToPromoteTo and instead just tries to double the element width. This is because the default behavior of getTypeToPromote to just adds 1 to the SimpleVT, which has the affect of increasing the element count while keeping the scalar size the same.
If multiple steps are required to get to a legal operation type, int_to_fp will be promoted multiple times. And fp_to_int will keep trying wider types in a loop until it finds one that works.
getTypeToPromoteTo does have the ability to query a promotion map to get the type and not do the increasing behavior. It seems better to just let the target specify the promotion type in the map explicitly instead of letting the legalizer iterate via widening.
FWIW, it's worth I think for any other vector operations that need to be promoted, we have to specify the type explicitly because the default behavior of getTypeToPromote isn't useful for vectors. The other types of promotion already require either the element count is constant or the total vector width is constant, but neither happens by incrementing the SimpleVT enum.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40664
llvm-svn: 321629
Fix code in LiveDebugVariables that was changing def MachineOperands to
uses, which will hit an assert for dead operands after the change to add
the renamable bit to MachineOperands. Avoid the assert by clearing the
dead bit before changing the operand to a use.
Fixes issue reported in out of tree target by Jesper Antonsson at Ericsson.
llvm-svn: 321571
Summary:
I have been getting rather difficult to reproduce SIGBUS crashes when
compiling certain FreeBSD sources, and their stack traces pointed
squarely at `SelectionDAG::salvageDebugInfo()`:
```
Core was generated by `/usr/obj/share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/amd64.amd64/tmp/usr/bin/cc -cc1 -'.
Program terminated with signal SIGBUS, Bus error.
#0 isInvalidated () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SDNodeDbgValue.h:115
115 bool isInvalidated() const { return Invalid; }
(gdb) bt
#0 isInvalidated () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SDNodeDbgValue.h:115
#1 salvageDebugInfo () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:7116
#2 0x00000000033b2516 in operator() () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:3595
#3 __invoke<(lambda at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:3593:59) &, llvm::SDNode *, llvm::SDNode *> () at /usr/include/c++/v1/type_traits:4323
#4 __call<(lambda at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:3593:59) &, llvm::SDNode *, llvm::SDNode *> () at /usr/include/c++/v1/__functional_base:349
#5 operator() () at /usr/include/c++/v1/functional:1562
#6 0x00000000033b0817 in operator() () at /usr/include/c++/v1/functional:1916
#7 NodeDeleted () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAG.h:293
#8 0x0000000003529dde in RemoveDeadNodes () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:610
#9 0x00000000035556df in MorphNodeTo () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:6794
#10 0x00000000033a9acc in MorphNode () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:2594
#11 0x00000000033ac80b in SelectCodeCommon () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:3601
#12 0x00000000023d464b in SelectCode () at /usr/obj/share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/amd64.amd64/tmp/obj-tools/lib/clang/libllvm/X86GenDAGISel.inc:282902
#13 Select () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/Target/X86/X86ISelDAGToDAG.cpp:3072
#14 0x00000000033a5afa in DoInstructionSelection () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:988
#15 0x00000000033a4e1a in CodeGenAndEmitDAG () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:868
#16 0x00000000033a2643 in SelectAllBasicBlocks () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:1624
#17 0x000000000339f158 in runOnMachineFunction () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGISel.cpp:466
#18 0x00000000023d03c4 in runOnMachineFunction () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/Target/X86/X86ISelDAGToDAG.cpp:175
#19 0x00000000035cc8c2 in runOnFunction () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/MachineFunctionPass.cpp:62
#20 0x00000000030dca9a in runOnFunction () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/IR/LegacyPassManager.cpp:1520
#21 0x00000000030dccf3 in runOnModule () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/IR/LegacyPassManager.cpp:1541
#22 0x00000000030dd228 in runOnModule () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/IR/LegacyPassManager.cpp:1597
#23 run () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/IR/LegacyPassManager.cpp:1700
#24 0x00000000014db578 in EmitAssembly () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/lib/CodeGen/BackendUtil.cpp:815
#25 EmitBackendOutput () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/lib/CodeGen/BackendUtil.cpp:1181
#26 0x00000000014d5b26 in HandleTranslationUnit () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/lib/CodeGen/CodeGenAction.cpp:292
#27 0x0000000001c4c332 in ParseAST () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/lib/Parse/ParseAST.cpp:159
#28 0x00000000015d546c in Execute () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/lib/Frontend/FrontendAction.cpp:897
#29 0x0000000001cec311 in ExecuteAction () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/lib/Frontend/CompilerInstance.cpp:991
#30 0x00000000014b4f81 in ExecuteCompilerInvocation () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/lib/FrontendTool/ExecuteCompilerInvocation.cpp:252
#31 0x00000000014aa73f in cc1_main () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/tools/driver/cc1_main.cpp:221
#32 0x00000000014b2928 in ExecuteCC1Tool () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/tools/driver/driver.cpp:309
#33 main () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/tools/clang/tools/driver/driver.cpp:388
(gdb) frame 1
#1 salvageDebugInfo () at /share/dim/src/freebsd/clang600-import/contrib/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:7116
7116 if (DV->isInvalidated())
(gdb) disassemble
Dump of assembler code for function salvageDebugInfo():
[...]
0x0000000003557348 <+744>: nopl 0x0(%rax,%rax,1)
0x0000000003557350 <+752>: mov (%r12),%r13
=> 0x0000000003557354 <+756>: cmpb $0x0,0x31(%r13)
0x0000000003557359 <+761>: jne 0x35573b0 <salvageDebugInfo()+848>
(gdb) info registers
[...]
r13 0x5a5a5a5a5a5a5a5a 6510615555426900570
```
The `0x5a5a5a5a5a5a5a5a` value in `r13` indicates the memory was either
uninitialized, or already freed.
Unfortunately I do not have a simple self-contained test case for this.
However, it seems pretty clear that the call to `AddDbgValue()` in
`salvageDebugInfo()` causes the problems, since it modifies
`SelectionDag::DbgInfo` while looping through one of its DenseMaps:
```
void SelectionDAG::salvageDebugInfo(SDNode &N) {
[...]
for (auto DV : GetDbgValues(&N)) {
if (DV->isInvalidated())
continue;
[...]
AddDbgValue(Clone, N0.getNode(), false);
[...]
}
}
```
At least, if I comment out the `AddDbgValue()` call, the crashes go
away. I propose to change this function slightly, similar to the
`SelectionDAG::transferDbgValues()` function just above it, to save the
cloned SDDbgValues in a separate SmallVector, and only call
AddDbgValue() on them after the for loop is done.
Reviewers: aprantl, bogner, bkramer, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: davide, krytarowski, JDevlieghere, emaste, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41589
llvm-svn: 321545
For example, float operations may fail to constant fold under certain circumstances (inf/nan/denormal creation etc.)
Reduced from oss-fuzz #4802 test case
llvm-svn: 321488
This moves the combine for turning ANDs into shuffle with zero out of SimplifyVBinOps and places it only in visitAND below the reassociate handling. This fixes the specific case I noticed where we failed to combine two ands with constants.
llvm-svn: 321417
getOperand returns an SDValue that contains the node and the result number. There is no guarantee that the result number if 0. By using the -> operator we are calling SDNode::getValueType rather than SDValue::getValueType. This requires supplying a result number and we shouldn't assume it was 0.
I don't have a test case. Just noticed while cleaning up some other code and saw that it occurred in other places.
llvm-svn: 321397
BaseIndexOffset supercedes findBaseOffset analysis save only Constant
Pool addresses. Migrate analysis to BaseIndexOffset.
Relanding after correcting base address matching check.
llvm-svn: 321389
Re-land r321234. It had to be reverted because it broke the shared
library build. The shared library build broke because there was a
missing LLVMBuild dependency from lib/Passes (which calls
TargetMachine::getTargetIRAnalysis) to lib/Target. As far as I can
tell, this problem was always there but was somehow masked
before (perhaps because TargetMachine::getTargetIRAnalysis was a
virtual function).
Original commit message:
This makes the TargetMachine interface a bit simpler. We still need
the std::function in TargetIRAnalysis to avoid having to add a
dependency from Analysis to Target.
See discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119749.html
I avoided adding all of the backend owners to this review since the
change is simple, but let me know if you feel differently about this.
Reviewers: echristo, MatzeB, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: jholewinski, jfb, arsenm, dschuff, mcrosier, sdardis, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41464
llvm-svn: 321375
This seems to improve X86's ability to match this into an address computation. Otherwise the other operand gets assigned to the base register and the stack pointer + frame index ends up in the index register. But index registers can't encode ESP/RSP so we end up having to move it into another register to meet the constraint.
I could try to improve the address matcher in X86, but swapping the producer seemed easier. Several other places already have the operands in this order so this is at least consistent.
llvm-svn: 321370
Summary:
This replaces calls to getEntryCount().hasValue() with hasProfileData
that does the same thing. This refactoring is useful to do before adding
synthetic function entry counts but also a useful cleanup IMO even
otherwise. I have used hasProfileData instead of hasRealProfileData as
David had earlier suggested since I think profile implies "real" and I
use the phrase "synthetic entry count" and not "synthetic profile count"
but I am fine calling it hasRealProfileData if you prefer.
Reviewers: davidxl, silvas
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41461
llvm-svn: 321331
The knownbits_mask_or_shuffle_uitofp change is interesting - shuffle combines manage to kick in, removing the AND constant mask load. For targets with fast-variable-shuffle this should reduce further to VPOR+VPSHUFB+VCVTDQ2PS.
llvm-svn: 321279
If the SRL node is only used by an AND, we may be able to set the
ExtVT to the width of the mask, making the AND redundant. To support
this, another check has been added in isLegalNarrowLoad which queries
whether the load is valid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41350
llvm-svn: 321259
Summary:
This makes the TargetMachine interface a bit simpler. We still need
the std::function in TargetIRAnalysis to avoid having to add a
dependency from Analysis to Target.
See discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119749.html
I avoided adding all of the backend owners to this review since the
change is simple, but let me know if you feel differently about this.
Reviewers: echristo, MatzeB, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: jholewinski, jfb, arsenm, dschuff, mcrosier, sdardis, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41464
llvm-svn: 321234
When intrinsics are allowed to have mem operands, there
are two ways this can happen. First is an intrinsic
that is marked has having a mem operand, but is not handled
by getTgtMemIntrinsic.
The second way can occur even for intrinsics which do not
have a mem operand. It seems the selector table does
some kind of sorting based on the opcode, and the
mem ref recording can happen in the same scope for
intrinsics that both do and do not have mem refs.
I haven't been able to figure out exactly why this happens
(although it happens even with the matcher optimizations disabled).
I'm not sure if it's worth trying to avoid hitting this for
these nodes since I think it's still reasonable to handle
this in case getTgtMemIntrinic is not implemented.
llvm-svn: 321208
Summary:
The function section prefix for PGO based layout (e.g. hot/unlikely)
should look at the hotness of all blocks not just the entry BB.
A function with a cold entry but a very hot loop should be placed in the
hot section, for example, so that it is located close to other hot
functions it may call. For SamplePGO it was already looking at the
branch weights on calls, and I made that code conditional on whether
this is SamplePGO since it was essentially a noop for instrumentation
PGO anyway.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41395
llvm-svn: 321197
These functions simply call their counterparts in the associated SDNode,
which do take an optional SelectionDAG. This change makes the legalization
debug trace a little easier to read, since target-specific nodes will
now have their names shown instead of "Unknown node #123".
llvm-svn: 321180
It appears the code uses nullptr to represent a void type in debug metadata,
which led to an assertion failure when building DeltaAlgorithm.cpp with a
self-hosted clang on Windows.
I'm not sure why/if the problem was Windows-specific.
Fixes bug https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35543
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41264
llvm-svn: 321122
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by refactoring the
interfaces.
Also add support for printing with a null TargetIntrinsicInfo and no
MachineFunction.
llvm-svn: 321111
Another followup to my refactoring in r321036: Turns out we can end up
with an x86 darwin target that is not macos (simulator triples can look
like i386-apple-ios) so we need the x86/32bit check in all cases.
llvm-svn: 321104
Summary:
Extend overlapping store elision to handle overwrites of stores by
larger stores.
Nontemporal tests have been modified to add memory dependencies to
prevent store elision.
Reviewers: craig.topper, rnk, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40969
llvm-svn: 321089
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by refactoring the
interfaces.
Before this patch we printed "<call frame instruction>" in the debug
output.
llvm-svn: 321084
I missed some prefixes and the fact that on AArch64 we use "bzero"
instead of "__bzero" as on X86 when doing my refactoring in r321035.
Improve tests for bzero.
llvm-svn: 321046
I missed the fact that the later called InitLibcallCallingConvs()
overrides some things set in InitLibcalls() when I did the refactoring
in r321036.
Fix by merging InitLibcallCallingConvs() into InitLibcalls() and doing
the initialization earlier.
llvm-svn: 321045
Note:
- X86ISelLowering: setLibcallName(SINCOS) was superfluous as
InitLibcalls() already does it.
- ARMISelLowering: Setting libcallnames for sincos/sincosf seemed
superfluous as in the darwin case it wouldn't be used while for all
other cases InitLibcalls already does it.
llvm-svn: 321036
Adds missing support for DW_FORM_data16.
Update of r320852/r320886, fixing the unittest again, this time use a
raw char string for the test data.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41090
llvm-svn: 321011
Search from AND nodes to find whether they can be propagated back to
loads, so that the AND and load can be combined into a narrow load.
We search through OR, XOR and other AND nodes and all bar one of the
leaves are required to be loads or constants. The exception node then
needs to be masked off meaning that the 'and' isn't removed, but the
loads(s) are narrowed still.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41177
llvm-svn: 320962
When we put the value in select placeholder we must pass
the value through simplification tracker due to the value might
be already simplified and erased.
This is a fix for PR35658.
Reviewers: john.brawn, uabelho
Reviewed By: john.brawn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41251
llvm-svn: 320956
Adds missing support for DW_FORM_data16.
Update of r320852, fixing the unittest to use a hand-coded struct
instead of std::array to guarantee data layout.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41090
llvm-svn: 320886
Summary:
Currently we don't handle v32i1/v64i1 insert_vector_elt correctly as we fail to look at the number of elements closely and assume it can only be v16i1 or v8i1.
We also can't type legalize v64i1 insert_vector_elt correctly on KNL due to the type not being byte addressable as required by the legalizing through memory accesses path requires.
For the first issue, the patch now tries to pick a 512-bit register with the correct number of elements and promotes to that.
For the second issue, we now extend the vector to a byte addressable type, do the stores to memory, load the two halves, and then truncate the halves back to the original type. Technically since we changed the type, we may not need two loads, but actually checking that is more work and for the v64i1 case we do need them.
Reviewers: RKSimon, delena, spatel, zvi
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40942
llvm-svn: 320849
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by printing
`%stack.0` instead of `<fi#0>`, and `%fixed-stack.0` instead of
`<fi#-4>` (supposing there are 4 fixed stack objects).
Only debug syntax is affected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41027
llvm-svn: 320827
The following CFI directives are suported by MC but not by MIR:
* .cfi_rel_offset
* .cfi_adjust_cfa_offset
* .cfi_escape
* .cfi_remember_state
* .cfi_restore_state
* .cfi_undefined
* .cfi_register
* .cfi_window_save
Add support for printing, parsing and update tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41230
llvm-svn: 320819
This makes it work better with some build_vector and concat_vectors creations.
Adjust the NewSDValueDbgMsg in getConstant to avoid duplicating the print when it calls getSplatBuildVector since getSplatBuildVector didn't trigger a print before.
llvm-svn: 320783
Summary:
- lowers @llvm.global_dtors by adding @llvm.global_ctors
functions which register the destructors with `__cxa_atexit`.
- impements @llvm.global_ctors with wasm start functions and linker metadata
See [here](https://github.com/WebAssembly/tool-conventions/issues/25) for more background.
Subscribers: jfb, dschuff, mgorny, jgravelle-google, aheejin, sunfish
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41211
llvm-svn: 320774
While investigating LLVM PR22316 (http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22316)
I started wondering if it were not always preferable to emit the
initial DBG_VALUEs for stack arguments as FI locations instead of
describing the first register they get copied into. The advantage of
doing this is that the arguments will be available as soon as the
stack is setup. As illustrated by the testcase in the PR, the first
copy of the FI into a register may be sunk by MachineSink.cpp into a
later basic block. By describing the argument on the stack, we nicely
circumvent this problem.
<rdar://problem/19583723>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41135
llvm-svn: 320758
Most of the -Wsign-compare warnings are due to the fact that
enums are signed by default in the MS ABI, while the
tautological comparison warnings trigger on x86 builds where
sizeof(size_t) is 4 bytes, so N > numeric_limits<unsigned>::max()
is always false.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41256
llvm-svn: 320750
Rather than adding more bits to express every
MMO flag you could want, just directly use the
MMO flags. Also fixes using a bunch of bool arguments to
getMemIntrinsicNode.
On AMDGPU, buffer and image intrinsics should always
have MODereferencable set, but currently there is no
way to do that directly during the initial intrinsic
lowering.
llvm-svn: 320746
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by printing
`<mcsymbol sym>` instead of `<MCSym=sym>`.
Only debug syntax is affected.
llvm-svn: 320685
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by printing
`liveout(...)` instead of `<regliveout>`.
Only debug syntax is affected.
llvm-svn: 320683
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by printing
`@foo` instead of `<ga:@foo>`.
Also print target flags in the MIR format since most of them are used on
global address operands.
Only debug syntax is affected.
llvm-svn: 320682
Recommitting rL319773, which was reverted due to a recursive issue
causing timeouts. This happened because I failed to check whether
the discovered loads could be narrowed further. In the case of a tree
with one or more narrow loads, that could not be further narrowed, as
well as a node that would need masking, an AND could be introduced
which could then be visited and recombined again with the same load.
This could again create the masking load, with would be combined
again... We now check that the load can be narrowed so that this
process stops.
Original commit message:
Search from AND nodes to find whether they can be propagated back to
loads, so that the AND and load can be combined into a narrow load.
We search through OR, XOR and other AND nodes and all bar one of the
leaves are required to be loads or constants. The exception node then
needs to be masked off meaning that the 'and' isn't removed, but the
loads(s) are narrowed still.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41177
llvm-svn: 320679
A v32i1 CONCAT_VECTORS of v16i1 uses promotion to v32i8 to legalize the v32i1. This results in a bunch of extract_vector_elts and a build_vector that ultimately gets scalarized.
This patch checks to see if v16i8 is legal and inserts a any_extend to that so that we can concat v16i8 to v32i8 and avoid creating the extracts.
llvm-svn: 320674
If so go ahead and get the promoted input vector to extract from. Previously, we would create a bunch of any_extends of extract_vector_elts with illegal input type that needs to be promoted. The legalization of those extract_vector_elts would then potentially introduce a truncate. So now we have a bunch of any_extends of truncates. By legalizing both parts together we avoid creating these extra nodes.
The test changes seem to be because we were previously combining the build_vector with the any_extend before the any_extend got combined with the truncate.
llvm-svn: 320669
Factor out duplicated code emitting mach-o version-min specifiers.
This should be NFC but happens to fix a bug where the code in
MCMachoStreamer didn't take the version skew between darwin and macos
versions into account.
llvm-svn: 320666
Two issues were found about machine inst scheduler when compiling ProRender
with -g for amdgcn target:
GCNScheduleDAGMILive::schedule tries to update LiveIntervals for DBG_VALUE, which it
should not since DBG_VALUE is not mapped in LiveIntervals.
when DBG_VALUE is the last instruction of MBB, ScheduleDAGInstrs::buildSchedGraph and
ScheduleDAGMILive::scheduleMI does not move RPTracker properly, which causes assertion.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41132
llvm-svn: 320650
Currently this is an LLVM extension to the COFF spec which is
experimental and intended to speed up linking. For now it is
behind a hidden cl::opt flag, but in the future we can move it
to a "real" cc1 flag and have the driver pass it through whenever
it is appropriate.
The patch to actually make use of this section in lld will come
in a followup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40917
llvm-svn: 320649
Shrink wrapping should ignore DBG_VALUEs referring to frame indices,
since the presence of debug information must not affect code
generation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41187
llvm-svn: 320606
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by printing `target-index(target-specific) + 8` instead of `<ti#0+8>` and `target-index(target-specific) + 8` instead of `<ti#0-8>`.
Only debug syntax is affected.
llvm-svn: 320565
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by printing
`%const.0 + 8` instead of `<cp#0+8>` and `%const.0 - 8` instead of
`<cp#0-8>`.
Only debug syntax is affected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41116
llvm-svn: 320564
Headers/Implementation files should be named after the class they
declare/define.
Also eliminated an `#include "llvm/CodeGen/LiveIntervalAnalysis.h"` in
favor of `class LiveIntarvals;`
llvm-svn: 320546
Summary:
Add isRenamable() predicate to MachineOperand. This predicate can be
used by machine passes after register allocation to determine whether it
is safe to rename a given register operand. Register operands that
aren't marked as renamable may be required to be assigned their current
register to satisfy constraints that are not captured by the machine
IR (e.g. ABI or ISA constraints).
Reviewers: qcolombet, MatzeB, hfinkel
Subscribers: nemanjai, mcrosier, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39400
llvm-svn: 320503
When either instruction in a fused pair has no other dependency, besides on
the other instruction, make sure that other instructions do not get
scheduled between them. Additionally, avoid fusing an instruction more than
once along the same dependency chain.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36704
llvm-svn: 320420
This is due to PR26161 needing to be resolved before we can fix
big endian bugs like PR35359. The work to split aggregates into smaller LLTs
instead of using one large scalar will take some time, so in the mean time
we'll fall back to SDAG.
Some ARM BE tests xfailed for now as a result.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40789
llvm-svn: 320388
At first, I tried to thread the x86 needle and use a target hook (isVectorShiftByScalarCheap())
to disable the transform only for non-splat pow-of-2 constants, but not AVX2, but only some
element types, but...it's difficult.
Here we just avoid the loop with the x86 vector transform that conflicts with the general DAG
combine and preserve all of the existing behavior AFAICT otherwise.
Some tests that will probably fail if someone does try to restrict this in a more targeted way
for x86-only may be found in:
test/CodeGen/X86/combine-mul.ll
test/CodeGen/X86/vector-mul.ll
test/CodeGen/X86/widen_arith-5.ll
This should prevent the infinite looping seen with:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35579
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41040
llvm-svn: 320374
This commit is the first part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D40348.
In order to allow target combines to be performed on newly combined
indexed loads, add them back to the worklist. The remainder of the
above patch will be committed in subsequent revisions and will use
this. Test cases will be included with those follow-up commits.
llvm-svn: 320365
This is a preparatory step for D34515.
This change:
- makes nodes ISD::ADDCARRY and ISD::SUBCARRY legal for i32
- lowering is done by first converting the boolean value into the carry flag
using (_, C) ← (ARMISD::ADDC R, -1) and converted back to an integer value
using (R, _) ← (ARMISD::ADDE 0, 0, C). An ARMISD::ADDE between the two
operations does the actual addition.
- for subtraction, given that ISD::SUBCARRY second result is actually a
borrow, we need to invert the value of the second operand and result before
and after using ARMISD::SUBE. We need to invert the carry result of
ARMISD::SUBE to preserve the semantics.
- given that the generic combiner may lower ISD::ADDCARRY and
ISD::SUBCARRYinto ISD::UADDO and ISD::USUBO we need to update their lowering
as well otherwise i64 operations now would require branches. This implies
updating the corresponding test for unsigned.
- add new combiner to remove the redundant conversions from/to carry flags
to/from boolean values (ARMISD::ADDC (ARMISD::ADDE 0, 0, C), -1) → C
- fixes PR34045
- fixes PR34564
- fixes PR35103
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35192
llvm-svn: 320355
Introduces the AddrFI "addressing mode", which is necessary simply because
it's not possible to write a pattern that directly matches a frameindex.
Ensure callee-saved registers are accessed relative to the stackpointer. This
is necessary as callee-saved register spills are performed before the frame
pointer is set.
Move HexagonDAGToDAGISel::isOrEquivalentToAdd to SelectionDAGISel, so we can
make use of it in the RISC-V backend.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39848
llvm-svn: 320353
Summary:
This relaxes an assertion inside SelectionDAGBuilder which is overly
restrictive on targets which have no concept of alignment (such as AVR).
In these architectures, all types are aligned to 8-bits.
After this, LLVM will only assert that accesses are aligned on targets
which actually require alignment.
This patch follows from a discussion on llvm-dev a few months ago
http://llvm.1065342.n5.nabble.com/llvm-dev-Unaligned-atomic-load-store-td112815.html
Reviewers: bogner, nemanjai, joerg, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, cactus, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39946
llvm-svn: 320243
Summary:
This is LLVM instrumentation for the new HWASan tool. It is basically
a stripped down copy of ASan at this point, w/o stack or global
support. Instrumenation adds a global constructor + runtime callbacks
for every load and store.
HWASan comes with its own IR attribute.
A brief design document can be found in
clang/docs/HardwareAssistedAddressSanitizerDesign.rst (submitted earlier).
Reviewers: kcc, pcc, alekseyshl
Subscribers: srhines, mehdi_amini, mgorny, javed.absar, eraman, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40932
llvm-svn: 320217
MachineSink attempts to place instructions near the basic blocks where
they are needed. Once an instruction has been sunk, its location
relative to other instructions no longer is consistent with the
original source code. In order to ensure correct stepping in the
debugger, the debug location for sunk instructions is either merged
with the insertion point or erased if the target successor block is
empty.
Originally submitted as r318679, revised to fix sanitizer failure and
improve testing.
Patch by Matthew Voss!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39933
llvm-svn: 320216
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by refactoring the
interfaces.
Add support for operand subreg index as an immediate to debug printing
and use ::print in the MIRPrinter.
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40965
llvm-svn: 320209
I noticed this pattern in D38316 / D38388. We failed to combine a shuffle that is either
repeating a scalar insertion at the same position in a vector or translated to a different
element index.
Like the earlier patch, this could be an instcombine too, but since we opted to make this
a DAG transform earlier, I've made this one a DAG patch too.
We do not need any legality checking because the new insert is identical to the existing
insert except that it may have a different constant insertion operand.
The constant insertion test in test/CodeGen/X86/vector-shuffle-combining.ll was the
motivation for D38756.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40209
llvm-svn: 320050
Summary:
Changed use_instructions() to use_nodbg_instructions() when
building an instruction set.
We don't want the presence of debug info to affect the code
we generate.
Reviewers: dblaikie, Eugene.Zelenko, chandlerc, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40882
llvm-svn: 320010
Currently, when creating a named section, the Wasm
frontend forces it to use `SectionKind::Data`, whereas
in fact C++ does generate code sections with custom
names.
Patch by Nicholas Wilson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40906
llvm-svn: 320002
Summary:
When calculating the RootLatency, we add up all the latencies of the
deleted instructions. But for NewRootLatency we only add the latency of
the new root instructions, ignoring the latencies of the other
instructions inserted. This leads the combiner to underestimate the cost
of patterns which add multiple instructions. This patch fixes that by
summing up the latencies of all new instructions. For NewRootNode, the
more complex getLatency function is used.
Note that we may be slightly more precise than just summing up
all latencies. For example, consider a pattern like
r1 = INS1 ..
r2 = INS2 ..
r3 = INS3 r1, r2
I think in some other places, the total latency of the pattern would be
estimated as lat(INS3) + max(lat(INS1), lat(INS2)). If you consider
that worth changing, I think it would be best to do in a follow-up
patch.
Reviewers: Gerolf, sebpop, spop, fhahn
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: evandro, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40307
llvm-svn: 319951
If the mask needs to be promoted that should occur by the legalizer detecting the mask operand needs to be promoted not as a side effect of another action.
llvm-svn: 319852
The mask will be promoted if necessary when operands are promoted. It's possible the mask type is legal, but the setcc result type is a different. We shouldn't promote to the setcc result type unless the mask needs to be promoted.
llvm-svn: 319850
The patch originally broke Chromium (crbug.com/791714) due to its failing to
specify that the new pseudo instructions clobber EFLAGS. This commit fixes
that.
> Summary: This strengthens the guard and matches MSVC.
>
> Reviewers: hans, etienneb
>
> Subscribers: hiraditya, JDevlieghere, vlad.tsyrklevich, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40622
llvm-svn: 319824
There's no such thing as a setcc with vector operands and scalar result. And if we're trying to widen the result we would have to already be looking at a vector result type.
So this patch renames the VSETCC function as the SETCC function and delete the original SETCC function.
llvm-svn: 319799
Search from AND nodes to find whether they can be propagated back to
loads, so that the AND and load can be combined into a narrow load.
We search through OR, XOR and other AND nodes and all bar one of the
leaves are required to be loads or constants. The exception node then
needs to be masked off meaning that the 'and' isn't removed, but the
loads(s) are narrowed still.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39604
llvm-svn: 319773
Summary:
Found out, at code inspection, that there was a fault in
DAGCombiner::CombineConsecutiveLoads for big-endian targets.
A BUILD_PAIR is always having the least significant bits of
the composite value in element 0. So when we are doing the checks
for consecutive loads, for big endian targets, we should check
if the load to elt 1 is at the lower address and the load
to elt 0 is at the higher address.
Normally this bug only resulted in missed oppurtunities for
doing the load combine. I guess that in some rare situation it
could lead to faulty combines, but I've not seen that happen.
Note that this patch actually will trigger load combine for
some big endian regression tests.
One example is test/CodeGen/PowerPC/anon_aggr.ll where we now get
t76: i64,ch = load<LD8[FixedStack-9]
instead of
t37: i32,ch = load<LD4[FixedStack-10]>
t35: i32,ch = load<LD4[FixedStack-9]>
t41: i64 = build_pair t37, t35
before legalization. Then the legalization will split the LD8
into two loads, so the end result is the same. That should
verify that the transfomation is correct now.
Reviewers: niravd, hfinkel
Reviewed By: niravd
Subscribers: nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40444
llvm-svn: 319771
Pull the checks upon the load out from ReduceLoadWidth into their own
function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40833
llvm-svn: 319766
MachineRegisterInfo used to allow just one regalloc hint per virtual
register. This patch extends this to a vector of regalloc hints, which is
filled in by common code with sorted copy hints. Such hints will make for
more ID copies that can be removed.
NB! This improvement is currently (and hopefully temporarily) *disabled* by
default, except for SystemZ. The only reason for this is the big impact this
has on tests, which has unfortunately proven unmanageable. It was a long
while since all the tests were updated and just waiting for review (which
didn't happen), but now targets have to enable this themselves
instead. Several targets could get a head-start by downloading the tests
updates from the Phabricator review. Thanks to those who helped, and sorry
you now have to do this step yourselves.
This should be an improvement generally for any target!
The target may still create its own hint, in which case this has highest
priority and is stored first in the vector. If it has target-type, it will
not be recomputed, as per the previous behaviour.
The temporary hook enableMultipleCopyHints() will be removed as soon as all
targets return true.
Review: Quentin Colombet, Ulrich Weigand.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D38128
llvm-svn: 319754
The CONCAT_VECTORS operand get its type from getSetCCResultType, but if the mask type and the setcc have different scalar sizes this creates an illegal CONCAT_VECTORS operation. The concat type should be 2x the mask type, and then an extend should be added if needed.
llvm-svn: 319744
Consistently use the same parameter names as the names of the affected
fields. This avoids some unintuitive abbreviations like `isSS`.
llvm-svn: 319722
While we cannot skip the whole TwoAddressInstructionPass even for -O0
there are some parts of the pass that are currently skipped at -O0 but
not for optnone. Changing this as there is no reason to have those two
hit different code paths here.
llvm-svn: 319721
MatchRotate assumes the types of the types of LHS and RHS are equal,
which is always the case then they come from an OR node, but here
we're getting them from two different TRUNC nodes, so we have to check
the types.
llvm-svn: 319695
If the truncation has been pushed past the or-node, look through it and
truncate afterwards.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40792
llvm-svn: 319692
This patch splits atomics out of the generic G_LOAD/G_STORE and into their own
G_ATOMIC_LOAD/G_ATOMIC_STORE. This is a pragmatic decision rather than a
necessary one. Atomic load/store has little in implementation in common with
non-atomic load/store. They tend to be handled very differently throughout the
backend. It also has the nice side-effect of slightly improving the common-case
performance at ISel since there's no longer a need for an atomicity check in the
matcher table.
All targets have been updated to remove the atomic load/store check from the
G_LOAD/G_STORE path. AArch64 has also been updated to mark
G_ATOMIC_LOAD/G_ATOMIC_STORE legal.
There is one issue with this patch though which also affects the extending loads
and truncating stores. The rules only match when an appropriate G_ANYEXT is
present in the MIR. For example,
(G_ATOMIC_STORE (G_TRUNC:s16 (G_ANYEXT:s32 (G_ATOMIC_LOAD:s16 X))))
will match but:
(G_ATOMIC_STORE (G_ATOMIC_LOAD:s16 X))
will not. This shouldn't be a problem at the moment, but as we get better at
eliminating extends/truncates we'll likely start failing to match in some
cases. The current plan is to fix this in a patch that changes the
representation of extending-load/truncating-store to allow the MMO to describe
a different type to the operation.
llvm-svn: 319691
Summary:
Move splitIndirectCriticalEdges() from CodeGenPrepare to BasicBlockUtils.h so
that it can be called from other places.
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40750
llvm-svn: 319689
As part of the unification of the debug format and the MIR format, print
MBB references as '%bb.5'.
The MIR printer prints the IR name of a MBB only for block definitions.
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/BB#" << ([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)->getNumber\(\)/" << printMBBReference(*\1)/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/BB#" << ([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)\.getNumber\(\)/" << printMBBReference(\1)/g'
* find . \( -name "*.txt" -o -name "*.s" -o -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/BB#([0-9]+)/%bb.\1/g'
* grep -nr 'BB#' and fix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40422
llvm-svn: 319665
An instruction returned by TII->convertToThreeAddress() may contain a %noreg
(undef) operand, which is not expected by tryInstructionTransform(). So if
this MI is sunk to a lower point in MBB, it must be skipped when later
encountered.
A new set SunkInstrs is used for this purpose.
Note: there is no test supplied here, as this was triggered on SystemZ while
working on a review of instruction flags. A test case for this bugfix will be
included in the upcoming SystemZ commit.
Review: Quentin Colombet
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40711
llvm-svn: 319646
Both LoadedVT and NarrowLoad are passed as references and neither
of them are used by any of its callers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40713
llvm-svn: 319645
If we have a non-splat constant shift amount, the minimum shift amount can be used to infer the number of zero upper bits of the result. There's probably a lot more that we can do here, but this
fixes a case where I wanted to infer the sign bit as zero when all the shift amounts are non-zero.
llvm-svn: 319639
SelectionDAGISel::LowerArguments assumes sret addr space is 0, which is
not true for amdgcn---amdgiz target.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40255
llvm-svn: 319630
Two issues found when doing codegen for splitting vector with non-zero alloca addr space:
DAGTypeLegalizer::SplitVecRes_INSERT_VECTOR_ELT/SplitVecOp_EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT uses dummy pointer info for creating
SDStore. Since one pointer operand contains multiply and add, InferPointerInfo is unable to
infer the correct pointer info, which ends up with a dummy pointer info for the target to lower
store and results in isel failure. The fix is to introduce MachinePointerInfo::getUnknownStack to
represent MachinePointerInfo which is known in alloca address space but without other information.
TargetLowering::getVectorElementPointer uses value type of pointer in addr space 0 for
multiplication of index and then add it to the pointer. However the pointer may be in an addr
space which has different size than addr space 0. The fix is to use the pointer value type for
index multiplication.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39758
llvm-svn: 319622
Currently, the outliner considers candidates that intersect with themselves in
the candidate pruning step. That is, candidates of the form "AA" in ranges like
"AAAAAA". In that range, it looks like there are 5 instances of "AA" that could
possibly be outlined, and that's considered in the benefit calculation.
However, only at most 3 instances of "AA" could ever be outlined in "AAAAAA".
Thus, it's possible to pass through "AA" to the candidate selection step even
though it's *never* the case that "AA" could be outlined. This makes it so that
when we find candidates, we consider only non-overlapping occurrences of that
candidate.
llvm-svn: 319588
These are blocks that haven't not been executed during training. For large
projects this could make a significant difference. For the project, I was
looking at, I got an order of magnitude decrease in the size of the total YAML
files with this and r319235.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40678
Re-commit after fixing the failing testcase in rL319576, rL319577 and
rL319578.
llvm-svn: 319581
These are blocks that haven't not been executed during training. For large
projects this could make a significant difference. For the project, I was
looking at, I got an order of magnitude decrease in the size of the total YAML
files with this and r319235.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40678
llvm-svn: 319556
Summary:
1/ Operand folding during complex pattern matching for LEAs has been extended, such that it promotes Scale to
accommodate similar operand appearing in the DAG e.g.
T1 = A + B
T2 = T1 + 10
T3 = T2 + A
For above DAG rooted at T3, X86AddressMode will now look like
Base = B , Index = A , Scale = 2 , Disp = 10
2/ During OptimizeLEAPass down the pipeline factorization is now performed over LEAs so that if there is an opportunity
then complex LEAs (having 3 operands) could be factored out e.g.
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,2), %rcx
will be factored as following
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
leal (%rdx,%rcx) , %edx
3/ Aggressive operand folding for AM based selection for LEAs is sensitive to loops, thus avoiding creation of any complex LEAs within a loop.
4/ Simplify LEA converts (lea (BASE,1,INDEX,0) --> add (BASE, INDEX) which offers better through put.
PR32755 will be taken care of by this pathc.
Previous patch revisions : r313343 , r314886
Reviewers: lsaba, RKSimon, craig.topper, qcolombet, jmolloy, jbhateja
Reviewed By: lsaba, RKSimon, jbhateja
Subscribers: jmolloy, spatel, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35014
llvm-svn: 319543
Summary: LegalizerInfo assumes all G_MERGE_VALUES and G_UNMERGE_VALUES instructions are legal, so it is not possible to legalize vector operations on illegal vector types. This patch fixes the problem by removing the related check and adding default actions for G_MERGE_VALUES and G_UNMERGE_VALUES.
Reviewers: qcolombet, ab, dsanders, aditya_nandakumar, t.p.northover, kristof.beyls
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: rovka, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39823
llvm-svn: 319524
Type promotion makes no guarantee about the contents of the promoted bits. Since the gather/scatter instruction will use the bits to calculate addresses, we need to ensure they aren't garbage.
llvm-svn: 319520
These command line options are not intended for public use, and often
don't even make sense in the context of a particular tool anyway. About
90% of them are already hidden, but when people add new options they
forget to hide them, so if you were to make a brand new tool today, link
against one of LLVM's libraries, and run tool -help you would get a
bunch of junk that doesn't make sense for the tool you're writing.
This patch hides these options. The real solution is to not have
libraries defining command line options, but that's a much larger effort
and not something I'm prepared to take on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40674
llvm-svn: 319505
G_ATOMICRMW_* is generally legal on AArch64. The exception is G_ATOMICRMW_NAND.
G_ATOMIC_CMPXCHG_WITH_SUCCESS needs to be lowered to G_ATOMIC_CMPXCHG with an
external comparison.
Note that IRTranslator doesn't generate these instructions yet.
llvm-svn: 319466
output
As part of the unification of the debug format and the MIR format,
always use `printReg` to print all kinds of registers.
Updated the tests using '_' instead of '%noreg' until we decide which
one we want to be the default one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40421
llvm-svn: 319445
Re applying after fixing issues in the diff, sorry for any painful conflicts/merges!
Original RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-August/117028.html
This change adds a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag. The section contains pairs of function symbol references (8 byte) and stack sizes (unsigned LEB128).
The contents of this section can be used to measure changes to stack sizes between different versions of the compiler or a source base. The advantage of having a section is that we can extract this information when examining binaries that we didn't build, and it allows users and tools easy access to that information just by referencing the binary.
There is a follow up change to add an option to clang.
Thanks.
Reviewers: hfinkel, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: thegameg, asb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39788
llvm-svn: 319430
As part of the unification of the debug format and the MIR format, avoid
printing "vreg" for virtual registers (which is one of the current MIR
possibilities).
Basically:
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E "s/%vreg([0-9]+)/%\1/g"
* grep -nr '%vreg' . and fix if needed
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E "s/ vreg([0-9]+)/ %\1/g"
* grep -nr 'vreg[0-9]\+' . and fix if needed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40420
llvm-svn: 319427
Summary:
Original RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-August/117028.html
I wasn't sure who to put as reviewers, so please add/remove people as appropriate.
This change adds a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag. The section contains pairs of function symbol references (8 byte) and stack sizes (unsigned LEB128).
The contents of this section can be used to measure changes to stack sizes between different versions of the compiler or a source base. The advantage of having a section is that we can extract this information when examining binaries that we didn't build, and it allows users and tools easy access to that information just by referencing the binary.
There is a follow up change to add an option to clang.
Thanks.
Reviewers: hfinkel, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: thegameg, asb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39788
llvm-svn: 319423
visitAND attempts to narrow the width of extending loads that are
then masked off. ReduceLoadWidth already exists for a similar purpose
and handles shifts, so I've moved the code to handle AND nodes there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39595
llvm-svn: 319421
If we put in an assertsext/zext here, we're able to generate better truncate code using pack on pre-avx512 targets.
Similar is already done during type legalization. This is the equivalent for op legalization
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40591
llvm-svn: 319368
If common type is different we should bail out due to we will not be
able to create a select or Phi of these values.
Basically it is done in ExtAddrMode::compare however it does not work
if we handle the null first and then two values of different types.
so add a check in initializeMap as well. The check in ExtAddrMode::compare
is used as earlier bail out.
Reviewers: reames, john.brawn
Reviewed By: john.brawn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40479
llvm-svn: 319292
The object can't straddle the address space
wrap around, so I think it's OK to assume any
offsets added to the base object pointer can't
overflow. Similar logic already appears to be
applied in SelectionDAGBuilder when lowering
aggregate returns.
llvm-svn: 319272
Previously we had an isel pattern to add the truncate. Instead use Promote to add the truncate to the DAG before isel.
The Promote legalization code had to be updated to prevent an infinite loop if promotion took multiple steps because it wasn't remembering the previously tried value.
llvm-svn: 319259
Summary:
Recommitting this with the correct sorting predicate. The Low field of Clusters is a ConstantInt and
cannot be directly compared. So we needed to invoke slt (signed less than) to compare correctly.
This fixes failures in the following tests uncovered by D39245:
LLVM :: CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt3.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/ARM/switch-minsize.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/X86/switch.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/X86/switch-bt.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/X86/switch-density.ll
Reviewers: hans, fhahn
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: aemerson, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40541
llvm-svn: 319210
Summary:
They're not always mutually exclusive. read-modify-write atomics are both
at the same time. One example of this is the SWP instructions on AArch64.
Another example is GlobalISel's G_ATOMICRMW_* generic instructions which
will be added in a later patch.
Reviewers: arphaman, aemerson
Reviewed By: aemerson
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40157
llvm-svn: 319202
The motivation behind this patch is that future directions require us to
be able to compute the hash value of records independently of actually
using them for de-duplication.
The current structure of TypeSerializer / TypeTableBuilder being a
single entry point that takes an unserialized type record, and then
hashes and de-duplicates it is not flexible enough to allow this.
At the same time, the existing TypeSerializer is already extremely
complex for this very reason -- it tries to be too many things. In
addition to serializing, hashing, and de-duplicating, ti also supports
splitting up field list records and adding continuations. All of this
functionality crammed into this one class makes it very complicated to
work with and hard to maintain.
To solve all of these problems, I've re-written everything from scratch
and split the functionality into separate pieces that can easily be
reused. The end result is that one class TypeSerializer is turned into 3
new classes SimpleTypeSerializer, ContinuationRecordBuilder, and
TypeTableBuilder, each of which in isolation is simple and
straightforward.
A quick summary of these new classes and their responsibilities are:
- SimpleTypeSerializer : Turns a non-FieldList leaf type into a series of
bytes. Does not do any hashing. Every time you call it, it will
re-serialize and return bytes again. The same instance can be re-used
over and over to avoid re-allocations, and in exchange for this
optimization the bytes returned by the serializer only live until the
caller attempts to serialize a new record.
- ContinuationRecordBuilder : Turns a FieldList-like record into a series
of fragments. Does not do any hashing. Like SimpleTypeSerializer,
returns references to privately owned bytes, so the storage is
invalidated as soon as the caller tries to re-use the instance. Works
equally well for LF_FIELDLIST as it does for LF_METHODLIST, solving a
long-standing theoretical limitation of the previous implementation.
- TypeTableBuilder : Accepts sequences of bytes that the user has already
serialized, and inserts them by de-duplicating with a hash table. For
the sake of convenience and efficiency, this class internally stores a
SimpleTypeSerializer so that it can accept unserialized records. The
same is not true of ContinuationRecordBuilder. The user is required to
create their own instance of ContinuationRecordBuilder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40518
llvm-svn: 319198
As part of the unification of the debug format and the MIR format,
always print registers as lowercase.
* Only debug printing is affected. It now follows MIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40417
llvm-svn: 319187
This is needed for cases when the memory access is not as big as the width of
the data type. For instance, storing i1 (1 bit) would be done in a byte (8
bits).
Using 'BitSize >> 3' (or '/ 8') would e.g. give the memory access of an i1 a
size of 0, which for instance makes alias analysis return NoAlias even when
it shouldn't.
There are no tests as this was done as a follow-up to the bugfix for the case
where this was discovered (r318824). This handles more similar cases.
Review: Björn Petterson
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40339
llvm-svn: 319173
LLVM Coding Standards:
Function names should be verb phrases (as they represent actions), and
command-like function should be imperative. The name should be camel
case, and start with a lower case letter (e.g. openFile() or isFoo()).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40416
llvm-svn: 319168
The priorities in the section name suffixes are zero padded,
allowing the linker to just do a lexical sort.
Add zero padding for .ctors sections in ELF as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40407
llvm-svn: 319150
Unoptimized IR can have linear sequences of stores to an array, where the
initial GEP for the first store is formed from the pointer to the array, and the
GEP for each store after the first is formed from the previous GEP with some
offset in an inductive fashion.
The (large) resulting DAG when analyzed by DAGCombine undergoes an excessive
number of combines as each store node is examined every time its' offset node
is combined with any child of the offset. One of the transformations is
findBetterNeighborChains which assists MergeConsecutiveStores. The former
relies on repeated chain walking to do its' work, however MergeConsecutiveStores
is disabled at O0 which makes the transformation redundant.
Any optimization level other than O0 would invoke InstCombine which would
resolve the chain of GEPs into flat base + offset GEP for each store which
does not exhibit the repeated examination of each store to the array.
Disabling this optimization fixes an excessive compile time issue (30~ minutes
for the test case provided) at O0.
Reviewers: niravd, craig.topper, t.p.northover
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40193
llvm-svn: 319142
This fixes cases where we wouldn't perform various register operand
checks just because we didn't happen to have a definition in the
MCInstrDesc. This changes the code to only skip the tests that actually
depend on the MCInstrDesc definition.
This makes the machine verifier spot the problem from
https://llvm.org/PR33071 after the pass that actually caused it.
llvm-svn: 319141
Additional checks for phi operands:
- first operand should be a virtual register def. It should not be
tied, implicit, internalread, earlyclobber or a read.
- The other operands should be register/mbb operands next to each other
- The register operands should not be implicit, internalread,
earlyclobber, debug or tied.
- We can perform most of the PHI checks even for unreachable blocks.
llvm-svn: 319140
With AVX512 vXi1 types are legal so we shouldn't be extending them.
This change is similar to existing code in the zext(setcc) combine.
llvm-svn: 319120
The current way that trivial addressing modes are detected incorrectly thinks
that null pointers are non-trivial, leading to an infinite loop where we keep
duplicating the same select. Fix this by aware of null when deciding if an
addressing mode is trivial.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40447
llvm-svn: 319019
Summary:
Currently ScalarizeVecRes_SETCC checks for the result type being a vector and jumps to ScalarizeVecRes_VSETCC. But if we're scalarizing a vector result, aren't we guaranteed to be looking at a vector type?
This patch deletes the current ScalarizeVecRes_SETCC and renames ScalarizeVecRes_VSETCC to ScalarizeVecRes_SETCC.
Reviewers: RKSimon, arsenm, eladcohen, zvi
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40452
llvm-svn: 318982
CodeGenPrepare sinks address computations from one basic block to another
and attempts to reuse address computations that have already been sunk. If
the same address computation appears twice with the first instance as an
operand of a load whose result is an operand to a simplifable select,
CodeGenPrepare simplifies the select and recursively erases the now dead
instructions. CodeGenPrepare then attempts to use the erased address
computation for the second load.
Fix this by erasing the cached address value if it has zero uses before
looking for the address value in the sunken address map.
This partially resolves PR35209.
Thanks to Alexander Richardson for reporting the issue!
This fixed version relands r318032 which was reverted in r318049 due to
sanitizer buildbot failures.
Reviewers: john.brawn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39841
llvm-svn: 318956
This patch extends the recent work in optimizeMemoryInst to make it able to
combine more ExtAddrMode fields than just the BaseReg.
This fixes some benchmark regressions introduced by r309397, where GVN PRE is
hoisting a getelementptr such that it can no longer be combined into the
addressing mode of the load or store that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38133
llvm-svn: 318949
TableGen already generates code for selecting a G_FDIV, so we only need
to add a test.
For the legalizer and reg bank select, we do the same thing as for the
other floating point binary operations: either mark as legal if we have
a FP unit or lower to a libcall, and map to the floating point
registers.
llvm-svn: 318915
TableGen already generates code for selecting a G_FMUL, so we only need
to add a test for that part.
For the legalizer and reg bank select, we do the same thing as the other
floating point binary operators: either mark as legal if we have a FP
unit or lower to a libcall, and map to the floating point registers.
llvm-svn: 318910
This patch reverts change to X86TargetLowering::getScalarShiftAmountTy in
rL318727 and move the logic to DAGTypeLegalizer::SplitInteger.
The reason is that getScalarShiftAmountTy returns a shift amount type that
is suitable for common use cases in CodeGen. DAGTypeLegalizer::SplitInteger
is a rare situation which requires a shift amount type larger than what
getScalarShiftAmountTy. In this case, it is more reasonable to do special
handling of shift amount type in DAGTypeLegalizer::SplitInteger only. If
similar situations arises the logic may be moved to a separate function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40320
llvm-svn: 318890
Since i1 is a legal type, this:
NumBytes = Op1->getMemoryVT().getSizeInBits() >> 3;
is wrong and should be instead
NumBytes = Op0->getMemoryVT().getStoreSize();
There seems to be more places where this should be fixed outside DAGCombiner.
Review: Hal Finkel
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35366
llvm-svn: 318824
DAGTypeLegalizer::SplitInteger uses default pointer size as shift amount constant type,
which causes less performant ISA in amdgcn---amdgiz target since the default pointer
type is i64 whereas the desired shift amount type is i32.
This patch fixes that by using TLI.getScalarShiftAmountTy in DAGTypeLegalizer::SplitInteger.
The X86 change is necessary since splitting i512 requires shifting amount of 256, which
cannot be held by i8.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40148
llvm-svn: 318727
Normally this would be cleaned up by promoting the condition operand next. But in the attached case we promoted the result from v2i48 to v2i64 and the condition from v2i1 to v2i48. Then we tried to "promote" the v2i48 condition back to v2i1 because that's what the SetCC result type for v2i64 is on X86 with VLX. But promote is either a NOP or SIGN_EXTEND and this would need a truncation.
With the change here we now get the SetCC type of v2i1 when we're handling the result promotion and the operand no longer needs to be promoted itself.
Fixes PR35272.
llvm-svn: 318706
MachineSink attempts to place instructions near the basic blocks where
they are needed. Once an instruction has been sunk, its location
relative to other instructions is no longer consistent with the
original source code. In order to ensure correct single-stepping and
profiling, the debug location for sunk instructions is either merged
with the insertion point or erased if the target successor block is
empty.
Patch by Matthew Voss!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39933
llvm-svn: 318679
The instructions addis,addi, bl are used to calculate the address of TLS thread
local variables. These TLS access code sequences are generated repeatedly every
time the thread local variable is accessed. By communicating to Machine CSE that
X2 is guaranteed to have the same value within the same function call (so called
Caller Preserved Physical Register), the redundant TLS access code sequences are
cleaned up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39173
llvm-svn: 318661
We must collect all AddModes even if they are the same.
This is due to Original value is different but we need all original
values collected as they are used as anchors in common phi finding.
Reviewers: john.brawn, reames
Reviewed By: john.brawn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40166
llvm-svn: 318638
Instead of asserting that the type sizes are exactly equal, we check
that the new size is big enough to contain the original type.
We have to relax this constrain because, right now, we sometimes
specify that things that are smaller than a storage type are legal
instead of widening everything to the size of a storage type.
E.g., we say that G_AND s16 is legal and we map that on GPR32.
This is something we may revisit in the future (either by changing
the legalization process or keeping track separately of the storage
size and the size of the type), but let us reflect the reality of
the situation for now.
llvm-svn: 318587
If a vreg's bank is specified in the registers block and one of its
defs or uses also specifies the bank, we end up checking that the
RegBank is equal to diagnose conflicting banks. The problem comes up
for generic vregs, where we weren't fully initializing the VRegInfo
when parsing the registers block, so we'd end up comparing a null
pointer to uninitialized memory.
This fixes a non-deterministic failure when round tripping through MIR
with generic vregs.
llvm-svn: 318543
Previously we were assuming all results were vectors and calling SetWidenedVector, but if its a chain result we should just replace uses instead.
This fixes an error found by expensive checks after r318368.
llvm-svn: 318509
TransferDbgValues (capital 'T') is wired into ReplaceAllUsesWith, and
transferDbgValues (lowercase 't') is used elsewhere (e.g in Legalize).
Both functions should be doing the exact same thing. This patch
consolidates the logic into one place.
This was reverted in r318455 because some newly introduced asserts,
which I thought were NFC, were firing. I filed PR35338. For now I've
weakened the asserts.
Testing: check-llvm, check-clang, and a stage2 Rel+Deb build of clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40104
llvm-svn: 318498
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).
llvm-svn: 318490
The sign extend might be from an i16 or i8 type and was inserted by InstCombine to match the pointer width. X86 gather legalization isn't currently detecting this to reinsert a sign extend to make things legal.
It's a bit weird for the SelectionDAGBuilder to do this kind of optimization in the first place. With this removed we can at least lean on InstCombine somewhat to ensure the index is i32 or i64.
I'll work on trying to recover some of the test cases by removing sign extends in the backend when its safe to do so with an understanding of the current legalizer capabilities.
This should fix PR30690.
llvm-svn: 318466
TransferDbgValues (capital 'T') is wired into ReplaceAllUsesWith, and
transferDbgValues (lowercase 't') is used elsewhere (e.g in Legalize).
Both functions should be doing the exact same thing. This patch
consolidates the logic into one place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40104
llvm-svn: 318448
SelectionDAGBuilder::visitAlloca assumes alloca address space is 0, which is
incorrect for triple amdgcn---amdgiz and causes isel failure.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40095
llvm-svn: 318392
Change the calculation for the desired ValueType for non-sign
extending loads, as in those cases we don't care about the
higher bits. This creates a smaller ExtVT and allows for such
combinations as:
(srl (zextload i16, [addr]), 8) -> (zextload i8, [addr + 1])
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40034
llvm-svn: 318390
The LatencyPriorityQueue doesn't currently check whether the SU being removed really exists in the Queue.
This method fails quietly when SU is not found and removes the last element from the Queue, leading to unexpected behavior.
Unfortunately, this only occurs on our custom target, with the custom scheduler. In our case, when remove() is invoked, it removes the wrong SU at the end of the Queue, which is only discovered later when VerifyScheduledDAG() is invoked and finds that some nodes were not scheduled at all.
As this is only reproducible with a lot of proprietary code, I'm hopeful this assert is straightforward enough to not necessitate a test.
Patch by Ondrej Glasnak!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40084
llvm-svn: 318387
Summary:
Use use_nodbg_empty() rather than use_empty() in
MachineRegisterInfo::EmitLiveInCopies() when determining if a livein
register has any uses or not. Otherwise a single dbg.value can make us
generate different code, meaning -g would affect code generation.
Found when compiling code for my out-of-tree target. Unfortunately I
haven't been able to reproduce the problem on X86 or any of the other
in-tree targets that I tried, so no test case.
Reviewers: MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39044
llvm-svn: 318382
For example, this is currently reachable by X86 if you use a masked store intrinsic with a v1iX type.
Using a fatal error seems like a better user experience if someone were to encounter this on a release build. There are several other similar places that have been converted from unreachable to fatal error previously.
llvm-svn: 318379
processDbgDeclares assumes pointer size is the same for different addr spaces.
It uses pointer size for addr space 0 for all pointers, which causes assertion
in stripAndAccumulateInBoundsConstantOffsets for amdgcn---amdgiz since
pointer in addr space 5 has different size than in addr space 0.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40085
llvm-svn: 318370
Summary:
This patch adds a LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV which, like LLVM_ENABLE_DAGISEL_COV,
causes TableGen to instrument the generated table to collect rule coverage
information. However, LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV goes a bit further than
LLVM_ENABLE_DAGISEL_COV. The information is written to files
(${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/gisel-coverage-* by default). These files can then be
concatenated into ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-all after which TableGen will
read this information and use it to emit warnings about untested rules.
This technique could also be used by SelectionDAG and can be further
extended to detect hot rules and give them priority over colder rules.
Usage:
* Enable LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV in CMake
* Build the compiler and run some tests
* cat gisel-coverage-[0-9]* > gisel-coverage-all
* Delete lib/Target/*/*GenGlobalISel.inc*
* Build the compiler
Known issues:
* ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-all must be generated as a manual
step due to a lack of a portable 'cat' command. It should be the
concatenation of all ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-[0-9]* files.
* There's no mechanism to discard coverage information when the ruleset
changes
Depends on D39742
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, aditya_nandakumar, rovka
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: vsk, arsenm, nhaehnle, mgorny, kristof.beyls, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39747
llvm-svn: 318356
Due to integer precision, we might have numerator greater than denominator in
the branch probability scaling. Add a check to prevent this from happening.
llvm-svn: 318353
In constructAbstractSubprogramScopeDIE there can be a potential mismatch
between `this` and the CU of ContextDIE when a scope is shared between
two DISubprograms belonging to a different CU. In that case, `this` is
the CU that was specified in the IR, but the CU of ContextDIE is that of
the first subprogram that was emitted. This patch fixes the mismatch by
looking up the CU of ContextDIE, and switching to use that.
This fixes PR35212 (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35212)
Patch by Philip Craig!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39981
llvm-svn: 318289
artifacts along with DCE
Legalization Artifacts are all those insts that are there to make the
type system happy. Currently, the target needs to say all combinations
of extends and truncs are legal and there's no way of verifying that
post legalization, we only have *truly* legal instructions. This patch
changes roughly the legalization algorithm to process all illegal insts
at one go, and then process all truncs/extends that were added to
satisfy the type constraints separately trying to combine trivial cases
until they converge. This has the added benefit that, the target
legalizerinfo can only say which truncs and extends are okay and the
artifact combiner would combine away other exts and truncs.
Updated legalization algorithm to roughly the following pseudo code.
WorkList Insts, Artifacts;
collect_all_insts_and_artifacts(Insts, Artifacts);
do {
for (Inst in Insts)
legalizeInstrStep(Inst, Insts, Artifacts);
for (Artifact in Artifacts)
tryCombineArtifact(Artifact, Insts, Artifacts);
} while(!Insts.empty());
Also, wrote a simple wrapper equivalent to SetVector, except for
erasing, it avoids moving all elements over by one and instead just
nulls them out.
llvm-svn: 318210
This patch peels off the top case in switch statement into a branch if the
probability exceeds a threshold. This will help the branch prediction and
avoids the extra compares when lowering into chain of branches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D39262
llvm-svn: 318202
Clang implements the -finstrument-functions flag inherited from GCC, which
inserts calls to __cyg_profile_func_{enter,exit} on function entry and exit.
This is useful for getting a trace of how the functions in a program are
executed. Normally, the calls remain even if a function is inlined into another
function, but it is useful to be able to turn this off for users who are
interested in a lower-level trace, i.e. one that reflects what functions are
called post-inlining. (We use this to generate link order files for Chromium.)
LLVM already has a pass for inserting similar instrumentation calls to
mcount(), which it does after inlining. This patch renames and extends that
pass to handle calls both to mcount and the cygprofile functions, before and/or
after inlining as controlled by function attributes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39287
llvm-svn: 318195
Summary:
Bypass of slow divs based on operand values is currently disabled for
-Os. Do the same when profile summary is available and the working set
size of the application is huge. This is similar to how loop peeling is
guarded by hasHugeWorkingSetSize. In the div bypass case, the generated
extra code (and the extra branch) tendss to outweigh the benefits of the
bypass. This results in noticeable performance improvement on an
internal application.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39992
llvm-svn: 318179
TargetLowering::LowerCallTo assumes that sret value type corresponds to a
pointer in default address space, which is incorrect, since sret value type
should correspond to a pointer in alloca address space, which may not
be the default address space. This causes assertion for amdgcn target
in amdgiz environment.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39996
llvm-svn: 318167
For now at least. We clearly need some kind of comdat or
linkonce_odr support for wasm but currently COMDAT is not
supported.
Disable COMDAT support in the same way we do the Mach-O. This
also causes clang not to generated COMDATs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39873
llvm-svn: 318123
CodeGenPrepare sinks address computations from one basic block to another
and attempts to reuse address computations that have already been sunk. If
the same address computation appears twice with the first instance as an
operand of a load whose result is an operand to a simplifable select,
CodeGenPrepare simplifies the select and recursively erases the now dead
instructions. CodeGenPrepare then attempts to use the erased address
computation for the second load.
Fix this by erasing the cached address value if it has zero uses before
looking for the address value in the sunken address map.
This partially resolves PR35209.
Thanks to Alexander Richardson for reporting the issue!
Reviewers: john.brawn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39841
llvm-svn: 318032
Allow a pattern rewriter to be installed in CodeGenDAGPatterns and use it to
correct situations where SelectionDAG and GlobalISel disagree on
representation. For example, it would rewrite:
(sextload:i32 $ptr)<<unindexedload>><<sextload>><<sextloadi16>
to:
(sext:i32 (load:i16 $ptr)<<unindexedload>>)
I'd have preferred to replace the fragments and have the expansion happen
naturally as part of PatFrag expansion but the type inferencing system can't
cope with loads of types narrower than those mentioned in register classes.
This is because the SDTCisInt's on the sext constrain both the result and
operand to the 'legal' integer types (where legal is defined as 'a register
class can contain the type') which immediately rules the narrower types out.
Several targets (those with only one legal integer type) would then go on to
crash on the SDTCisOpSmallerThanOp<> when it removes all the possible types
for the result of the extend.
Also, improve isObviouslySafeToFold() slightly to automatically return true for
neighbouring instructions. There can't be any re-ordering problems if
re-ordering isn't happenning. We'll need to improve it further to handle
sign/zero-extending loads when the extend and load aren't immediate neighbours
though.
llvm-svn: 317971
This is a fix for a bug in r317947. We were supposed to check that all the indices are are constant 0, but instead we're only make sure that indices that are constant are 0. Non-constant indices are being ignored.
llvm-svn: 317950
Currently we can only get a uniform base from a simple GEP with 2 operands. This causes us to miss address folding opportunities for simple global array accesses as the test case shows.
This patch adds support for larger GEPs if the other indices are 0 since those don't require any additional computations to be inserted.
We may also want to handle constant splats of zero here, but I'm leaving that for future work when I have a real world example.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39911
llvm-svn: 317947
Summary:
The associated debug value is updated when the virtual source register
of a copy is completely eliminated and replaced with a rematerialize
value in the defed register of the copy. As the debug value now is
associated with another register it also need to be moved, otherwise
the debug value isn't valid.
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: MatzeB, llvm-commits, qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38024
llvm-svn: 317880
* The method getRegAllocationHints() is now of bool type instead of void. If
true is returned, regalloc (AllocationOrder) will *only* try to allocate the
hints, as opposed to merely trying them before non-hinted registers.
* TargetRegisterInfo::getRegAllocationHints() is implemented for SystemZ with
an increase in number of LOCRs.
In this case, it is desired to force the hints even though there is a slight
increase in spilling, because if a non-hinted register would be allocated,
the LOCRMux pseudo would have to be expanded with a jump sequence. The LOCR
(Load On Condition) SystemZ instruction must have both operands in either the
low or high part of the 64 bit register.
Reviewers: Quentin Colombet and Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D36795
llvm-svn: 317879
Summary: This fixes failure in CodeGen/AArch64/global-merge-group-by-use.ll uncovered by D39245.
Reviewers: ab, asl
Reviewed By: ab
Subscribers: aemerson, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39635
llvm-svn: 317817
In Rust, a trait can be implemented for any type, and if a trait
object pointer is used for the type, then a virtual table will be
emitted for that trait/type combination.
We would like debuggers to be able to inspect trait objects, which
requires finding the concrete type associated with a given vtable.
This patch changes LLVM so that any type can be passed to
replaceVTableHolder. This allows the Rust compiler to emit the needed
debug info -- associating a vtable with the concrete type for which it
was emitted.
This is a DWARF extension: DWARF only specifies the meaning of
DW_AT_containing_type in one specific situation. This style of DWARF
extension is routine, though, and LLVM already has one such case for
DW_AT_containing_type.
Patch by Tom Tromey!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39503
llvm-svn: 317730
This patch implements Chandler's idea [0] for supporting languages that
require support for infinite loops with side effects, such as Rust, providing
part of a solution to bug 965 [1].
Specifically, it adds an `llvm.sideeffect()` intrinsic, which has no actual
effect, but which appears to optimization passes to have obscure side effects,
such that they don't optimize away loops containing it. It also teaches
several optimization passes to ignore this intrinsic, so that it doesn't
significantly impact optimization in most cases.
As discussed on llvm-dev [2], this patch is the first of two major parts.
The second part, to change LLVM's semantics to have defined behavior
on infinite loops by default, with a function attribute for opting into
potential-undefined-behavior, will be implemented and posted for review in
a separate patch.
[0] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-July/088103.html
[1] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=965
[2] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-October/118632.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38336
llvm-svn: 317729
This reverts r317579, originally committed as r317100.
There is a design issue with marking CFI instructions duplicatable. Not
all targets support the CFIInstrInserter pass, and targets like Darwin
can't cope with duplicated prologue setup CFI instructions. The compact
unwind info emission fails.
When the following code is compiled for arm64 on Mac at -O3, the CFI
instructions end up getting tail duplicated, which causes compact unwind
info emission to fail:
int a, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m;
void n(int o, int *b) {
if (g)
f = 0;
for (; f < o; f++) {
m = a;
if (l > j * k > i)
j = i = k = d;
h = b[c] - e;
}
}
We get assembly that looks like this:
; BB#1: ; %if.then
Lloh3:
adrp x9, _f@GOTPAGE
Lloh4:
ldr x9, [x9, _f@GOTPAGEOFF]
mov w8, wzr
Lloh5:
str wzr, [x9]
stp x20, x19, [sp, #-16]! ; 8-byte Folded Spill
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
.cfi_offset w19, -8
.cfi_offset w20, -16
cmp w8, w0
b.lt LBB0_3
b LBB0_7
LBB0_2: ; %entry.if.end_crit_edge
Lloh6:
adrp x8, _f@GOTPAGE
Lloh7:
ldr x8, [x8, _f@GOTPAGEOFF]
Lloh8:
ldr w8, [x8]
stp x20, x19, [sp, #-16]! ; 8-byte Folded Spill
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
.cfi_offset w19, -8
.cfi_offset w20, -16
cmp w8, w0
b.ge LBB0_7
LBB0_3: ; %for.body.lr.ph
Note the multiple .cfi_def* directives. Compact unwind info emission
can't handle that.
llvm-svn: 317726
Previously, hasSideEffects was ? for TargetOpcode::PHI and would be inferred
as 1. D37065 sets the previously inferred properties explicitly. This patch sets
hasSideEffects=0 for PHI, as it is for G_PHI. MachineInstr::isSafeToMove has
been updated so it still returns false for PHI.
Additionally, HexagonBitSimplify relied on a PHI node having the
hasUnmodeledSideEffects property. This patch fixes that assumption.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37097
llvm-svn: 317721
In 2010 a commit with no testcase and no further explanation
explicitly disabled the handling of inlined variables in
EmitFuncArgumentDbgValue(). I don't think there is a good reason for
this any more and re-enabling this adds debug locations for variables
associated with an LLVM function argument in functions that are
inlined into the first basic block. The only downside of doing this is
that we may insert a DBG_VALUE before the inlined scope, but (1) this
could be filtered out later, and (2) LiveDebugValues will not
propagate it into subsequent basic blocks if they don't dominate the
variable's lexical scope, so this seems like a small price to pay.
rdar://problem/26228128
llvm-svn: 317702
Some of the AMDGPU stack addressing modes require knowing the sign
bit is zero. We used to accomplish this by custom lowering
frame indexes, and then putting an AssertZext around a
TargetFrameIndex. This required specifically looking for
the AssextZext + frame index pattern which was moderately
disgusting. The same could probably be accomplished
with a target specific node, but would still
require special handling of frame indexes.
llvm-svn: 317671
This patch enables the folding of address computation in
memory instruction in case adress is represented by Phi node.
The inputs of Phi node might be different in base register.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36073
llvm-svn: 317665
This header includes CodeGen headers, and is not, itself, included by
any Target headers, so move it into CodeGen to match the layering of its
implementation.
llvm-svn: 317647
Reland r317100 with minor fix regarding ComputeCommonTailLength function in
BranchFolding.cpp. Skipping top CFI instructions block needs to executed on
several more return points in ComputeCommonTailLength().
Original r317100 message:
"Correct dwarf unwind information in function epilogue for X86"
This patch aims to provide correct dwarf unwind information in function
epilogue for X86.
It consists of two parts. The first part inserts CFI instructions that set
appropriate cfa offset and cfa register in emitEpilogue() in
X86FrameLowering. This part is X86 specific.
The second part is platform independent and ensures that:
- CFI instructions do not affect code generation
- Unwind information remains correct when a function is modified by
different passes. This is done in a late pass by analyzing information
about cfa offset and cfa register in BBs and inserting additional CFI
directives where necessary.
Changed CFI instructions so that they:
- are duplicable
- are not counted as instructions when tail duplicating or tail merging
- can be compared as equal
Added CFIInstrInserter pass:
- analyzes each basic block to determine cfa offset and register valid at
its entry and exit
- verifies that outgoing cfa offset and register of predecessor blocks match
incoming values of their successors
- inserts additional CFI directives at basic block beginning to correct the
rule for calculating CFA
Having CFI instructions in function epilogue can cause incorrect CFA
calculation rule for some basic blocks. This can happen if, due to basic
block reordering, or the existence of multiple epilogue blocks, some of the
blocks have wrong cfa offset and register values set by the epilogue block
above them.
CFIInstrInserter is currently run only on X86, but can be used by any target
that implements support for adding CFI instructions in epilogue.
Patch by Violeta Vukobrat.
llvm-svn: 317579
This changes the interface of how targets describe how to legalize, see
the below description.
1. Interface for targets to describe how to legalize.
In GlobalISel, the API in the LegalizerInfo class is the main interface
for targets to specify which types are legal for which operations, and
what to do to turn illegal type/operation combinations into legal ones.
For each operation the type sizes that can be legalized without having
to change the size of the type are specified with a call to setAction.
This isn't different to how GlobalISel worked before. For example, for a
target that supports 32 and 64 bit adds natively:
for (auto Ty : {s32, s64})
setAction({G_ADD, 0, s32}, Legal);
or for a target that needs a library call for a 32 bit division:
setAction({G_SDIV, s32}, Libcall);
The main conceptual change to the LegalizerInfo API, is in specifying
how to legalize the type sizes for which a change of size is needed. For
example, in the above example, how to specify how all types from i1 to
i8388607 (apart from s32 and s64 which are legal) need to be legalized
and expressed in terms of operations on the available legal sizes
(again, i32 and i64 in this case). Before, the implementation only
allowed specifying power-of-2-sized types (e.g. setAction({G_ADD, 0,
s128}, NarrowScalar). A worse limitation was that if you'd wanted to
specify how to legalize all the sized types as allowed by the LLVM-IR
LangRef, i1 to i8388607, you'd have to call setAction 8388607-3 times
and probably would need a lot of memory to store all of these
specifications.
Instead, the legalization actions that need to change the size of the
type are specified now using a "SizeChangeStrategy". For example:
setLegalizeScalarToDifferentSizeStrategy(
G_ADD, 0, widenToLargerAndNarrowToLargest);
This example indicates that for type sizes for which there is a larger
size that can be legalized towards, do it by Widening the size.
For example, G_ADD on s17 will be legalized by first doing WidenScalar
to make it s32, after which it's legal.
The "NarrowToLargest" indicates what to do if there is no larger size
that can be legalized towards. E.g. G_ADD on s92 will be legalized by
doing NarrowScalar to s64.
Another example, taken from the ARM backend is:
for (unsigned Op : {G_SDIV, G_UDIV}) {
setLegalizeScalarToDifferentSizeStrategy(Op, 0,
widenToLargerTypesUnsupportedOtherwise);
if (ST.hasDivideInARMMode())
setAction({Op, s32}, Legal);
else
setAction({Op, s32}, Libcall);
}
For this example, G_SDIV on s8, on a target without a divide
instruction, would be legalized by first doing action (WidenScalar,
s32), followed by (Libcall, s32).
The same principle is also followed for when the number of vector lanes
on vector data types need to be changed, e.g.:
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(8, 8)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(16, 8)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(4, 16)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(8, 16)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(2, 32)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(4, 32)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setLegalizeVectorElementToDifferentSizeStrategy(
G_ADD, 0, widenToLargerTypesUnsupportedOtherwise);
As currently implemented here, vector types are legalized by first
making the vector element size legal, followed by then making the number
of lanes legal. The strategy to follow in the first step is set by a
call to setLegalizeVectorElementToDifferentSizeStrategy, see example
above. The strategy followed in the second step
"moreToWiderTypesAndLessToWidest" (see code for its definition),
indicating that vectors are widened to more elements so they map to
natively supported vector widths, or when there isn't a legal wider
vector, split the vector to map it to the widest vector supported.
Therefore, for the above specification, some example legalizations are:
* getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(3, 3)})
returns {WidenScalar, LLT::vector(3, 8)}
* getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(3, 8)})
then returns {MoreElements, LLT::vector(8, 8)}
* getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(20, 8)})
returns {FewerElements, LLT::vector(16, 8)}
2. Key implementation aspects.
How to legalize a specific (operation, type index, size) tuple is
represented by mapping intervals of integers representing a range of
size types to an action to take, e.g.:
setScalarAction({G_ADD, LLT:scalar(1)},
{{1, WidenScalar}, // bit sizes [ 1, 31[
{32, Legal}, // bit sizes [32, 33[
{33, WidenScalar}, // bit sizes [33, 64[
{64, Legal}, // bit sizes [64, 65[
{65, NarrowScalar} // bit sizes [65, +inf[
});
Please note that most of the code to do the actual lowering of
non-power-of-2 sized types is currently missing, this is just trying to
make it possible for targets to specify what is legal, and how non-legal
types should be legalized. Probably quite a bit of further work is
needed in the actual legalizing and the other passes in GlobalISel to
support non-power-of-2 sized types.
I hope the documentation in LegalizerInfo.h and the examples provided in the
various {Target}LegalizerInfo.cpp and LegalizerInfoTest.cpp explains well
enough how this is meant to be used.
This drops the need for LLT::{half,double}...Size().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30529
llvm-svn: 317560
This patch disables the handling of selects in optimization
extensing scope of optimizeMemoryInst.
The optimization itself is disable by default.
The idea here is just to switch optimiztion level step by step.
Specifically, first optimization will be enabled only for Phi nodes,
then select instructions will be added.
In case someone will complain about perfromance it will be easier to
detect what part of optimizations is responsible for that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36073
llvm-svn: 317555
Summary:
Print %subreg.<subregidxname> instead of just the subregister
index when printing immediate operands corresponding to subreg
indices in INSERT_SUBREG, EXTRACT_SUBREG, SUBREG_TO_REG and
REG_SEQUENCE.
Reviewers: qcolombet, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: nhaehnle, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39696
llvm-svn: 317513
As discussed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-November/107104.html
and again more recently:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-October/118118.html
...this is a step in cleaning up our fast-math-flags implementation in IR to better match
the capabilities of both clang's user-visible flags and the backend's flags for SDNode.
As proposed in the above threads, we're replacing the 'UnsafeAlgebra' bit (which had the
'umbrella' meaning that all flags are set) with a new bit that only applies to algebraic
reassociation - 'AllowReassoc'.
We're also adding a bit to allow approximations for library functions called 'ApproxFunc'
(this was initially proposed as 'libm' or similar).
...and we're out of bits. 7 bits ought to be enough for anyone, right? :) FWIW, I did
look at getting this out of SubclassOptionalData via SubclassData (spacious 16-bits),
but that's apparently already used for other purposes. Also, I don't think we can just
add a field to FPMathOperator because Operator is not intended to be instantiated.
We'll defer movement of FMF to another day.
We keep the 'fast' keyword. I thought about removing that, but seeing IR like this:
%f.fast = fadd reassoc nnan ninf nsz arcp contract afn float %op1, %op2
...made me think we want to keep the shortcut synonym.
Finally, this change is binary incompatible with existing IR as seen in the
compatibility tests. This statement:
"Newer releases can ignore features from older releases, but they cannot miscompile
them. For example, if nsw is ever replaced with something else, dropping it would be
a valid way to upgrade the IR."
( http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html#ir-backwards-compatibility )
...provides the flexibility we want to make this change without requiring a new IR
version. Ie, we're not loosening the FP strictness of existing IR. At worst, we will
fail to optimize some previously 'fast' code because it's no longer recognized as
'fast'. This should get fixed as we audit/squash all of the uses of 'isFast()'.
Note: an inter-dependent clang commit to use the new API name should closely follow
commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39304
llvm-svn: 317488
This is an implementation of PR26223.
Currently optimizeMemoryInst optimization tries to fold address computation
if all possible way to get compute the address are of the form
baseGV + base + scale * Index + offset
where scale and offset are constants and baseGV, base and Index are exactly
the same instructions if defined.
The patch extends this optimization to allow different bases. In this case
it tries to find/build a Phi node merging all possible bases and use this Phi node
as a base for sunk address computation. Also it supports Select instruction on
the way.
The main motivation for this scope extension is GCRelocateInst.
If there is a relocation of derived pointer it will be represented as relocation of base + offset.
Also there will be a Phi node merging address computation for relocated derived pointer
and derived pointer itself. If we have a Phi node merging original base and relocated base
and can fold the address computation of derived pointer then we can potentially reduce
the code size and Phi node for derived pointer. The later can have a positive impact to
register allocator.
Reviewers: efriedma, dberlin, mkazantsev, reames, john.brawn
Reviewed By: john.brawn
Subscribers: javed.absar, john.brawn, dneilson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36073
llvm-svn: 317429
This header already includes a CodeGen header and is implemented in
lib/CodeGen, so move the header there to match.
This fixes a link error with modular codegeneration builds - where a
header and its implementation are circularly dependent and so need to be
in the same library, not split between two like this.
llvm-svn: 317379
This preserves the debug info for the cast operation in the original location.
rdar://problem/33460652
Reapplied r317340 with the test moved into an ARM-specific directory.
llvm-svn: 317375
DenseMaps require the definition of a type to be available when using a
pointer to that type as a key to know how many bits are available for
tombstone/etc.
llvm-svn: 317360
Make doSpillCalleeSavedRegs a member function, instead of passing most of the
members of PEI as arguments.
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35642
llvm-svn: 317309
mir-canon (MIRCanonicalizerPass) is a pass designed to reorder instructions and
rename operands so that two similar programs will diff more cleanly after being
run through mir-canon than they would otherwise. This project is still a work
in progress and there are ideas still being discussed for improving diff
quality.
M include/llvm/InitializePasses.h
M lib/CodeGen/CMakeLists.txt
M lib/CodeGen/CodeGen.cpp
A lib/CodeGen/MIRCanonicalizerPass.cpp
llvm-svn: 317285
Summary:
Currently the block frequency analysis is an approximation for irreducible
loops.
The new irreducible loop metadata is used to annotate the irreducible loop
headers with their header weights based on the PGO profile (currently this is
approximated to be evenly weighted) and to help improve the accuracy of the
block frequency analysis for irreducible loops.
This patch is a basic support for this.
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39028
llvm-svn: 317278
undefined reference to `llvm::TargetPassConfig::ID' on
clang-ppc64le-linux-multistage
This reverts commit eea333c33fa73ad225ef28607795984829f65688.
llvm-svn: 317213
Summary:
This is mostly a noop (most of the test diffs are renamed blocks).
There are a few temporary register renames (eax<->ecx) and a few blocks are
shuffled around.
See the discussion in PR33325 for more details.
Reviewers: spatel
Subscribers: mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39456
llvm-svn: 317211
When splitting a large load to smaller legally-typed loads, the last load should be padded to reach the size of the previous one so a CONCAT_VECTORS node could reunite them again.
The code currently pads the last load to reach the size of the first load (instead of the previous).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38495
Change-Id: Ib60b55ed26ce901fabf68108daf52683fbd5013f
llvm-svn: 317206
As of today we only use .cfi_offset to specify the offset of a CSR, but
we never use .cfi_restore when the CSR is restored.
If we want to perform a more advanced type of shrink-wrapping, we need
to use .cfi_restore in order to switch the CFI state between blocks.
This patch only aims at adding support for the directive.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36114
llvm-svn: 317199
This patch aims to provide correct dwarf unwind information in function
epilogue for X86.
It consists of two parts. The first part inserts CFI instructions that set
appropriate cfa offset and cfa register in emitEpilogue() in
X86FrameLowering. This part is X86 specific.
The second part is platform independent and ensures that:
- CFI instructions do not affect code generation
- Unwind information remains correct when a function is modified by
different passes. This is done in a late pass by analyzing information
about cfa offset and cfa register in BBs and inserting additional CFI
directives where necessary.
Changed CFI instructions so that they:
- are duplicable
- are not counted as instructions when tail duplicating or tail merging
- can be compared as equal
Added CFIInstrInserter pass:
- analyzes each basic block to determine cfa offset and register valid at
its entry and exit
- verifies that outgoing cfa offset and register of predecessor blocks match
incoming values of their successors
- inserts additional CFI directives at basic block beginning to correct the
rule for calculating CFA
Having CFI instructions in function epilogue can cause incorrect CFA
calculation rule for some basic blocks. This can happen if, due to basic
block reordering, or the existence of multiple epilogue blocks, some of the
blocks have wrong cfa offset and register values set by the epilogue block
above them.
CFIInstrInserter is currently run only on X86, but can be used by any target
that implements support for adding CFI instructions in epilogue.
Patch by Violeta Vukobrat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35844
llvm-svn: 317100
Change the map key from DIFile* to the absolute path string. Computing
the absolute path isn't expensive because we already have a map that
caches the full path keyed on DIFile*.
llvm-svn: 317041
Issue found by llvm-isel-fuzzer on OSS fuzz, https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=3725
If anyone actually cares about > 64 bit arithmetic, there's a lot more to do in this area. There's a bunch of obviously wrong code in the same function. I don't have the time to fix all of them and am just using this to understand what the workflow for fixing fuzzer cases might look like.
llvm-svn: 316967
Summary:
For reference, see: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-August/116589.html
This patch fleshes out the instruction class hierarchy with respect to atomic and
non-atomic memory intrinsics. With this change, the relevant part of the class
hierarchy becomes:
IntrinsicInst
-> MemIntrinsicBase (methods-only class)
-> MemIntrinsic (non-atomic intrinsics)
-> MemSetInst
-> MemTransferInst
-> MemCpyInst
-> MemMoveInst
-> AtomicMemIntrinsic (atomic intrinsics)
-> AtomicMemSetInst
-> AtomicMemTransferInst
-> AtomicMemCpyInst
-> AtomicMemMoveInst
-> AnyMemIntrinsic (both atomicities)
-> AnyMemSetInst
-> AnyMemTransferInst
-> AnyMemCpyInst
-> AnyMemMoveInst
This involves some class renaming:
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemCpyInst -> AtomicMemCpyInst
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemMoveInst -> AtomicMemMoveInst
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemSetInst -> AtomicMemSetInst
A script for doing this renaming in downstream trees is included below.
An example of where the Any* classes should be used in LLVM is when reasoning
about the effects of an instruction (ex: aliasing).
---
Script for renaming AtomicMem* classes:
PREFIXES="[<,([:space:]]"
CLASSES="MemIntrinsic|MemTransferInst|MemSetInst|MemMoveInst|MemCpyInst"
SUFFIXES="[;)>,[:space:]]"
REGEX="(${PREFIXES})ElementUnorderedAtomic(${CLASSES})(${SUFFIXES})"
REGEX2="visitElementUnorderedAtomic(${CLASSES})"
FILES=$( grep -E "(${REGEX}|${REGEX2})" -r . | tr ':' ' ' | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq )
SED_SCRIPT="s~${REGEX}~\1Atomic\2\3~g"
SED_SCRIPT2="s~${REGEX2}~visitAtomic\1~g"
for f in $FILES; do
echo "Processing: $f"
sed -i ".bak" -E "${SED_SCRIPT};${SED_SCRIPT2};${EA_SED_SCRIPT};${EA_SED_SCRIPT2}" $f
done
Reviewers: sanjoy, deadalnix, apilipenko, anna, skatkov, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: hfinkel, jholewinski, arsenm, sdardis, nhaehnle, JDevlieghere, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38419
llvm-svn: 316950
- Targets that want to support memcmp expansions now return the list of
supported load sizes.
- Expansion codegen does not assume that all power-of-two load sizes
smaller than the max load size are valid. For examples, this is not the
case for x86(32bit)+sse2.
Fixes PR34887.
llvm-svn: 316905
Introduce a isConstOrDemandedConstSplat helper function that can recognise a constant splat build vector for at least the demanded elts we care about.
llvm-svn: 316866
For cases where we know the floating point representations match the bitcasted integer equivalent, allow bitcasting to these types.
This is especially useful for the X86 floating point compare results which return all/zero bits but as a floating point type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39289
llvm-svn: 316831
In function DAGCombiner::visitSIGN_EXTEND_INREG, sext can be combined with extload even if sextload is not supported by target, then
if sext is the only user of extload, there is no big difference, no harm no benefit.
if extload has more than one user, the combined sextload may block extload from combining with other zext, causes extra zext instructions generated. As demonstrated by the attached test case.
This patch add the constraint that when sextload is not supported by target, sext can only be combined with extload if it is the only user of extload.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39108
llvm-svn: 316802
Not having the subclass data on an MemIntrinsicSDNodes means it was possible
to try to fold 2 nodes with the same operands but differing MMO flags. This
would trip an assertion when trying to refine the alignment between the 2
MachineMemOperands.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38898
llvm-svn: 316737
Summary:
Currently we skip merging when extra moves may be added in the header of switch instead of the case block, if the case block is used as an incoming
block of a PHI. If all the incoming values of the PHIs are non-constants and the destination block is dominated by the switch block then extra moves are likely not added by ISel, so there is no need to skip merging in this case.
Reviewers: efriedma, junbuml, davidxl, hfinkel, qcolombet
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: dberlin, kuhar, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37343
llvm-svn: 316711
Summary:
This seems to be the only place in llvm we directly call qsort. We can replace
this with a call to array_pod_sort. Also minor cleanup of the sorting function.
Reviewers: bkramer, Eugene.Zelenko, rafael
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: efriedma, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39214
llvm-svn: 316671
Summary: Make sure shifts are legal/specified by the legalizerinfo before creating it
Reviewers: qcolombet, dsanders, rovka, t.p.northover
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39264
llvm-svn: 316602
Compute the actual decomposition only after deciding whether to expand
of not. Else, it's easy to make the compiler OOM with:
`memcpy(dst, src, 0xffffffffffffffff);`, which typically happens if
someone mistakenly passes a negative value. Add a test.
This reverts commit f8fc02fbd4ab33383c010d33675acf9763d0bd44.
llvm-svn: 316567
Duplicated code found in three places put into a new static function:
/// Given a Count of resource usage and a Latency value, return true if a
/// SchedBoundary becomes resource limited.
static bool checkResourceLimit(unsigned LFactor, unsigned Count,
unsigned Latency) {
return (int)(Count - (Latency * LFactor)) > (int)LFactor;
}
Review: Florian Hahn, Matthias Braun
https://reviews.llvm.org/D39235
llvm-svn: 316560
This code added in r297930 assumed that it could create
a select with a condition type that is just an integer
bitcast of the selected type. For AMDGPU any vselect is
going to be scalarized (although the vector types are legal),
and all select conditions must be i1 (the same as getSetCCResultType).
This logic doesn't really make sense to me, but there's
never really been a consistent policy in what the select
condition mask type is supposed to be. Try to extend
the logic for skipping the transform for condition types
that aren't setccs. It doesn't seem quite right to me though,
but checking conditions that seem more sensible (like whether the
vselect is going to be expanded) doesn't work since this
seems to depend on that also.
llvm-svn: 316554
Similar to how llvm::salvagDebugInfo hooks into InstCombine, this adds
a hook that can be invoked before an SDNode that is associated with an
SDDbgValue is erased to capture the effect of the deleted node in a
DIExpression.
The motivating example is an SDDebugValue attached to an ADD operation
that gets folded into a LOAD+OFFSET operation.
rdar://problem/32121503
llvm-svn: 316525
This reverts commit r316417, which causes internal compiles to OOM.
I don't unfortunately have a self-contained test case but will follow up
with courbet.
llvm-svn: 316497
This updates the MIRPrinter to include the regclass when printing
virtual register defs, which is already valid syntax for the
parser. That is, given 64 bit %0 and %1 in a "gpr" regbank,
%1(s64) = COPY %0(s64)
would now be written as
%1:gpr(s64) = COPY %0(s64)
While this change alone introduces a bit of redundancy with the
registers block, it allows us to update the tests to be more concise
and understandable and brings us closer to being able to remove the
registers block completely.
Note: We generally only print the class in defs, but there is one
exception. If there are uses without any defs whatsoever, we'll print
the class on all uses. I'm not completely convinced this comes up in
meaningful machine IR, but for now the MIRParser and MachineVerifier
both accept that kind of stuff, so we don't want to have a situation
where we can print something we can't parse.
llvm-svn: 316479
Refactor ExpandMemcmp:
- Stop duplicating the logic for computation of the sequence of loads to
generate (thsi was done in three different places), this is now done
only once in MemCmpExpansion::MemCmpExpansion().
- Add a FIXME to expose a bug with the computation of the number of loads
when not all sizes are loadable. For example, on X86-32 + SSE, possible
loads are {16,4,2,1} bytes. The current code considers that all loads
starting at MaxLoadSize are possible. This is not an issue right now as
vector loads are not enabled, so I'm not fixing the issue here to keep
the change as small as possible. I'm going to address this in a
subsequent revision, where I enable vector loads.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34887
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38498
llvm-svn: 316417
Infrastructure designed for padding code with nop instructions in key places such that preformance improvement will be achieved.
The infrastructure is implemented such that the padding is done in the Assembler after the layout is done and all IPs and alignments are known.
This patch by itself in a NFC. Future patches will make use of this infrastructure to implement required policies for code padding.
Reviewers:
aaboud
zvi
craig.topper
gadi.haber
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34393
Change-Id: I92110d0c0a757080a8405636914a93ef6f8ad00e
llvm-svn: 316413
This commit adds optimisation remarks for outlining which fire when a function
is successfully outlined.
To do this, OutlinedFunctions must now contain references to their Candidates.
Since the Candidates must still be sorted and worked on separately, this is
done by working on everything in terms of shared_ptrs to Candidates. This is
good; it means that we can easily move everything to outlining in terms of
the OutlinedFunctions rather than the individual Candidates. This is far more
intuitive than what's currently there!
(Remarks are output when a function is created for some group of Candidates.
In a later commit, all of the outlining logic should be rewritten so that we
loop over OutlinedFunctions rather than over Candidates.)
llvm-svn: 316396
This fixes a bug where we'd crash given code like the test-case from
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=30792 . Instead, we let the
offending clobber silently slide through.
This doesn't fully fix said bug, since the assembler will still complain
the moment it sees a crypto/fp/vector op, and we still don't diagnose
calls that require vector regs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39030
llvm-svn: 316374
combineShuffleOfScalars is very conservative about shuffled BUILD_VECTORs that can be combined together.
This patch adds one additional case - if both BUILD_VECTORs represent splats of the same scalar value but with different UNDEF elements, then we should create a single splat BUILD_VECTOR, sharing only the UNDEF elements defined by the shuffle mask.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38696
llvm-svn: 316331
This fixes bugzilla 26810
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=26810
This is intended to prevent sequences like:
movl %ebp, 8(%esp) # 4-byte Spill
movl %ecx, %ebp
movl %ebx, %ecx
movl %edi, %ebx
movl %edx, %edi
cltd
idivl %esi
movl %edi, %edx
movl %ebx, %edi
movl %ecx, %ebx
movl %ebp, %ecx
movl 16(%esp), %ebp # 4 - byte Reload
Such sequences are created in 2 scenarios:
Scenario #1:
vreg0 is evicted from physreg0 by vreg1
Evictee vreg0 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg0 (the reg vreg0 was evicted from)
Region splitting creates a local interval because of interference with the evictor vreg1 (normally region spliiting creates 2 interval, the "by reg" and "by stack" intervals. Local interval created when interference occurs.)
one of the split intervals ends up evicting vreg2 from physreg1
Evictee vreg2 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg1
one of the split intervals ends up evicting vreg3 from physreg2 etc.. until someone spills
Scenario #2
vreg0 is evicted from physreg0 by vreg1
vreg2 is evicted from physreg2 by vreg3 etc
Evictee vreg0 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg1
Region splitting creates a local interval because of interference with the evictor vreg1
one of the split intervals ends up evicting back original evictor vreg1 from physreg0 (the reg vreg0 was evicted from)
Another evictee vreg2 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg1
one of the split intervals ends up evicting vreg3 from physreg2 etc.. until someone spills
As compile time was a concern, I've added a flag to control weather we do cost calculations for local intervals we expect to be created (it's on by default for X86 target, off for the rest).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35816
Change-Id: Id9411ff7bbb845463d289ba2ae97737a1ee7cc39
llvm-svn: 316295
We don't need to do any additional recursion, we just need to analyze the APInt stored in the node. This matches what the ValueTracking versions do for IR.
llvm-svn: 316256
Summary:
We shouldn't recurse any further but it doesn't mean we shouldn't be able to give the known bits for a constant. The caller would probably like that we always return the right answer for a constant RHS. This matches what InstCombine does in this case.
I don't have a test case because this showed up while trying to revive D31724.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38967
llvm-svn: 316255
Move the prune logic in pruneOverlaps to a new function, prune. This lets us
reuse the prune functionality. Makes the code a bit more readable. It'll also
make it easier to emit remarks/debug statements for pruned functions.
llvm-svn: 316031
This commit moves the decrement logic for outlined functions into the class,
and makes OccurrenceCount private. It can now be accessed via
getOccurrenceCount().
This makes it more difficult to accidentally introduce bugs by incorrectly
decrementing the occurrence count on OutlinedFunctions.
llvm-svn: 316020
Cleanup to Candidate that moves all end index calculations into
Candidate.endIdx(). For the sake of consistency, StartIdx and Len are now
private members, and can be accessed with length() and startIdx() respectively.
llvm-svn: 316019
Summary:
It seems that negative offset was accidentally allowed in D17967.
AFAICT small negative offset should be valid (always raise segfault) on all archs that I'm aware of (especially x86, which is the only one with this optimization enabled) and such case can be useful when loading hiden metadata from an object.
However, like the positive side, it should only be done within a certain limit.
For now, use the same limit on the positive side for the negative side.
A separate option can be added if needs appear.
Reviewers: mcrosier, skatkov
Reviewed By: skatkov
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38925
llvm-svn: 315991
Minor addition and follow up of r314773 and r311533: this adds more
debug messages to the type legalizer. For each node, it dumps
legalization info for results and operands nodes, rather than just the
final legalized node.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38726
llvm-svn: 315904
Summary:
iPTR is a pointer of subtarget-specific size to any address space. Therefore
type checks on this size derive the SizeInBits from a subtarget hook.
At this point, we can import the simplests G_LOAD rules and select load
instructions using them. Further patches will support for the predicates to
enable additional loads as well as the stores.
The previous commit failed on MSVC due to a failure to convert an
initializer_list to a std::vector. Hopefully, MSVC will accept this version.
Depends on D37457
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37458
llvm-svn: 315887
Summary:
iPTR is a pointer of subtarget-specific size to any address space. Therefore
type checks on this size derive the SizeInBits from a subtarget hook.
At this point, we can import the simplests G_LOAD rules and select load
instructions using them. Further patches will support for the predicates to
enable additional loads as well as the stores.
Depends on D37457
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37458
llvm-svn: 315885
Summary:
It's possible for a ComplexPattern to be used as an operator in a match
pattern. This is used by the load/store patterns in AArch64 to name the
suboperands returned by ComplexPattern predicate so that they can be broken
apart and referenced independently in the result pattern.
This patch adds support for this in order to enable the import of load/store
patterns.
Depends on D37445
Hopefully fixed the ambiguous constructor that a large number of bots reported.
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37456
llvm-svn: 315869
Summary:
It's possible for a ComplexPattern to be used as an operator in a match
pattern. This is used by the load/store patterns in AArch64 to name the
suboperands returned by ComplexPattern predicate so that they can be broken
apart and referenced independently in the result pattern.
This patch adds support for this in order to enable the import of load/store
patterns.
Depends on D37445
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37456
llvm-svn: 315863
TargetRegisterInfo::getMinimalPhysRegClass is actually pretty expensive
because it has to iterate over all the register classes.
Cache this information as we need and get it so that we limit its usage.
Right now, we heavily rely on it, because this is how we get the mapping
for vregs defined by copies from physreg (i.e., the one that are ABI
related).
Improve compile time by up to 10% for that pass.
NFC
llvm-svn: 315759
Prior to this patch we used to create SetVectors in temporaries that
were created and destroyed for each instruction. Now, instead we create
and destroyed them only once, but clear the content for each
instruction.
This speeds up the pass by ~25%.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 315756
This is only currently used for mad/fma transforms.
This is the only case where it should be used for AMDGPU,
so add an opcode to be sure.
llvm-svn: 315740
I don't know if we ever hit this case or not. Turning it into an assert only fired on expanding some atomic operation in a SystemZ lit test.
llvm-svn: 315648
Reverting to investigate layering effects of MCJIT not linking
libCodeGen but using TargetMachine::getNameWithPrefix() breaking the
lldb bots.
This reverts commit r315633.
llvm-svn: 315637
The clang frontend already creates a DIExpression that replicates the
logic in addBlockByrefAddress() exactly, thus making this function
effectively unreachable. To guard against human error I'm hereby
marking the function with an assertion and let it hit the bots before
eventually removing it.
rdar://problem/31629055
llvm-svn: 315636
Merge LLVMTargetMachine into TargetMachine.
- There is no in-tree target anymore that just implements TargetMachine
but not LLVMTargetMachine.
- It should still be possible to stub out all the various functions in
case a target does not want to use lib/CodeGen
- This simplifies the code and avoids methods ending up in the wrong
interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38489
llvm-svn: 315633
The comparator passed to std::sort must provide a strict weak ordering;
otherwise, the behavior is undefined.
Fixes an assertion failure generating debug info for globals
split by GlobalOpt. I have a testcase, but not sure how to reduce it,
so not included here. (Someone else came up with a testcase, but I
can't reproduce the crash with it, presumably because my version of LLVM
ends up sorting the array differently.)
This isn't really a complete fix (see the FIXME in the patch), but at
least it doesn't have undefined behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38830
llvm-svn: 315619
Summary:
Add LLVM_FORCE_ENABLE_DUMP cmake option, and use it along with
LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS to set LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP.
Remove NDEBUG and only use LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP to enable dump methods.
Move definition of LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP from config.h to llvm-config.h so
it'll be picked up by public headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38406
llvm-svn: 315590
MachineInstr::isIdenticalTo has a lot of logic for dealing with register
Defs (i.e. deciding whether to take them into account or ignore them).
This logic gets things wrong in some obscure cases, for instance if an
operand is not a Def for both the current MI and the one we are
comparing to.
I'm not sure if it's possible for this to happen for regular register
operands, but it may happen in the ARM backend for special operands
which use sentinel values for the register (i.e. 0, which is neither a
physical register nor a virtual one).
This causes MachineInstrExpressionTrait::isEqual (which uses
MachineInstr::isIdenticalTo) to return true for the following
instructions, which are the same except for the fact that one sets the
flags and the other one doesn't:
%1114 = ADDrsi %1113, %216, 17, 14, _, def _
%1115 = ADDrsi %1113, %216, 17, 14, _, _
OTOH, MachineInstrExpressionTrait::getHashValue returns different values
for the 2 instructions due to the different isDef on the last operand.
In practice this means that when trying to add those instructions to a
DenseMap, they will be considered different because of their different
hash values, but when growing the map we might get an assertion while
copying from the old buckets to the new buckets because isEqual
misleadingly returns true.
This patch makes sure that isEqual and getHashValue agree, by improving
the checks in MachineInstr::isIdenticalTo when we are ignoring virtual
register definitions (which is what the Trait uses). Firstly, instead of
checking isPhysicalRegister, we use !isVirtualRegister, so that we cover
both physical registers and sentinel values. Secondly, instead of
checking MachineOperand::isReg, we use MachineOperand::isIdenticalTo,
which checks isReg, isSubReg and isDef, which are the same values that
the hash function uses to compute the hash.
Note that the function is symmetric with this change, since if the
current operand is not a Def, we check MachineOperand::isIdenticalTo,
which returns false if the operands have different isDef's.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38789
llvm-svn: 315579
While this shouldn't be necessary anymore, we have cases where we run
into the assertion below, i.e. cases with two non-fragment entries for the
same variable at different frame indices.
This should be fixed, but for now, we should revert to a version that
does not trigger asserts.
llvm-svn: 315576
This patch fixes the bug introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D35907; the bug is reported by http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20171002/491452.html.
Before D35907, when GetUnderlyingObjects fails to find an identifiable object, allMMOsOkay lambda in getUnderlyingObjectsForInstr returns false and Objects vector is cleared. This behavior is unintentionally changed by D35907.
This patch makes the behavior for such case same as the previous behavior.
Since D35907 introduced a wrapper function getUnderlyingObjectsForCodeGen around GetUnderlyingObjects, getUnderlyingObjectsForCodeGen is modified to return a boolean value to ask the caller to clear the Objects vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38735
llvm-svn: 315565
Summary:
The comments in the code said
// Remove <def,read-undef> flags. This def is now a partial redef.
but the code didn't just remove read-undef, it could introduce new ones which
could cause errors.
E.g. if we have something like
%vreg1<def> = IMPLICIT_DEF
%vreg2:subreg1<def, read-undef> = op %vreg3, %vreg4
%vreg2:subreg2<def> = op %vreg6, %vreg7
and we merge %vreg1 and %vreg2 then we should not set undef on the second subreg
def, which the old code did.
Now we solve this by actually do what the code comment says. We remove
read-undef flags rather than remove or introduce them.
Reviewers: qcolombet, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38616
llvm-svn: 315564
MCObjectStreamer owns its MCCodeEmitter -- this fixes the types to reflect that,
and allows us to remove the last instance of MCObjectStreamer's weird "holding
ownership via someone else's reference" trick.
llvm-svn: 315531
Summary:
This adds a set of new directives that describe 32-bit x86 prologues.
The directives are limited and do not expose the full complexity of
codeview FPO data. They are merely a convenience for the compiler to
generate more readable assembly so we don't need to generate tons of
labels in CodeGen. If our prologue emission changes in the future, we
can change the set of available directives to suit our needs. These are
modelled after the .seh_ directives, which use a different format that
interacts with exception handling.
The directives are:
.cv_fpo_proc _foo
.cv_fpo_pushreg ebp/ebx/etc
.cv_fpo_setframe ebp/esi/etc
.cv_fpo_stackalloc 200
.cv_fpo_endprologue
.cv_fpo_endproc
.cv_fpo_data _foo
I tried to follow the implementation of ARM EHABI CFI directives by
sinking most directives out of MCStreamer and into X86TargetStreamer.
This helps avoid polluting non-X86 code with WinCOFF specific logic.
I used cdb to confirm that this can show locals in parent CSRs in a few
cases, most importantly the one where we use ESI as a frame pointer,
i.e. the one in http://crbug.com/756153#c28
Once we have cdb integration in debuginfo-tests, we can add integration
tests there.
Reviewers: majnemer, hans
Subscribers: aemerson, mgorny, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38776
llvm-svn: 315513
Summary:
Fixes a bogus iterator resulting from the removal of a block's first instruction at the point that incremental update is enabled.
Patch by Paul Walker.
Reviewers: fhahn, Gerolf, efriedma, MatzeB
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38734
llvm-svn: 315502
parameterized emit() calls
Summary: This is not functional change to adopt new emit() API added in r313691.
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38285
llvm-svn: 315476
The software pipeliner and the packetizer try to break dependence
between the post-increment instruction and the dependent memory
instructions by changing the base register and the offset value.
However, in some cases, the existing logic didn't work properly
and created incorrect offset value.
Patch by Jyotsna Verma.
llvm-svn: 315468
The pipeliner is generating a serial sequence that causes poor
register allocation when a post-increment instruction appears
prior to the use of the post-increment register. This occurs when
there is a circular set of dependences involved with a sequence
of instructions in the same cycle. In this case, there is no
serialization of the parallel semantics that will not cause an
additional register to be allocated.
This patch fixes the problem by changing the instructions so that
the post-increment instruction is used by the subsequent
instruction, which enables the register allocator to make a
better decision and not require another register.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 315466
Eg:
insert v4i32 V, (v2i16 X), 2 --> shuffle v8i16 V', X', {0,1,2,3,8,9,6,7}
This is a generalization of the IR fold in D38316 to handle insertion into a non-undef vector.
We may want to abandon that one if we can't find value in squashing the more specific pattern sooner.
We're using the existing legal shuffle target hook to avoid AVX512 horror with vXi1 shuffles.
There may be room for improvement in the shuffle lowering here, but that would be follow-up work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38388
llvm-svn: 315460
The NumFixedArgs field of CallLoweringInfo is used by
TargetLowering::LowerCallTo to determine whether a given argument is passed
using the vararg calling convention or not (specifically, to set IsFixed for
each ISD::OutputArg).
Firstly, CallLoweringInfo::setLibCallee and CallLoweringInfo::setCallee both
incorrectly set NumFixedArgs based on the _previous_ args list. Secondly,
TargetLowering::LowerCallTo failed to increment NumFixedArgs when modifying
the argument list so a pointer is passed for the return value.
If your backend uses the IsFixed property or directly accesses NumFixedArgs,
it is _possible_ this change could result in codegen changes (although the
previous behaviour would have been incorrect). No such cases have been
identified during code review for any in-tree architecture.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37898
llvm-svn: 315457
MCObjectStreamer owns its MCAsmBackend -- this fixes the types to reflect that,
and allows us to remove another instance of MCObjectStreamer's weird "holding
ownership via someone else's reference" trick.
llvm-svn: 315410
Similarly to how Instruction has getFunction, this adds a less verbose
way to write MI->getParent()->getParent(). I'll follow up shortly with
a change that changes a bunch of the uses.
llvm-svn: 315388
Summary:
See https://llvm.org/PR33743 for more details
It seems that for non-power of 2 vector sizes, the algorithm can produce
non-matching sizes for input and result causing an assert.
This usually isn't a problem as the isAnyExtend check will weed these out, but
in some cases (most often with lots of undefined values for the mask indices) it
can pass this check for non power of 2 vectors.
Adding in an extra check that ensures that bit size will match for the result
and input (as required)
Subscribers: nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35241
llvm-svn: 315307
Some passes might duplicate calls to llvm.dbg.declare creating
duplicate frame index expression which currently trigger an assertion
which is meant to catch erroneous, overlapping fragment declarations.
But identical frame index expressions are just redundant and don't
actually conflict with each other, so we can be more lenient and just
ignore the duplicates.
Reviewers: aprantl, rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38540
llvm-svn: 315279
We end up creating COPY's that are either truncating/extending and this
should be illegal.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37640
Patch for X86 and ARM by igorb, rovka
llvm-svn: 315240
Say you have two identical linkonceodr functions, one in M1 and one in M2.
Say that the outliner outlines A,B,C from one function, and D,E,F from another
function (where letters are instructions). Now those functions are not
identical, and cannot be deduped. Locally to M1 and M2, these outlining
choices would be good-- to the whole program, however, this might not be true!
To mitigate this, this commit makes it so that the outliner sees linkonceodr
functions as unsafe to outline from. It also adds a flag,
-enable-linkonceodr-outlining, which allows the user to specify that they
want to outline from such functions when they know what they're doing.
Changing this handles most code size regressions in the test suite caused by
competing with linker dedupe. It also doesn't have a huge impact on the code
size improvements from the outliner. There are 6 tests that regress > 5% from
outlining WITH linkonceodrs to outlining WITHOUT linkonceodrs. Overall, most
tests either improve or are not impacted.
Not outlined vs outlined without linkonceodrs:
https://hastebin.com/raw/qeguxavuda
Not outlined vs outlined with linkonceodrs:
https://hastebin.com/raw/edepoqoqic
Outlined with linkonceodrs vs outlined without linkonceodrs:
https://hastebin.com/raw/awiqifiheb
Numbers generated using compare.py with -m size.__text. Tests run for AArch64
with -Oz -mllvm -enable-machine-outliner -mno-red-zone.
llvm-svn: 315136
Summary:
After r303360, we initialize UsesCalleeSaves in runOnMachineFunction,
which runs after getRequiredProperties. UsesCalleeSaves was initialized
to 'false', so getRequiredProperties would always return an empty set.
We don't have a TargetMachine available early anymore after r303360.
Just removing the requirement of NoVRegs seems to make things work, so
let's do that.
Reviewers: thegameg, dschuff, MatzeB
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38597
llvm-svn: 315089
The patch that this assert comes with is fixing a bug in MBP. The assert is
invalid however.
Thanks to @sergey.k.okunev for finding this
Currently this fails SPECCPU2006 LTO. I will add a test case when I do more
investigation and have one.
llvm-svn: 315032
Summary:
When reinserting debug values after register allocation, make sure to
insert debug values after each redefinition of debug value register in
the slot index range. The reason for this is that DwarfDebug will end
the range of a debug variable when the physical reg is defined. For
instructions with e.g. tied operands this result in prematurely ended
debug range.
This resolves pr34545
Patch by Karl-Johan Karlsson and Bjorn Pettersson
Reviewers: rnk, aprantl
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: bjope, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38229
llvm-svn: 314974
Summary:
FastISel::hasTrivialKill() was the only user of the "IntPtrTy" version of
Cast::isNoopCast(). According to review comments in D37894 we could instead
use the "DataLayout" version of the method, and thus get rid of the
"IntPtrTy" versions of isNoopCast() completely.
With the above done, the remaining isNoopCast() could then be simplified
a bit more.
Reviewers: arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38497
llvm-svn: 314969
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D38138.
I fixed the capitalization of some functions because we're changing those
lines anyway and that helped verify that we weren't accidentally dropping
any options by using default param values.
llvm-svn: 314930
It broke the Chromium / SQLite build; see PR34830.
> Summary:
> 1/ Operand folding during complex pattern matching for LEAs has been
> extended, such that it promotes Scale to accommodate similar operand
> appearing in the DAG.
> e.g.
> T1 = A + B
> T2 = T1 + 10
> T3 = T2 + A
> For above DAG rooted at T3, X86AddressMode will no look like
> Base = B , Index = A , Scale = 2 , Disp = 10
>
> 2/ During OptimizeLEAPass down the pipeline factorization is now performed over LEAs
> so that if there is an opportunity then complex LEAs (having 3 operands)
> could be factored out.
> e.g.
> leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
> leal 1(%rax,%rcx,2), %rcx
> will be factored as following
> leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
> leal (%rdx,%rcx) , %edx
>
> 3/ Aggressive operand folding for AM based selection for LEAs is sensitive to loops,
> thus avoiding creation of any complex LEAs within a loop.
>
> Reviewers: lsaba, RKSimon, craig.topper, qcolombet, jmolloy
>
> Reviewed By: lsaba
>
> Subscribers: jmolloy, spatel, igorb, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35014
llvm-svn: 314919
Before the patch this was in Analysis. Moving it to IR and making it implicit
part of LLVMContext::diagnose allows the full opt-remark facility to be used
outside passes e.g. the pass manager. Jessica is planning to use this to
report function size after each pass. The same could be used for time
reports.
Tested with BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=On.
llvm-svn: 314909
Summary:
1/ Operand folding during complex pattern matching for LEAs has been
extended, such that it promotes Scale to accommodate similar operand
appearing in the DAG.
e.g.
T1 = A + B
T2 = T1 + 10
T3 = T2 + A
For above DAG rooted at T3, X86AddressMode will no look like
Base = B , Index = A , Scale = 2 , Disp = 10
2/ During OptimizeLEAPass down the pipeline factorization is now performed over LEAs
so that if there is an opportunity then complex LEAs (having 3 operands)
could be factored out.
e.g.
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,2), %rcx
will be factored as following
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
leal (%rdx,%rcx) , %edx
3/ Aggressive operand folding for AM based selection for LEAs is sensitive to loops,
thus avoiding creation of any complex LEAs within a loop.
Reviewers: lsaba, RKSimon, craig.topper, qcolombet, jmolloy
Reviewed By: lsaba
Subscribers: jmolloy, spatel, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35014
llvm-svn: 314886
This time invoking llc with "-march=x86-64" in the testcase, so we don't assume
the default target is x86.
Summary:
If we have
%vreg0<def> = PHI %vreg2<undef>, <BB#0>, %vreg3, <BB#2>; GR32:%vreg0,%vreg2,%vreg3
%vreg3<def,tied1> = ADD32ri8 %vreg0<kill,tied0>, 1, %EFLAGS<imp-def>; GR32:%vreg3,%vreg0
then we can't just change %vreg0 into %vreg3, since %vreg2 is actually
undef. We would have to also copy the undef flag to be able to change the
register.
Instead we deal with this case like other cases where we can't just
replace the register: we insert a COPY. The code creating the COPY already
copied all flags from the PHI input, so the undef flag will be transferred
as it should.
Reviewers: kparzysz
Reviewed By: kparzysz
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38235
llvm-svn: 314882
Summary:
If we have
%vreg0<def> = PHI %vreg2<undef>, <BB#0>, %vreg3, <BB#2>; GR32:%vreg0,%vreg2,%vreg3
%vreg3<def,tied1> = ADD32ri8 %vreg0<kill,tied0>, 1, %EFLAGS<imp-def>; GR32:%vreg3,%vreg0
then we can't just change %vreg0 into %vreg3, since %vreg2 is actually
undef. We would have to also copy the undef flag to be able to change the
register.
Instead we deal with this case like other cases where we can't just
replace the register: we insert a COPY. The code creating the COPY already
copied all flags from the PHI input, so the undef flag will be transferred
as it should.
Reviewers: kparzysz
Reviewed By: kparzysz
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38235
llvm-svn: 314879
This commit does two things. Firstly, it cleans up some of the benefit
calculation wrt outlined functions and candidates. Secondly, it fixes an
off-by-one bug in the cost model which was caused by the benefit value of
an OutlinedFunction and Candidate differing by 1. It updates the remarks test
to reflect this change.
llvm-svn: 314836
Summary:
This should fix a regression introduced by r313786, which switched from
MachineInstr::isIndirectDebugValue() to checking if operand 1 is an
immediate. I didn't have a test case for it until now.
A single UserValue, which approximates a user variable, may have many
DBG_VALUE instructions that disagree about whether the variable is in
memory or in a virtual register. This will become much more common once
we have llvm.dbg.addr, but you can construct such a test case manually
today with llvm.dbg.value.
Before this change, we would get two UserValues: one for direct and one
for indirect DBG_VALUE instructions describing the same variable. If we
build separate interval maps for direct and indirect locations, we will
end up accidentally coalescing identical DBG_VALUE intervals that need
to remain separate because they are broken up by intervals of the
opposite direct-ness.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37932
llvm-svn: 314819
Currently optimizeMemoryInst requires that all of the AddrModes it sees are
identical. This patch makes it capable of tracking multiple AddrModes, so long
as they differ in at most one field.
This patch does nothing by itself, but later patches will make use of it to
insert or reuse phi or select instructions for the differing fields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38278
llvm-svn: 314795
This lets us optimize away selects that perform the same address computation in
two different ways and is also the first step towards being able to handle
selects between two different, but compatible, address computations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38242
llvm-svn: 314794
Summary:
Take the target's endianness into account when splitting the
debug information in DAGTypeLegalizer::SetExpandedInteger.
This patch fixes so that, for big-endian targets, the fragment
expression corresponding to the high part of a split integer
value is placed at offset 0, in order to correctly represent
the memory address order.
I have attached a PPC32 reproducer where the resulting DWARF
pieces for a 64-bit integer were incorrectly reversed.
Original patch was reverted due to using -stop-after=isel in
the test case (but that is only working when AMDGPU target
is included in the llc build). The test case has now been
updated to use -stop-before=expand-isel-pseudos instead.
Patch by: dstenb
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38172
llvm-svn: 314781
This adds some more debug messages to the type legalizer and functions
like PromoteNode, ExpandNode, ExpandLibCall in an attempt to make
the debug messages a little bit more informative and useful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38450
llvm-svn: 314773
Issues addressed since original review:
- Avoid bug in regalloc greedy/machine verifier when forwarding to use
in an instruction that re-defines the same virtual register.
- Fixed bug when forwarding to use in EarlyClobber instruction slot.
- Fixed incorrect forwarding to register definitions that showed up in
explicit_uses() iterator (e.g. in INLINEASM).
- Moved removal of dead instructions found by
LiveIntervals::shrinkToUses() outside of loop iterating over
instructions to avoid instructions being deleted while pointed to by
iterator.
- Fixed ARMLoadStoreOptimizer bug exposed by this change in r311907.
- The pass no longer forwards COPYs to physical register uses, since
doing so can break code that implicitly relies on the physical
register number of the use.
- The pass no longer forwards COPYs to undef uses, since doing so
can break the machine verifier by creating LiveRanges that don't
end on a use (since the undef operand is not considered a use).
[MachineCopyPropagation] Extend pass to do COPY source forwarding
This change extends MachineCopyPropagation to do COPY source forwarding.
This change also extends the MachineCopyPropagation pass to be able to
be run during register allocation, after physical registers have been
assigned, but before the virtual registers have been re-written, which
allows it to remove virtual register COPY LiveIntervals that become dead
through the forwarding of all of their uses.
llvm-svn: 314729
Summary:
Take the target's endianness into account when splitting the
debug information in DAGTypeLegalizer::SetExpandedInteger.
This patch fixes so that, for big-endian targets, the fragment
expression corresponding to the high part of a split integer
value is placed at offset 0, in order to correctly represent
the memory address order.
I have attached a PPC32 reproducer where the resulting DWARF
pieces for a 64-bit integer were incorrectly reversed.
Patch by: dstenb
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38172
llvm-svn: 314666
Currently expandUnalignedLoad/Store uses place holder pointer info for temporary memory operand
in stack, which does not have correct address space. This causes unaligned private double16 load/store to be
lowered to flat_load instead of buffer_load for amdgcn target.
This fixes failures of OpenCL conformance test basic/vload_private/vstore_private on target amdgcn---amdgizcl.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35361
llvm-svn: 314566
Implement shouldCoalesce() to help regalloc avoid running out of GR128
registers.
If a COPY involving a subreg of a GR128 is coalesced, the live range of the
GR128 virtual register will be extended. If this happens where there are
enough phys-reg clobbers present, regalloc will run out of registers (if
there is not a single GR128 allocatable register available).
This patch tries to allow coalescing only when it can prove that this will be
safe by checking the (local) interval in question.
Review: Ulrich Weigand, Quentin Colombet
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37899https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34610
llvm-svn: 314516
This commit yanks out the repeated sections of code in pruneCandidates into
two lambdas: ShouldSkipCandidate and Prune. This simplifies the logic in
pruneCandidates significantly, and reduces the chance of introducing bugs by
folding all of the shared logic into one place.
llvm-svn: 314475
This patch implements the dwarfdump option --find=<name>. This option
looks for a DIE in the accelerator tables and dumps it if found. This
initial patch only adds support for .apple_names to keep the review
small, adding the other sections and pubnames support should be
trivial though.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38282
llvm-svn: 314439
Summary:
A DBG_VALUE that is referring to a physical register is
valid up until the next def of the register, or the end
of the basic block that it belongs to.
LiveDebugVariables is computing live intervals (slot index
ranges) for DBG_VALUE instructions, before regalloc, in order
to be able to re-insert DBG_VALUE instructions again after
regalloc. When the DBG_VALUE is mapping a variable to a
physical register we do not need to compute the range. We
should simply re-insert the DBG_VALUE at the start position.
The problem that was found, resulting in this patch, was a
situation when the DBG_VALUE was the last real use of the
physical register. The computeIntervals/extendDef methods
extended the range to cover the whole basic block, even though
the physical register very well could be allocated to some
virtual register inside the basic block. So the extended
range could not be trusted.
This patch is a preparation for https://reviews.llvm.org/D38229,
where the goal is to insert DBG_VALUE after each new definition
of a variable, even if the virtual registers that the variable
was connected to has been coalesced into using the same physical
register (e.g. due to two address instructions). For more info
see https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34545
Reviewers: aprantl, rnk, echristo
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: Ka-Ka, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38140
llvm-svn: 314414
It's currently quite difficult to test passes like branch relaxation, which
requires branches with large displacement to be generated. The .space assembler
directive makes it easy to create arbitrarily large basic blocks, but
getInlineAsmLength is not able to parse it and so the size of the block is not
correctly estimated. Other backends (AArch64, AMDGPU) introduce options just
for testing that artificially restrict the ranges of branch instructions (e.g.
aarch64-tbz-offset-bits). Although parsing a single form of the .space
directive feels inelegant, it does allow a more direct testing approach.
This patch adapts the .space parsing code from
Mips16InstrInfo::getInlineAsmLength and removes it now the extra functionality
is provided by the base implementation. I want to move this functionality to
the generic getInlineAsmLength as 1) I need the same for RISC-V, and 2) I feel
other backends will benefit from more direct testing of large branch
displacements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37798
llvm-svn: 314393
Summary:
If we have a non-allocated register, we allow us to try recoloring of an
already allocated and "Done" register, even if they are of the same
register class, if the non-allocated register has at least one tied def
and the allocated one has none.
It should be easier to recolor the non-tied register than the tied one, so
it might be an improvement even if they use the same regclasses.
Reviewers: qcolombet
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: llvm-commits, MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38309
llvm-svn: 314388
Without this, we could end up trying to get the Nth (0-indexed) element
from a subvector of size N.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37880
llvm-svn: 314380
This commit allows the outliner to avoid saving and restoring the link register
on AArch64 when it is dead within an entire class of candidates.
This introduces changes to the way the outliner interfaces with the target.
For example, the target now interfaces with the outliner using a
MachineOutlinerInfo struct rather than by using getOutliningCallOverhead and
getOutliningFrameOverhead.
This also improves several comments on the outliner's cost model.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D36721
llvm-svn: 314341
Summary:
According to https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/SplitStacks, the linker expects a zero-sized .note.GNU-split-stack section if split-stack is used (and also .note.GNU-no-split-stack section if it also contains non-split-stack functions), so it can handle the cases where a split-stack function calls non-split-stack function.
This change adds the sections if needed.
Fixes PR #34670.
Reviewers: thanm, rnk, luqmana
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Patch by Cherry Zhang <cherryyz@google.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38051
llvm-svn: 314335
This was intended to be no-functional-change, but it's not - there's a test diff.
So I thought I should stop here and post it as-is to see if this looks like what was expected
based on the discussion in PR34603:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34603
Notes:
1. The test improvement occurs because the existing 'LateSimplifyCFG' marker is not carried
through the recursive calls to 'SimplifyCFG()->SimplifyCFGOpt().run()->SimplifyCFG()'.
The parameter isn't passed down, so we pick up the default value from the function signature
after the first level. I assumed that was a bug, so I've passed 'Options' down in all of the
'SimplifyCFG' calls.
2. I split 'LateSimplifyCFG' into 2 bits: ConvertSwitchToLookupTable and KeepCanonicalLoops.
This would theoretically allow us to differentiate the transforms controlled by those params
independently.
3. We could stash the optional AssumptionCache pointer and 'LoopHeaders' pointer in the struct too.
I just stopped here to minimize the diffs.
4. Similarly, I stopped short of messing with the pass manager layer. I have another question that
could wait for the follow-up: why is the new pass manager creating the pass with LateSimplifyCFG
set to true no matter where in the pipeline it's creating SimplifyCFG passes?
// Create an early function pass manager to cleanup the output of the
// frontend.
EarlyFPM.addPass(SimplifyCFGPass());
-->
/// \brief Construct a pass with the default thresholds
/// and switch optimizations.
SimplifyCFGPass::SimplifyCFGPass()
: BonusInstThreshold(UserBonusInstThreshold),
LateSimplifyCFG(true) {} <-- switches get converted to lookup tables and loops may not be in canonical form
If this is unintended, then it's possible that the current behavior of dropping the 'LateSimplifyCFG'
setting via recursion was masking this bug.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38138
llvm-svn: 314308
This teach simplifyDemandedBits to handle constant splat vector shifts.
This required changing some uses of getZExtValue to getLimitedValue since we can't rely on legalization using getShiftAmountTy for the shift amount.
I believe there may have been a bug in the ((X << C1) >>u ShAmt) handling where we didn't check if the inner shift was too large. I've fixed that here.
I had to add new patterns to ARM because the zext/sext the patterns were trying to look for got turned into an any_extend with this patch. Happy to split that out too, but not sure how to test without this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37665
llvm-svn: 314139
Summary:
This code iterates the 'Orders' vector in parallel with the DbgValue
list, emitting all DBG_VALUEs that occurred between the last IR order
insertion point and the next insertion point. This assumes the
SDDbgValue list is sorted in IR order, which it usually is. However, it
is not sorted when a node with a debug value is replaced with another
one. When this happens, TransferDbgValues is called, and the new value
is added to the end of the list.
The problem can be solved by stably sorting the list by IR order.
Reviewers: aprantl, Ka-Ka
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: MatzeB, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38197
llvm-svn: 314114
Summary:
Right now there are two functions with the same name, one does the work
and the other one returns true if expansion is needed. Rename
TargetTransformInfo::expandMemCmp to make it more consistent with other
members of TargetTransformInfo.
Remove the unused Instruction* parameter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38165
llvm-svn: 314096
Summary: Conditional returns were not taken into consideration at all. Implement them by turning them into jumps and normal returns. This means there is a slightly higher performance penalty for conditional returns, but this is the best we can do, and it still disturbs little of the rest.
Reviewers: dberris, echristo
Subscribers: sanjoy, nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38102
llvm-svn: 314005
At least for the 64-bit and less case, we should be able to determine if we even have a mask without counting any bits. This also removes the need to explicitly check for 0 active bits, isMask will return false for 0.
llvm-svn: 313908
The fix is to avoid invalidating our insertion point in
replaceDbgDeclare:
Builder.insertDeclare(NewAddress, DIVar, DIExpr, Loc, InsertBefore);
+ if (DII == InsertBefore)
+ InsertBefore = &*std::next(InsertBefore->getIterator());
DII->eraseFromParent();
I had to write a unit tests for this instead of a lit test because the
use list order matters in order to trigger the bug.
The reduced C test case for this was:
void useit(int*);
static inline void inlineme() {
int x[2];
useit(x);
}
void f() {
inlineme();
inlineme();
}
llvm-svn: 313905
Summary:
SelectionDAGISel::LowerArguments is associating arguments
with frame indices (FuncInfo->setArgumentFrameIndex). That
information is later on used by EmitFuncArgumentDbgValue to
create DBG_VALUE instructions that denotes that a variable
can be found on the stack.
I discovered that for our (big endian) out-of-tree target
the association created by SelectionDAGISel::LowerArguments
sometimes is wrong. I've seen this happen when a 64-bit value
is passed on the stack. The argument will occupy two stack
slots (frame index X, and frame index X+1). The fault is
that a call to setArgumentFrameIndex is associating the
64-bit argument with frame index X+1. The effect is that the
debug information (DBG_VALUE) will point at the least significant
part of the arguement on the stack. When printing the
argument in a debugger I will get the wrong value.
I managed to create a test case for PowerPC that seems to
show the same kind of problem.
The bugfix will look at the datalayout, taking endianness into
account when examining a BUILD_PAIR node, assuming that the
least significant part is in the first operand of the BUILD_PAIR.
For big endian targets we should use the frame index from
the second operand, as the most significant part will be stored
at the lower address (using the highest frame index).
Reviewers: bogner, rnk, hfinkel, sdardis, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: nemanjai, aprantl, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37740
llvm-svn: 313901
.. as well as the two subsequent changes r313826 and r313875.
This leads to segfaults in combination with ASAN. Will forward repro
instructions to the original author (rnk).
llvm-svn: 313876
This patch contains fix for reverted commit
rL312318 which was causing failure due to use
of unchecked dyn_cast to CIInit.
Patch by: Nikola Prica.
llvm-svn: 313870
Summary:
This implements the design discussed on llvm-dev for better tracking of
variables that live in memory through optimizations:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-September/117222.html
This is tracked as PR34136
llvm.dbg.addr is intended to be produced and used in almost precisely
the same way as llvm.dbg.declare is today, with the exception that it is
control-dependent. That means that dbg.addr should always have a
position in the instruction stream, and it will allow passes that
optimize memory operations on local variables to insert llvm.dbg.value
calls to reflect deleted stores. See SourceLevelDebugging.rst for more
details.
The main drawback to generating DBG_VALUE machine instrs is that they
usually cause LLVM to emit a location list for DW_AT_location. The next
step will be to teach DwarfDebug.cpp how to recognize more DBG_VALUE
ranges as not needing a location list, and possibly start setting
DW_AT_start_offset for variables whose lifetimes begin mid-scope.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Subscribers: eraman, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37768
llvm-svn: 313825
Add support for passing SwiftError through a register on the Windows x64
calling convention. This allows the use of swifterror attributes on
parameters which is used by the swift front end for the `Error`
parameter. This partially enables building the swift standard library
for Windows x86_64.
llvm-svn: 313791
After r313775, it's easier to maintain a parallel BitVector of spilled
locations indexed by location number.
I wasn't able to build a good reduced test case for this iteration of
the bug, but I added a more direct assertion that spilled values must
use frame index locations. If this bug reappears, it won't only fire on
the NEON vector code that we detected it on, but on medium-sized
integer-only programs as well.
llvm-svn: 313786
Summary:
The new code should be linear in the number of DBG_VALUEs, while the old
code was quadratic. NFC intended.
This is also hopefully a more direct expression of the problem, which is
to:
1. Rewrite all virtual register operands to stack slots or physical
registers
2. Uniquely number those machine operands, assigning them location
numbers
3. Rewrite all uses of the old location numbers in the interval map to
use the new location numbers
In r313400, I attempted to track which locations were spilled in a
parallel bitvector indexed by location number. My code was broken
because these location numbers are not stable during rewriting.
Reviewers: aprantl, hans
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38068
llvm-svn: 313775
This version of the patch fixes an off-by-one error causing PR34596. We
do not need to use std::next(BlockIter) when calling updateDepths, as
BlockIter already points to the next element.
Original commit message:
> For large basic blocks with lots of combinable instructions, the
> MachineTraceMetrics computations in MachineCombiner can dominate the compile
> time, as computing the trace information is quadratic in the number of
> instructions in a BB and it's relevant successors/predecessors.
> In most cases, knowing the instruction depth should be enough to make
> combination decisions. As we already iterate over all instructions in a basic
> block, the instruction depth can be computed incrementally. This reduces the
> cost of machine-combine drastically in cases where lots of instructions
> are combined. The major drawback is that AFAIK, computing the critical path
> length cannot be done incrementally. Therefore we only compute
> instruction depths incrementally, for basic blocks with more
> instructions than inc_threshold. The -machine-combiner-inc-threshold
> option can be used to set the threshold and allows for easier
> experimenting and checking if using incremental updates for all basic
> blocks has any impact on the performance.
>
> Reviewers: sanjoy, Gerolf, MatzeB, efriedma, fhahn
>
> Reviewed By: fhahn
>
> Subscribers: kiranchandramohan, javed.absar, efriedma, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36619
llvm-svn: 313751
This re-applies commit r313685, this time with the proper updates to
the test cases.
Original commit message:
Unreachable blocks in the machine instr representation are these
weird empty blocks with no successors.
The MIR printer used to not print empty lists of successors. However,
the MIR parser now treats non-printed list of successors as "please
guess it for me". As a result, the parser tries to guess the list of
successors and given the block is empty, just assumes it falls through
the next block (if any).
For instance, the following test case used to fail the verifier.
The MIR printer would print
entry
/ \
true (def) false (no list of successors)
|
split.true (use)
The MIR parser would understand this:
entry
/ \
true (def) false
| / <-- invalid edge
split.true (use)
Because of the invalid edge, we get the "def does not
dominate all uses" error.
The fix consists in printing empty successor lists, so that the parser
knows what to do for unreachable blocks.
rdar://problem/34022159
llvm-svn: 313696
Unreachable blocks in the machine instr representation are these
weird empty blocks with no successors.
The MIR printer used to not print empty lists of successors. However,
the MIR parser now treats non-printed list of successors as "please
guess it for me". As a result, the parser tries to guess the list of
successors and given the block is empty, just assumes it falls through
the next block (if any).
For instance, the following test case used to fail the verifier.
The MIR printer would print
entry
/ \
true (def) false (no list of successors)
|
split.true (use)
The MIR parser would understand this:
entry
/ \
true (def) false
| / <-- invalid edge
split.true (use)
Because of the invalid edge, we get the "def does not
dominate all uses" error.
The fix consists in printing empty successor lists, so that the parser
knows what to do for unreachable blocks.
rdar://problem/34022159
llvm-svn: 313685
This reverts r313640, originally r313400, one more time for essentially
the same issue. My BitVector of spilled location numbers isn't working
because we coalesce identical DBG_VALUE locations as we rewrite them,
invalidating the location numbers used to index the BitVector.
llvm-svn: 313679
I forgot to zero out the BitVector when reusing it between UserValues.
Later uses of the same location number for a different UserValue would
falsely indicate that they were spilled. Usually this would lead to
incorrect debug info, but in some cases they would indicate something
nonsensical like a memory location based on a vector register (Q8 on
ARM).
llvm-svn: 313640
This caused asserts in Chromium. See http://crbug.com/766261
> Summary:
> This comes up in optimized debug info for C++ programs that pass and
> return objects indirectly by address. In these programs,
> llvm.dbg.declare survives optimization, which causes us to emit indirect
> DBG_VALUE instructions. The fast register allocator knows to insert
> DW_OP_deref when spilling indirect DBG_VALUE instructions, but the
> LiveDebugVariables did not until this change.
>
> This fixes part of PR34513. I need to look into why this doesn't work at
> -O0 and I'll send follow up patches to handle that.
>
> Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
>
> Subscribers: qcolombet, hiraditya, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37911
llvm-svn: 313589
If we have an AssertZext of a truncated value that has already been AssertZext'ed,
we can assert on the wider source op to improve the zext-y knowledge:
assert (trunc (assert X, i8) to iN), i1 --> trunc (assert X, i1) to iN
This moves a fold from being Mips-specific to general combining, and x86 shows
improvements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37017
llvm-svn: 313577
rL310710 allowed store merging to occur after legalization to catch stores that are created late,
but this exposes a logic hole seen in PR34217:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34217
We will miss merging stores if the target lowers vector extracts into target-specific operations.
This patch allows store merging to occur both before and after legalization if the target chooses
to get maximum merging.
I don't think the potential regressions in the other tests are relevant. The tests are for
correctness of weird IR constructs rather than perf tests, and I think those are still correct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37987
llvm-svn: 313564
r313390 taught 'allowExtraAnalysis' to check whether remarks are
enabled at all. Use that to only do the expensive instruction printing
if they are.
llvm-svn: 313552
For cases where we are BITCASTing to vectors of smaller elements, then if the entire source was a splatted sign (src's NumSignBits == SrcBitWidth) we can say that the dst's NumSignBit == DstBitWidth, as we're just splitting those sign bits across multiple elements.
We could generalize this but at the moment the only use case I have is to peek through bitcasts to vector comparison results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37849
llvm-svn: 313543
This reverts commit 6389e7aa724ea7671d096f4770f016c3d86b0d54.
There is a bug in this implementation where the string value of the
checksum is outputted, instead of the actual hex bytes. Therefore the
checksum is incorrect, and this prevent pdbs from being loaded by visual
studio. Revert this until the checksum is emitted correctly.
llvm-svn: 313431
Summary:
This comes up in optimized debug info for C++ programs that pass and
return objects indirectly by address. In these programs,
llvm.dbg.declare survives optimization, which causes us to emit indirect
DBG_VALUE instructions. The fast register allocator knows to insert
DW_OP_deref when spilling indirect DBG_VALUE instructions, but the
LiveDebugVariables did not until this change.
This fixes part of PR34513. I need to look into why this doesn't work at
-O0 and I'll send follow up patches to handle that.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Subscribers: qcolombet, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37911
llvm-svn: 313400
Summary:
Fixes PR34513.
Indirect DBG_VALUEs typically come from dbg.declares of non-trivially
copyable C++ objects that must be passed by address. We were already
handling the case where the virtual register gets allocated to a
physical register and is later spilled. That's what usually happens for
normal parameters that aren't NRVO variables: they usually appear in
physical register parameters, and are spilled later in the function,
which would correctly add deref.
NRVO variables are different because the dbg.declare can come much later
after earlier instructions cause the incoming virtual register to be
spilled.
Also, clean up this code. We only need to look at the first operand of a
DBG_VALUE, which eliminates the operand loop.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Subscribers: MatzeB, qcolombet, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37929
llvm-svn: 313399
This means that we can honor -fdata-sections rather than
always creating a segment for each symbol.
It also allows for a followup change to add .init_array and friends.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37876
llvm-svn: 313395
Previously the 'Padding' argument was the number of padding
bytes to add. However most callers that use 'Padding' know
how many overall bytes they need to write. With the previous
code this would mean encoding the LEB once to find out how
many bytes it would occupy and then using this to calulate
the 'Padding' value.
See: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36595
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37494
llvm-svn: 313393
This caused PR34629: asserts firing when building Chromium. It also broke some
buildbots building test-suite as reported on the commit thread.
> Summary:
> 1/ Operand folding during complex pattern matching for LEAs has been
> extended, such that it promotes Scale to accommodate similar operand
> appearing in the DAG.
> e.g.
> T1 = A + B
> T2 = T1 + 10
> T3 = T2 + A
> For above DAG rooted at T3, X86AddressMode will no look like
> Base = B , Index = A , Scale = 2 , Disp = 10
>
> 2/ During OptimizeLEAPass down the pipeline factorization is now performed over LEAs
> so that if there is an opportunity then complex LEAs (having 3 operands)
> could be factored out.
> e.g.
> leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
> leal 1(%rax,%rcx,2), %rcx
> will be factored as following
> leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
> leal (%rdx,%rcx) , %edx
>
> 3/ Aggressive operand folding for AM based selection for LEAs is sensitive to loops,
> thus avoiding creation of any complex LEAs within a loop.
>
> Reviewers: lsaba, RKSimon, craig.topper, qcolombet
>
> Reviewed By: lsaba
>
> Subscribers: spatel, igorb, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35014
llvm-svn: 313376
Summary:
The checksums had already been placed in the IR, this patch allows
MCCodeView to actually write it out to an MCStreamer.
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37157
llvm-svn: 313374
removing them"
This was temporarily reverted, but now that the fix has been commited (r313197)
it should be put back in place.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34502
This reverts commit 9ef93d9dc4c51568e858cf8203cd2c5ce8dca796.
llvm-svn: 313349
Summary:
1/ Operand folding during complex pattern matching for LEAs has been
extended, such that it promotes Scale to accommodate similar operand
appearing in the DAG.
e.g.
T1 = A + B
T2 = T1 + 10
T3 = T2 + A
For above DAG rooted at T3, X86AddressMode will no look like
Base = B , Index = A , Scale = 2 , Disp = 10
2/ During OptimizeLEAPass down the pipeline factorization is now performed over LEAs
so that if there is an opportunity then complex LEAs (having 3 operands)
could be factored out.
e.g.
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,2), %rcx
will be factored as following
leal 1(%rax,%rcx,1), %rdx
leal (%rdx,%rcx) , %edx
3/ Aggressive operand folding for AM based selection for LEAs is sensitive to loops,
thus avoiding creation of any complex LEAs within a loop.
Reviewers: lsaba, RKSimon, craig.topper, qcolombet
Reviewed By: lsaba
Subscribers: spatel, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35014
llvm-svn: 313343
These are removed in C++17. We still have some users of
unary_function::argument_type, so just spell that typedef out. No
functionality change intended.
Note that many of the argument types are actually wrong :)
llvm-svn: 313287
This replaces TableGen's type inference to operate on parameterized
types instead of MVTs, and as a consequence, some interfaces have
changed:
- Uses of MVTs are replaced by ValueTypeByHwMode.
- EEVT::TypeSet is replaced by TypeSetByHwMode.
This affects the way that types and type sets are printed, and the
tests relying on that have been updated.
There are certain users of the inferred types outside of TableGen
itself, namely FastISel and GlobalISel. For those users, the way
that the types are accessed have changed. For typical scenarios,
these replacements can be used:
- TreePatternNode::getType(ResNo) -> getSimpleType(ResNo)
- TreePatternNode::hasTypeSet(ResNo) -> hasConcreteType(ResNo)
- TypeSet::isConcrete -> TypeSetByHwMode::isValueTypeByHwMode(false)
For more information, please refer to the review page.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31951
llvm-svn: 313271
We already have a combine for this pattern when the input to shl is add, so we just need to enable the transformation when the input is or.
Original patch by @tstellar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19325
llvm-svn: 313251
Use RotAmt.urem(VTBits) instead of AND(RotAmt, VTBits - 1)
TBH I don't expect non-power-of-2 types to be created, but it makes the logic clearer and matches what we do in other rotation combines.
llvm-svn: 313245
Summary:
XRay had been assuming that the previous section is the "text" section
of the function when lowering the instrumentation map. Unfortunately
this is not a safe assumption, because we may be coming from lowering
debug type information for the function being lowered.
This fixes an issue with combining -gsplit-dwarf, -generate-type-units,
-debug-compile and -fxray-instrument for sole member functions. When the
split dwarf section is stripped, we're left with references from the
xray_instr_map to the debug section. The change now uses the function's
symbol instead of the previous section's start symbol.
We found the bug while attempting to strip the split debug sections off
an XRay-instrumented object file, which had a peculiar edge-case for
single-function classes where the single function is being lowered.
Because XRay had assocaited the instrumentation map for a function to
the debug types section instead of the function's section, the objcopy
call will fail due to the misplaced reference from the xray_instr_map
section.
Reviewers: pcc, dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37791
llvm-svn: 313233
This caused PR34596.
> [MachineCombiner] Update instruction depths incrementally for large BBs.
>
> Summary:
> For large basic blocks with lots of combinable instructions, the
> MachineTraceMetrics computations in MachineCombiner can dominate the compile
> time, as computing the trace information is quadratic in the number of
> instructions in a BB and it's relevant successors/predecessors.
>
> In most cases, knowing the instruction depth should be enough to make
> combination decisions. As we already iterate over all instructions in a basic
> block, the instruction depth can be computed incrementally. This reduces the
> cost of machine-combine drastically in cases where lots of instructions
> are combined. The major drawback is that AFAIK, computing the critical path
> length cannot be done incrementally. Therefore we only compute
> instruction depths incrementally, for basic blocks with more
> instructions than inc_threshold. The -machine-combiner-inc-threshold
> option can be used to set the threshold and allows for easier
> experimenting and checking if using incremental updates for all basic
> blocks has any impact on the performance.
>
> Reviewers: sanjoy, Gerolf, MatzeB, efriedma, fhahn
>
> Reviewed By: fhahn
>
> Subscribers: kiranchandramohan, javed.absar, efriedma, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36619
llvm-svn: 313213
MachineScheduler when clustering loads or stores checks if base
pointers point to the same memory. This check is done through
comparison of base registers of two memory instructions. This
works fine when instructions have separate offset operand. If
they require a full calculated pointer such instructions can
never be clustered according to such logic.
Changed shouldClusterMemOps to accept base registers as well and
let it decide what to do about it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37698
llvm-svn: 313208
Previously we used a size of '1' for VLAs because we weren't sure what
MSVC did. However, MSVC does support declaring an array without a size,
for which it emits an array type with a size of zero. Clang emits the
same DI metadata for VLAs and arrays without bound, so we would describe
arrays without bound as having one element. This lead to Microsoft
debuggers only printing a single element.
Emitting a size of zero appears to cause these debuggers to search the
symbol information to find a definition of the variable with accurate
array bounds.
Fixes http://crbug.com/763580
llvm-svn: 313203
This is to fix PR34502. After rL311401, the live range of spilled vreg will be
cleared. HoistSpill need to use the live range of the original vreg before splitting
to know the moving range of the spills. The patch saves a copy of live interval for
the spilled vreg inside of HoistSpillHelper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37578
llvm-svn: 313197
Summary:
To improve CodeView quality for static member functions, we need to make the
static explicit. In addition to a small change in LLVM's CodeViewDebug to
return the appropriate MethodKind, this requires a small change in Clang to
note the staticness in the debug info metadata.
Subscribers: aprantl, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37715
llvm-svn: 313192
This flag is unnecessary for testing because we can get the coverage
we need by adjusting CU attributes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37725
llvm-svn: 313079
Implementing this pass as a PowerPC specific pass. Branch coalescing utilizes
the analyzeBranch method which currently does not include any implicit operands.
This is not an issue on PPC but must be handled on other targets.
Pass is currently off by default. Enabled via -enable-ppc-branch-coalesce.
Differential Revision : https: // reviews.llvm.org/D32776
llvm-svn: 313061
Looks like these were copied from the ELF sections but
don't apply to Wasm and were not used anywhere.
Also remove unused Wasm methods in MCContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37633
llvm-svn: 313058
A prologue-end line record is emitted with an incorrect associated address,
which causes a debugger to show the beginning of function body to be inside
the prologue.
Patch written by Carlos Alberto Enciso.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37625
llvm-svn: 313047
Summary:
GEP merging can sometimes increase the number of live values and register
pressure across control edges and cause performance problems particularly if the
increased register pressure results in spills.
This change implements GEP unmerging around an IndirectBr in certain cases to
mitigate the issue. This is in the CodeGenPrepare pass (after all the GEP
merging has happened.)
With this patch, the Python interpreter loop runs faster by ~5%.
Reviewers: sanjoy, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: eastig, junbuml, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36772
llvm-svn: 312930
After the split of the Scatter operation, the order of the new instructions is well defined - Lo goes before Hi. Otherwise the semantic of Scatter (from LSB to MSB) is broken.
I'm chaining 2 nodes to prevent reordering.
Differential Revision https://reviews.llvm.org/D37670
llvm-svn: 312894
- Use range based for
- Variable names should start with upper case
- Add `const`
- Change class name to match filename
- Fix doxygen comments
- Use MCPhysReg instead of unsigned
- Use references instead of pointers where things cannot be nullptr
- Misc coding style improvements
llvm-svn: 312846