In r224059, we started verifying after addPass, but missed doing so on
insertPass. There isn't a good reason for the discrepancy, and
skipping the verifier in these cases causes bugs.
This also exposes a verifier error that was introduced in r249087, but
the verifier doesn't run until after the register coalescer, when the
issue happens to have been resolved. I've skipped the verifier after
SIFixSGPRLiveRangesID to avoid the failures for now and will follow up
with Matt for a proper fix.
llvm-svn: 249643
Because of the constant bus requirement, it is never legal to
use a literal constant for these instructions despite the encoding
allowing it. This was already doing the right thing, but note why.
llvm-svn: 249500
This stops using an unknown reg class operand.
Currently build_vector selection has a broken looking check
where it tries to use a VGPR reg class and an SGPR one if it
sees an SGPR use.
With the source operand has an explicit VGPR class,
illegal copies will be inserted that SIFixSGPRCopies will take care
of normally later, which will allow removing the weird check
of build_vector users. Without this, when removed v_movrels_b32 would
still be emitted even though all of the values were only stored in
SGPRs.
llvm-svn: 249494
I'm not sure why this would be necessary, and no tests fail with
them removed. Looking at the uses is suspect as well because
the use reg classes will likely change when the users are moved
as a result of moving this instruction.
llvm-svn: 249493
Summary:
We currently ignore the calling convention, so there is no real reason to
assert on the calling convention of functions.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13367
llvm-svn: 249468
Summary:
The assembly printing of these is still missing the encoding size
suffix, but this will be fixed in a later commit.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13436
llvm-svn: 249424
Summary:
We are currently only using these aliases for VOPC instructions,
but this helper will make it easier to use them everywhere.
These aliases allow for the automatic matching of instructions
with forced 32-bit encoding. Eventually, we should be able to remove
the custom C++ logic we have for this in the assembler.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13396
llvm-svn: 249330
Replace LiveInterval usage with LiveVariables. LiveIntervals
computes far more information than is needed for this pass
which just needs to find if an SGPR is live out of the
defining block.
LiveIntervals are not usually available that early, requiring
computing them twice which is very expensive. The extra run of
LiveIntervals/LiveVariables/SlotIndexes was costing in total
about 5% of compile time.
Continuing to use LiveIntervals is problematic. It seems
there is an option (early-live-intervals) to run the analysis
about where it should go to avoid recomputing LiveVariables,
but it seems to be completely broken with subreg liveness
enabled. There are also problems from trying to recompute
LiveIntervals since this seems to undo LiveVariables
and clearing kill flags, causing TwoAddressInstructions
to make bad decisions.
Insert the pass right after live variables and preserve it.
The tricky case to worry about might be phis since
LiveVariables doesn't count a register as live out if
in the successor block it is only used in a phi,
but I don't think this is a concern right now
because SIFixSGPRCopies replaces SGPR phis.
llvm-svn: 249087
This was the slowest target custom pass and was spending 80%
of the time in getMinimalPhysRegClass which was called
for every register operand.
Try to use the statically known register class when possible from
the instruction's MCOperandInfo. There are a few pseudo instructions
which are not well behaved with unknown register classes which still
require the expensive physical register class search.
There are a few other possibilities for making this even faster,
such as not inspecting implicit operands. For now those are checked
because it is technically possible to have a scalar load into
exec or vcc which can be implicitly used.
llvm-svn: 249079
Summary:
Instead of asserting when the kernel metadata is different than we expect,
we should just skip lowering that function. This fixes assertion
failures with OpenCL argument metadata from older LLVM releases.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13356
llvm-svn: 249073
v2: Add test (Matt).
Fix capitalization of isEOP (Matt).
Move pattern to class parameter (Matt).
Make the instruction available to Cayman (Matt).
Change name from MEM_RAT WRITE_TYPED to MEM_RAT STORE_TYPED.
Patch by: Zoltan Gilian
llvm-svn: 249042
to prevent setting a huge stride, because DATA_FORMAT has a different
meaning if ADD_TID_ENABLE is set.
This is a candidate for stable llvm 3.7.
Tested-and-Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 248858
The splitting of > 4 dword SMRD instructions
if using an offset in an SGPR instead of an immediate
was not setting the destination register,
resulting an an instruction missing an operand
which would assert later.
Test will be included in a following commit
which fixes a related issue.
llvm-svn: 248739
These require multiple mov instructions to copy,
but the default value is that 1 instruction is needed.
I'm not sure if this actually changes anything.
llvm-svn: 248651
Trying to use the version with the explicit output operand
would complain because of the missing WriteSALU. I'm not sure
why it doesn't complain about this with the implicit VCC def.
llvm-svn: 248646
It's easier to understand creating a full instruction
than the current situation where sometimes a new
instruction is created and sometimes it is awkwardly
mutated in place.
llvm-svn: 248627
Don't run passes related to stack maps, garbage collection,
exceptions since these aren't useful for GPUs.
There might be a few more to turn off that I'm less sure about
(e.g. ShrinkWrapping) or I'm not sure how to disable
(SafeStack and StackProtector)
llvm-svn: 248591
This fixes a select error when the i64 source was also
bitcasted to v2i32 in the original source.
Instead of awkwardly trying to select the modified source value and
the store, replace before isel begins.
Uses a worklist to avoid possible problems from mutating the DAG,
although it seems to work OK without it.
llvm-svn: 248589
When buffer resource descriptors were built, the upper two components
of the descriptor were first composed into a 64-bit register because
legalizeOperands assumed all operands had the same register class.
Fix that problem, but keep the workaround. I'm not sure anything
actually is actually emitting such a REG_SEQUENCE now.
If multiple resource descriptors are set up with different base
pointers, this is copied with a single s_mov_b64. We probably
should fix this better by recognizing a pair of s_mov_b32 later,
but for now delete the dead code.
llvm-svn: 248585
This was only set on the final _si/_vi version, but not
on the pseudos most of codegen sees.
No test since these instructions aren't used yet.
llvm-svn: 248583
These were all using the default 32-bit VALU write class,
but the i64/f64 compares are half rate.
I'm not sure this is really correct, because they are still using
the write to VALU write class, even though they really write
to the SALU.
llvm-svn: 248582
These are necessary for implementing mem_fence for
OpenCL 2.0.
The VI assembler tests are disabled since it seems to be
using the wrong encoding or opcode.
llvm-svn: 248532
Allow a target to do something other than search for copies
that will avoid cross register bank copies.
Implement for SI by only rewriting the most basic copies,
so it should look through anything like a subregister extract.
I'm not entirely satisified with this because it seems like
eliminating a reg_sequence that isn't fully used should work
generically for all targets without them having to override
something. However, it seems to be tricky to have a simple
implementation of this without rewriting to invalid kinds
of subregister copies on some targets.
I'm not sure if there is currently a generic way to easily check
if a subregister index would be valid for the current use.
The current set of TargetRegisterInfo::get*Class functions don't
quite behave like I would expect (e.g. getSubClassWithSubReg
returns the maximal register class rather than the minimal), so
I'm not sure how to make the generic test keep searching if
SrcRC:SrcSubReg is a valid replacement for DefRC:DefSubReg. Making
the default implementation to check for simple copies breaks
a variety of ARM and x86 tests by producing illegal subregister uses.
The ARM tests are not actually changed since it should still be using
the same sharesSameRegisterFile implementation, this just relaxes
them to not check for specific registers.
llvm-svn: 248478
Instead of always inserting a copy in case
the super register is itself a subregister,
only extract to the super reg class if this is
actually the case.
This shouldn't really change codegen, but
makes looking at the output of SIFixSGPRCopies
easier to read.
llvm-svn: 248467
After D10403, we had FMF in the DAG but disabled by default. Nick reported no crashing errors after some stress testing,
so I enabled them at r243687. However, Escha soon notified us of a bug not covered by any in-tree regression tests:
if we don't propagate the flags, we may fail to CSE DAG nodes because differing FMF causes them to not match. There is
one test case in this patch to prove that point.
This patch hopes to fix or leave a 'TODO' for all of the in-tree places where we create nodes that are FMF-capable. I
did this by putting an assert in SelectionDAG.getNode() to find any FMF-capable node that was being created without FMF
( D11807 ). I then ran all regression tests and test-suite and confirmed that everything passes.
This patch exposes remaining work to get DAG FMF to be fully functional: (1) add the flags to non-binary nodes such as
FCMP, FMA and FNEG; (2) add the flags to intrinsics; (3) use the flags as conditions for transforms rather than the
current global settings.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12095
llvm-svn: 247815
Summary:
This is the first patch in the series to migrate Triple's (which are ambiguous)
to TargetTuple's (which aren't).
For the moment, TargetTuple simply passes all requests to the Triple object it
holds. Once it has replaced Triple, it will start to implement the interface in
a more suitable way.
This change makes some changes to the public C++ API. In particular,
InitMCSubtargetInfo(), createMCRelocationInfo(), and createMCSymbolizer()
now take TargetTuples instead of Triples. The other public C++ API's have
been left as-is for the moment to reduce patch size.
This commit also contains a trivial patch to clang to account for the C++ API
change. Thanks go to Pavel Labath for fixing LLDB for me.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: jyknight, dschuff, arsenm, rampitec, danalbert, srhines, javed.absar, dsanders, echristo, emaste, jholewinski, tberghammer, ted, jfb, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10969
llvm-svn: 247692
Summary:
This is the first patch in the series to migrate Triple's (which are ambiguous)
to TargetTuple's (which aren't).
For the moment, TargetTuple simply passes all requests to the Triple object it
holds. Once it has replaced Triple, it will start to implement the interface in
a more suitable way.
This change makes some changes to the public C++ API. In particular,
InitMCSubtargetInfo(), createMCRelocationInfo(), and createMCSymbolizer()
now take TargetTuples instead of Triples. The other public C++ API's have
been left as-is for the moment to reduce patch size.
This commit also contains a trivial patch to clang to account for the C++ API
change.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: jyknight, dschuff, arsenm, rampitec, danalbert, srhines, javed.absar, dsanders, echristo, emaste, jholewinski, tberghammer, ted, jfb, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10969
llvm-svn: 247683
Summary: This fixes a variety of typos in docs, code and headers.
Subscribers: jholewinski, sanjoy, arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12626
llvm-svn: 247495
Instead of extracting both 32-bit components from the 128-bit
register. This produces fewer copies and is easier for
the copy peephole optimizer to understand and see the actual uses
as extracts from a reg_sequence.
This avoids needing to handle subregister composing in the
PeepholeOptimizer's ValueTracker for this case.
llvm-svn: 247162
Summary:
This helps mostly when we use add instructions for address calculations
that contain immediates.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12256
llvm-svn: 247157
Currently this hits an assert that extload should
always be supported, which assumes integer extloads.
This moves a hack out of SI's argument lowering and
is covered by existing tests.
llvm-svn: 247113
Adds vcc to output string input for e32. Allows option
of using e64 encoding with assembler.
Also fixes these instructions not implicitly reading exec.
llvm-svn: 247074
These were marked as WriteSALU, which is low latency.
I'm guessing at the value to use, but it should probably
be considered the highest latency instruction.
I'm not sure this has any actual effect since hasSideEffects
probably is preventing any moving of these.
llvm-svn: 247060
sub C, x - > add (sub 0, x), C for DS offsets.
This is mostly to fix regressions that show up when
SeparateConstOffsetFromGEP is enabled.
llvm-svn: 247054
Use and check the 'IsFast' optional parameter to TLI.allowsMemoryAccess() any time
we have a merged access candidate. Without this patch, we were generating unaligned
16-byte (SSE) memops for x86 targets where those accesses are slow.
This change was mentioned in:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10662 and
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10905
and will help solve PR21711.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12573
llvm-svn: 246771
The VOP3 encoding of these allows any SGPR pair for the i1
output, but this was forced before to always use vcc.
This doesn't yet try to use this, but does add the operand
to the definitions so the main change is adding vcc to the
output of the VOP2 encoding.
llvm-svn: 246358
Without a memory operand, mayLoad or mayStore instructions
are treated as hasUnorderedMemRef, which results in much worse
scheduling.
We really should have a verifier check that any
non-side effecting mayLoad or mayStore has a memory operand.
There are a few instructions (interp and images) which I'm
not sure what / where to add these.
llvm-svn: 246356
Summary:
We were assuming tha if the use operand had a sub-register that
the immediate was 64-bits, but this was breaking the case of
folding a 64-bit immediate into another 64-bit instruction.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12255
llvm-svn: 246354
There is no context where s_mov_b64 is emitted
and could potentially be moved to the VALU.
It is currently only emitted for materializing
immediates, which can't be dependent on vector sources.
The immediate splitting is already done when selecting
constants. I'm not sure what contexts if any the register
splitting would have been used before.
Also clean up using s_mov_b64 in place of v_mov_b64_pseudo,
although this isn't required and just skips the extra step
of eliminating the copy from the SReg_64.
llvm-svn: 246080
When splitting 64-bit operations, create the correct
VALU instructions immediately.
This was splitting things like s_or_b64 into the two
s_or_b32s and then pushing the new instructions
onto the worklist. There's no reason we need
to do this intermediate step.
llvm-svn: 246077
Although the basic s_load_* instructions happen to use the same
opcode, some of the special case SMRD instructions have
different opcodes.
llvm-svn: 245775