This is part of the approved D63204 pending parent revision.
This small change is in fact a part of the VOP2b legalization which
does not technically belong to wave32 support, so extracted
separately.
llvm-svn: 363625
AMDGPUPropagateAttributes will not work on function bitcatsts,
so move AMDGPUFixFunctionBitcasts before it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63455
llvm-svn: 363614
Summary:
The purpose of the padding is to guard against stale code being
fetched into the instruction cache by the lowest level prefetching.
We're generating relocatable ELF here, and so the padding should
arguably be added by the linker. This is in fact what Mesa does.
This also fixes multi-part shaders for Mesa.
Change-Id: I6bfede58f20e9f337762ccf39ef9e0e263e69e82
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec, t-tye
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63427
llvm-svn: 363602
The pass works in two modes:
Mode 1: Just set attributes starting from kernels. This can work at
the very beginning of opt and llc pipeline, but cannot clone functions
because it must be a function pass.
Mode 2: Actually clone functions for new attributes. This can only work
after all function passes in the opt pipeline because it has to be a
module pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63208
llvm-svn: 363586
I keep using the wrong instruction when manually writing tests. This
really needs to check the number of operands, but I don't see an easy
way to do that right now.
llvm-svn: 363579
This patch changes MIR stack-id from an integer to an enum,
and adds printing/parsing support for this in MIR files. The default
stack-id '0' is now renamed to 'default'.
This should make MIR tests that have stack objects with different stack-ids
more descriptive. It also clarifies code operating on StackID.
Reviewers: arsenm, thegameg, qcolombet
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60137
llvm-svn: 363533
Summary:
Instead of encoding a high-word of 0 using a fake TargetGlobalAddress,
just use a literal target constant. This simplifies some subsequent changes.
The generated assembly is now more explicit about the kind of relocation
that is to be used.
Change-Id: I066835202d23b5941fa7a358eb4b89e9b71ab6f8
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61491
llvm-svn: 363516
Currently you get extra waits, because waits are inserted for the
register dependencies of the call, and the function prolog waits on
everything.
Currently waits are still inserted on returns. It may make sense to
not do this, and wait in the caller instead.
llvm-svn: 363465
The way SelectionDAG treats memory operands is very frustrating, and
by default drops them unless a property is set on the pattern. There
is no pattern for manually selected instructions, so this requires
manually setting them.
llvm-svn: 363455
Earlier commit has added AMDGPUOperand::isBoolReg(). Turns out
gcc issues warning about unused function since D63204 is not
yet submitted.
Added NFC part of D63204 to have a use of that function and
mute the warning.
llvm-svn: 363416
Avoid producing illegal register bank copies for reg_sequence and
phi. The default implementation assumes it is possible to pick any
operand's bank and use that for the result, introducing a copy for
operands with a different bank. This does not check for illegal
copies. It is not legal to introduce a VGPR->SGPR copy, so any VGPR
operand requires the result to be a VGPR.
The changes in getInstrMappingImpl aren't strictly necessary, since
AMDGPU now just bypasses this for reg_sequence/phi. This could be
replaced with an assert in case other targets run into this. It is
currently responsible for producing the error for unsatisfiable
copies, but this will be better served with a verifier check.
For phis, for now assume any undetermined operands must be
VGPRs. Eventually, this needs to be able to defer mapping these
operations. This also does not yet have a way to check for whether the
block is in a divergent region.
llvm-svn: 363410
As discussed on D62910, we need to check whether particular types of memory access are allowed, not just their alignment/address-space.
This NFC patch adds a MachineMemOperand::Flags argument to allowsMemoryAccess and allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses, and wires up calls to pass the relevant flags to them.
If people are happy with this approach I can then update X86TargetLowering::allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses to handle misaligned NT load/stores.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63075
llvm-svn: 363179
As suggested by @arsenm on D63075 - this adds a TargetLowering::allowsMemoryAccess wrapper that takes a Load/Store node's MachineMemOperand to handle the AddressSpace/Alignment arguments and will also implicitly handle the MachineMemOperand::Flags change in D63075.
llvm-svn: 363048
This reverts r362990 (git commit 374571301d)
This was causing linker warnings on Darwin:
ld: warning: direct access in function 'llvm::initializeEvexToVexInstPassPass(llvm::PassRegistry&)'
from file '../../lib/libLLVMX86CodeGen.a(X86EvexToVex.cpp.o)' to global weak symbol
'void std::__1::__call_once_proxy<std::__1::tuple<void* (&)(llvm::PassRegistry&),
std::__1::reference_wrapper<llvm::PassRegistry>&&> >(void*)' from file '../../lib/libLLVMCore.a(Verifier.cpp.o)'
means the weak symbol cannot be overridden at runtime. This was likely caused by different translation
units being compiled with different visibility settings.
llvm-svn: 363028
Summary:
For builds with LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON and BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF
this change makes all symbols in the target specific libraries hidden
by default.
A new macro called LLVM_EXTERNAL_VISIBILITY has been added to mark symbols in these
libraries public, which is mainly needed for the definitions of the
LLVMInitialize* functions.
This patch reduces the number of public symbols in libLLVM.so by about
25%. This should improve load times for the dynamic library and also
make abi checker tools, like abidiff require less memory when analyzing
libLLVM.so
One side-effect of this change is that for builds with
LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON and LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON some unittests that
access symbols that are no longer public will need to be statically linked.
Before and after public symbol counts (using gcc 8.2.1, ld.bfd 2.31.1):
nm before/libLLVM-9svn.so | grep ' [A-Zuvw] ' | wc -l
36221
nm after/libLLVM-9svn.so | grep ' [A-Zuvw] ' | wc -l
26278
Reviewers: chandlerc, beanz, mgorny, rnk, hans
Reviewed By: rnk, hans
Subscribers: Jim, hiraditya, michaelplatings, chapuni, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, kristina, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54439
llvm-svn: 362990
SIInsertSkips really doesn't understand the control flow, and makes
very stupid assumptions about the block layout. This was able to get
away with not skipping return blocks, since usually after
structurization there is only one placed at the end of the
function. Tail duplication can break this assumption.
llvm-svn: 362754
"Divergence driven ISel. Assign register class for cross block values
according to the divergence."
that discovered the design flaw leading to several issues that
required to be solved before.
This change reverts AMDGPU specific changes and keeps common part
unaffected.
llvm-svn: 362749
This forced the caller to be aware of this, which is an ugly ABI
feature.
Partially reverts r295877. The original reasons for doing this are
mostly fixed. Alloca is now in a non-0 address space, so it should be
OK to have 0 as a valid pointer. Since we treat the absolute address
as the pointer value, this part only really needed to apply to
kernels.
Since r357093, we avoid the need to increment/decrement the offset
register in more cases, and since r354816 the scavenger can fail
without spilling, so it's less critical that we try to avoid an offset
that fits in the MUBUF offset.
Restrict to callable functions for now to split this into 2 steps to
limit thte number of test updates and in case anything breaks.
llvm-svn: 362665
Since the beginning, the offset of a frame index has been consistently
interpreted backwards. It was treating it as an offset from the
scratch wave offset register as a frame register. The correct
interpretation is the offset from the SP on entry to the function,
before the prolog. Frame index elimination then should select either
SP or another register as an FP.
Treat the scratch wave offset on kernel entry as the pre-incremented
SP. Rely more heavily on the standard hasFP and frame pointer
elimination logic, and clean up the private reservation code. This
saves a copy in most callee functions.
The kernel prolog emission code is still kind of a mess relying on
checking the uses of physical registers, which I would prefer to
eliminate.
Currently selection directly emits MUBUF instructions, which require
using a reference to some register. Use the register chosen for SP,
and then ignore this later. This should probably be cleaned up to use
pseudos that don't refer to any specific base register until frame
index elimination.
Add a workaround for shaders using large numbers of SGPRs. I'm not
sure these cases were ever working correctly, since as far as I can
tell the logic for figuring out which SGPR is the scratch wave offset
doesn't match up with the shader input initialization in the shader
programming guide.
llvm-svn: 362661
The proposal in D62498 showed that x86 would benefit from vector
store splitting, but that may conflict with the generic DAG
combiner's store merging transforms.
Add memory type to the existing TLI hook that enables the merging
transforms, so we can limit those changes to scalars only for x86.
llvm-svn: 362507
This matches APInt's versions of these functions, and there is no need for these to be size_t.
(as well as __builtin_clzll())
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60823
llvm-svn: 362503
This is something of a workaround, and the state of stack realignment
controls is kind of a mess. Ideally, we would be able to specify the
stack is infinitely aligned on entry to a kernel.
TargetFrameLowering provides multiple controls which apply at
different points. The StackRealignable field is used during
SelectionDAG, and for some reason distinct from this
hook. StackAlignment is a single field not dependent on the
function. It would probably be better to make that dependent on the
calling convention, and the maximum value for kernels.
Currently this doesn't really change anything, since the frame
lowering mostly does its own thing. This helps avoid regressions in a
future change which will rely more heavily on hasFP.
llvm-svn: 362447
For some reason multiple places need to do this, and the variant the
loop unroller and inliner use was not handling it.
Also, introduce a new wrapper to be slightly more precise, since on
AMDGPU some addrspacecasts are free, but not no-ops.
llvm-svn: 362436
AMDGPU uses multiplier 9 for the inline cost. It is taken into account
everywhere except for inline hint threshold. As a result we are penalizing
functions with the inline hint making them less probable to be inlined
than those without the hint. Defaults are 225 for a normal function and
325 for a function with an inline hint. Currently we have effective
threshold 225 * 9 = 2025 for normal functions and just 325 for those with
the hint. That is fixed by this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62707
llvm-svn: 362239
With LLPC, previous investigation has suggested that si-scheduler
interacts badly with SiFormMemoryClauses on an XNACK target in some
games.
That needs further investigation in the future. In the meantime, this
commit adds a target-specific attribute to allow us to disable
SIFormMemoryClauses by setting it to 1 on a per-function basis for LLPC
to use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62572
Change-Id: Ia0ca12ce79093cbbe86caded723ffb13384ede92
llvm-svn: 362127
Summary:
- There's a regression due to the cross-block RC assignment. Use the
proper way to derive the output register RC in inline asm.
Reviewers: rampitec, alex-t
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, eraman, hiraditya, llvm-commits, yaxunl
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62537
llvm-svn: 361868
If the only VGPRs used for SGPR spilling were not CSRs, this was
enabling all laness and immediately restoring exec. This is the usual
situation in leaf functions.
llvm-svn: 361848
Summary:
- Don't treat the use of a scalar register as `vreg_1` an VGPR usage.
Otherwise, that promotes that scalar register into vector one, which
breaks the assumption that scalar register holds the lane mask.
- The issue is triggered in a complicated case, where if the uses of
that (lane mask) scalar register is legalized firstly before its
definition, e.g., due to the mismatch block placement and its
topological order or loop. In that cases, the legalization of PHI
introduces the use of that scalar register as `vreg_1`.
Reviewers: rampitec, nhaehnle, arsenm, alex-t
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, hiraditya, llvm-commits, yaxunl
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62492
llvm-svn: 361847
1a8b2ea611cf4ca7cb09562e0238cfefa27c05b5 Divergence driven ISel. Assign register class for cross block values according to the divergence.
llvm-svn: 361770
Details: To make instruction selection really divergence driven it is necessary to assign
the correct register classes to the cross block values beforehand. For the divergent targets
same value type requires different register classes dependent on the value divergence.
Reviewers: rampitec, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59990
This commit was reverted because of the build failure.
The reason was mlformed patch.
Build failure fixed.
llvm-svn: 361741
This matches countLeadingOnes() and countTrailingOnes(), and
APInt's countLeadingZeros() and countTrailingZeros().
(as well as __builtin_clzll())
llvm-svn: 361724
This was skipping GetUnderlyingObject for nonprivate addresses, but an
alloca could also be found through an addrspacecast if it's flat.
llvm-svn: 361649
Details: To make instruction selection really divergence driven it is necessary to assign
the correct register classes to the cross block values beforehand. For the divergent targets
same value type requires different register classes dependent on the value divergence.
Reviewers: rampitec, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59990
llvm-svn: 361644
We were assuming a much larger possible per-wave visible stack
allocation than is possible:
faa3ae5138/src/core/runtime/amd_gpu_agent.cpp (L70)
Based on this, we can assume the high 15 bits of a frame index or sret
are 0. The frame index value is the per-lane offset, so the maximum
frame index value is MAX_WAVE_SCRATCH / wavesize.
Remove the corresponding subtarget feature and option that made
this configurable.
llvm-svn: 361541
Keep it optional in cases this is ever needed in some global
context. Currently it's only used for getting an upper bound inline
asm code size.
For AMDGPU, gfx10 increases the maximum instruction size to
20-bytes. This avoids penalizing older subtargets when estimating code
size, and making some annoying branch relaxation test adjustments.
llvm-svn: 361405
Unfortunately the way SIInsertSkips works is backwards, and is
required for correctness. r338235 added handling of some special cases
where skipping is mandatory to avoid side effects if no lanes are
active. It conservatively handled asm correctly, but the same logic
needs to apply to calls.
Usually the call sequence code is larger than the skip threshold,
although the way the count is computed is really broken, so I'm not
sure if anything was likely to really hit this.
llvm-svn: 361202
A std::array is implemented as a template with an array
inside a struct. Older versions of clang, like 3.6,
require an extra set of curly braces around std::array
initializations to avoid warnings.
The C++ language was changed regarding this by CWG 1270.
So more modern tool chains does not complaing even if
leaving out one level of braces.
llvm-svn: 361171
Summary:
Avoid introducing hazard mitigation when lgkmcnt is reduced to 0.
Clarify code comments to explain assumptions made for this hazard
mitigation. Expand and correct test cases to cover variants of
s_waitcnt.
Reviewers: nhaehnle, rampitec
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62058
llvm-svn: 361124
This is ported from the custom AMDGPU DAG implementation. I think this
is a better default expansion than what the DAG currently uses, at
least if the target has CTLZ.
This implements the signed version in terms of the unsigned
conversion, which is implemented with bit operations. SelectionDAG has
several other implementations that should eventually be ported
depending on what instructions are legal.
llvm-svn: 361081
Summary:
In order to combine memory operations efficiently, the load/store
optimizer might move some instructions around. It's usually safe
to move instructions down past the merged instruction because the
pass checks if memory operations can be re-ordered.
Though, the current logic doesn't handle Write-after-Write hazards.
This fixes a reflection issue with Monster Hunter World and DXVK.
v2: - rebased on top of master
- clean up the test case
- handle WaW hazards correctly
Bugzilla: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40130
Original patch by Samuel Pitoiset.
Reviewers: tpr, arsenm, nhaehnle
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: ronlieb, arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61313
llvm-svn: 361008
This is the conservatively correct default. It is always safe to
assume xnack is enabled, but not the converse.
Introduce a feature to blacklist targets where xnack can never be
meaningfully enabled. I'm not sure the targets this is applied to is
100% correct.
llvm-svn: 360903
Summary:
SGPR in CC can be either hw initialized or set by other chained shaders
and so this increases the SGPR count availalbe to CC to 105.
Change-Id: I3dfadc750fe4a3e2bd07117a2899fd13f3e2fef3
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61261
llvm-svn: 360778
Move the declarations of getThe<Name>Target() functions into a new header in
TargetInfo and make users of these functions include this new header.
This fixes a layering problem.
llvm-svn: 360713
The +DumpCode attribute is a horrible hack in AMDGPU to embed the
disassembly of the generated code into the elf file. It is used by LLPC
to implement an extension that allows the application to read back the
disassembly of the code. Longer term, we should re-implement that by
using the LLVM disassembler from the Vulkan driver.
Recent LLVM changes broke +DumpCode. With -filetype=asm it crashed, and
with -filetype=obj I think it did not include any instructions, only the
labels. Fixed with this commit: now it has no effect with -filetype=asm,
and works as intended with -filetype=obj.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60682
Change-Id: I6436d86fe2ea220d74a643a85e64753747c9366b
llvm-svn: 360688
For some targets, there is a circular dependency between InstPrinter and
MCTargetDesc. Merging them together will fix this. For the other targets,
the merging is to maintain consistency so all targets will have the same
structure.
llvm-svn: 360487
This also allows three op patterns to use increased constant bus
limit of GFX10.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61763
llvm-svn: 360395
The VOP3 form should always be the preferred selection, to be shrunk
later. This should only be an optimization issue, but this partially
works around a problem from clobbering VCC when SIFixSGPRCopies
rewrites an SCC defining operation directly to VCC.
3 of the testcases are regressions from failing to fold the immediate
in cases it should. These can be avoided by improving the VCC liveness
handling in SIFoldOperands. Simply increasing the threshold to
computeRegisterLiveness works, although this is common enough that VCC
liveness should probably be tracked throughout the pass. The hack of
leaving behind an implicit_def instruction to avoid breaking iterator
wastes instruction count, which inhibits finding the VCC def in long
chains of adds. Doing this however exposes different, worse looking
regressions from poor scheduling behavior. This could probably be
avoided around by forcing the shrink of the addc here, but the
scheduler should probably be fixed.
The r600 add test needs to be split out because it asserts on the
arguments in the new test during the calling convention lowering.
llvm-svn: 360293
This was committed in rL358887 but reverted in rL360066 due to a x86 regression, really it should be have been pre-committed instead of being part of the SimplifyDemandedBits bitcast patch.
llvm-svn: 360263
Summary: GCNHazardRecognizer fails to identify hazards that are in and around bundles. This patch allows the hazard recognizer to consider bundled instructions in both scheduler and hazard recognizer mode. We ignore “bundledness” for the purpose of detecting hazards and examine the instructions individually.
Reviewers: arsenm, msearles, rampitec
Reviewed By: rampitec
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61564
llvm-svn: 360199
Summary:
No test case because I don't know of a way to trigger this, but I
accidentally caused this to fail while working on a different change.
Change-Id: I8015aa447fe27163cc4e4902205a203bd44bf7e3
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61490
llvm-svn: 360123
Reverts "[X86] Remove (V)MOV64toSDrr/m and (V)MOVDI2SSrr/m. Use 128-bit result MOVD/MOVQ and COPY_TO_REGCLASS instead"
Reverts "[TargetLowering][AMDGPU][X86] Improve SimplifyDemandedBits bitcast handling"
Eric Christopher and Jorge Gorbe Moya reported some issues with these patches to me off list.
Removing the CodeGenOnly instructions has changed how fneg is handled during fast-isel with sse/sse2. We're now emitting fsub -0.0, x instead
moving to the integer domain(in a GPR), xoring the sign bit, and then moving back to xmm. This is because the fast isel table no longer
contains an entry for (f32/f64 bitcast (i32/i64)) so the target independent fneg code fails. The use of fsub changes the behavior of nan with
respect to -O2 codegen which will always use a pxor. NOTE: We still have a difference with double with -m32 since the move to GPR doesn't work
there. I'll file a separate PR for that and add test cases.
Since removing the CodeGenOnly instructions was fixing PR41619, I'm reverting r358887 which exposed that PR. Though I wouldn't be surprised
if that bug can still be hit independent of that.
This should hopefully get Google back to green. I'll work with Simon and other X86 folks to figure out how to move forward again.
llvm-svn: 360066
The VOP3 form should always be the preferred selection form to be
shrunk later.
The r600 sub test needs to be split out because it asserts on the
arguments in the new test during the calling convention lowering.
llvm-svn: 359899
This was broken if the original operand was killed. The kill flag
would appear on both instructions, and fail the verifier. Keep the
kill flag, but remove the operands from the old instruction. This has
an added benefit of really reducing the use count for future folds.
Ideally the pass would be structured more like what PeepholeOptimizer
does to avoid this hack to avoid breaking instruction iterators.
llvm-svn: 359891
When a fold of an immediate into a sub/subrev required shrinking the
instruction, the wrong VOP2 opcode was used. This was using the VOP2
equivalent of the original instruction, not the commuted instruction
with the inverted opcode.
llvm-svn: 359883