Unlike SDag, we use a separate G_GEP instruction (much simplified, only taking
a single byte offset) to preserve the pointer type information through
selection.
llvm-svn: 281205
Some generic instructions have multiple types. While in theory these always be
discovered by inspecting the single definition of each generic vreg, in
practice those definitions won't always be local and traipsing through a big
function to find them will not be fun.
So this changes MIRPrinter to print out the type of uses as well as defs, if
they're known to be different or not known to be the same.
On the parsing side, we're a little more flexible: provided each register is
given a type in at least one place it's mentioned (and all types are
consistent) we accept the MIR. This doesn't introduce ambiguity but makes
writing tests manually a bit less painful.
llvm-svn: 281204
How I missed this locally is beyond me. I suspect llc didn't recompile. This is just changing the CHECK line back to what it was before r280364.
llvm-svn: 281161
These instructions were only necessary when type information was stored in the
MachineInstr (because only generic MachineInstrs possessed a type). Now that
it's in MachineRegisterInfo, COPY and PHI work fine.
llvm-svn: 281037
We want each register to have a canonical type, which means the best place to
store this is in MachineRegisterInfo rather than on every MachineInstr that
happens to use or define that register.
Most changes following from this are pretty simple (you need an MRI anyway if
you're going to be doing any transformations, so just check the type there).
But legalization doesn't really want to check redundant operands (when, for
example, a G_ADD only ever has one type) so I've made use of MCInstrDesc's
operand type field to encode these constraints and limit legalization's work.
As an added bonus, more validation is possible, both in MachineVerifier and
MachineIRBuilder (coming soon).
llvm-svn: 281035
They're another source of generic vregs, which are going to need a type on the
definition when we remove the register width from MachineRegisterInfo.
llvm-svn: 280412
This was a real restriction in the original version of SinkIfThenCodeToEnd. Now it's been rewritten, the restriction can be lifted.
As part of this, we handle a very common and useful case where one of the incoming branches is actually conditional. Consider:
if (a)
x(1);
else if (b)
x(2);
This produces the following CFG:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ | /
[ end ]
[end] has two unconditional predecessor arcs and one conditional. The conditional refers to the implicit empty 'else' arc. This same pattern can also be caused by an empty default block in a switch.
We can't sink the call to x() down to end because no call to x() happens on the third incoming arc (assume that x() has sideeffects for the sake of argument; if something is safe to speculate we could indeed sink nevertheless but this cannot happen in the general case and causes many extra selects).
We are now able to detect this case and split off the unconditional arcs to a common successor:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ / |
[sink.split] |
\ /
[ end ]
Now we can sink the call to x() into %sink.split. This can cause significant code simplification in many testcases.
llvm-svn: 280364
More preparation for dropping source types from MachineInstrs: regsters coming
out of already-selected code (i.e. non-generic instructions) don't have a type,
but that information is needed so we must add it manually.
This is done via a new G_TYPE instruction.
llvm-svn: 280292
This was a real restriction in the original version of SinkIfThenCodeToEnd. Now it's been rewritten, the restriction can be lifted.
As part of this, we handle a very common and useful case where one of the incoming branches is actually conditional. Consider:
if (a)
x(1);
else if (b)
x(2);
This produces the following CFG:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ | /
[ end ]
[end] has two unconditional predecessor arcs and one conditional. The conditional refers to the implicit empty 'else' arc. This same pattern can also be caused by an empty default block in a switch.
We can't sink the call to x() down to end because no call to x() happens on the third incoming arc (assume that x() has sideeffects for the sake of argument; if something is safe to speculate we could indeed sink nevertheless but this cannot happen in the general case and causes many extra selects).
We are now able to detect this case and split off the unconditional arcs to a common successor:
[if]
/ \
[x(1)] [if]
| | \
| | \
| [x(2)] |
\ / |
[sink.split] |
\ /
[ end ]
Now we can sink the call to x() into %sink.split. This can cause significant code simplification in many testcases.
llvm-svn: 280217
Legalization ends up creating many G_SEQUENCE/G_EXTRACT pairs which leads to
inefficient codegen (even for -O0), so add a quick pass over the function to
remove them again.
llvm-svn: 280155
We're intending to move to a world where the type of a register is determined
by its (unique) def. This is incompatible with physregs, which are untyped.
It also means the other passes don't have to worry quite so much about
register-class compatibility and inserting COPYs appropriately.
llvm-svn: 280132
When global-isel fails on a MachineFunction MF, MF will be cleaned up
and given to SDISel.
Thanks to this fallback, we can already perform correctness test even if
we support only a small portion of the functions in a test.
llvm-svn: 279891
In the code to detect fixed-point conversions and make use of AArch64's special
instructions, we weren't prepared for weird types. The fptosi direction got
fixed recently, but not the similar sitofp code.
llvm-svn: 279852
It's unclear how the old
%res(32) = G_ICMP { s32, s32 } intpred(eq), %0, %1
is actually different from an s1 verison
%res(1) = G_ICMP { s1, s32 } intpred(eq), %0, %1
so we'll remove it for now.
llvm-svn: 279843
The 32-bit variants of these operations don't depend on the bits not being
operated on, so they also naturally model operations narrower than the actual
register width.
llvm-svn: 279760
Rename AllVRegsAllocated to NoVRegs. This avoids the connotation of
running after register and simply describes that no vregs are used in
a machine function. With that we can simply compute the property and do
not need to dump/parse it in .mir files.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23850
llvm-svn: 279698
tracksSubRegLiveness only depends on the Subtarget and a cl::opt, there
is not need to change it or save/parse it in a .mir file.
Make the field const and move the initialization LiveIntervalAnalysis to the
MachineRegisterInfo constructor. Also cleanup some code and fix some
instances which better use MachineRegisterInfo::subRegLivenessEnabled() instead
of TargetSubtargetInfo::enableSubRegLiveness().
llvm-svn: 279676
Specifying isSSA is an extra line at best and results in invalid MI at
worst. Compute the value instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22722
llvm-svn: 279600
They really should have both types represented, but early variants were created
before MachineInstrs could have multiple types so they're rather ambiguous.
llvm-svn: 279567
branches
Looping over all terminators exposed AArch64 tests hitting
an assert from analyzeBranch failing. I believe these cases
were miscompiled before.
e.g.
fcmp s0, s1
b.ne LBB0_1
b.vc LBB0_2
b LBB0_2
LBB0_1:
; Large block
LBB0_2:
; ...
Both of the individual conditional branches need to
be expanded, since neither can reach the final block.
Split the original block into ones which analyzeBranch
will be able to understand.
llvm-svn: 279499
- Always compile print() regardless of LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP. (We usually
only gard dump() functions with that).
- Only show the set properties to reduce output clutter.
- Remove the unused variant that even shows the unset properties.
- Fix comments
llvm-svn: 279338