Commit Graph

316 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adrian Prantl 75819aedf6 [PR27284] Reverse the ownership between DICompileUnit and DISubprogram.
Currently each Function points to a DISubprogram and DISubprogram has a
scope field. For member functions the scope is a DICompositeType. DIScopes
point to the DICompileUnit to facilitate type uniquing.

Distinct DISubprograms (with isDefinition: true) are not part of the type
hierarchy and cannot be uniqued. This change removes the subprograms
list from DICompileUnit and instead adds a pointer to the owning compile
unit to distinct DISubprograms. This would make it easy for ThinLTO to
strip unneeded DISubprograms and their transitively referenced debug info.

Motivation
----------

Materializing DISubprograms is currently the most expensive operation when
doing a ThinLTO build of clang.

We want the DISubprogram to be stored in a separate Bitcode block (or the
same block as the function body) so we can avoid having to expensively
deserialize all DISubprograms together with the global metadata. If a
function has been inlined into another subprogram we need to store a
reference the block containing the inlined subprogram.

Attached to https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27284 is a python script
that updates LLVM IR testcases to the new format.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D19034
<rdar://problem/25256815>

llvm-svn: 266446
2016-04-15 15:57:41 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 6e6966460a [GVN] Fix handling of sub-byte types in big-endian mode
When GVN wants to re-interpret an already available value in a smaller
type, it needs to right-shift the value on big-endian systems to ensure
the correct bytes are accessed.  The shift value is the difference of
the sizes of the two types.

This is correct as long as both types occupy multiples of full bytes.
However, when one of them is a sub-byte type like i1, this no longer
holds true: we still need to shift, but only to access the correct
*byte*.  Accessing bits within the byte requires no shift in either
endianness; e.g. an i1 resides in the least-significant bit of its
containing byte on both big- and little-endian systems.

Therefore, the appropriate shift value to be used is the difference of
the *storage* sizes of the two types.  This is already handled correctly
in one place where such a shift takes place (GetStoreValueForLoad), but
is incorrect in two other places: GetLoadValueForLoad and
CoerceAvailableValueToLoadType.

This patch changes both places to use the storage size as well.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18662

llvm-svn: 265684
2016-04-07 15:45:02 +00:00
Davide Italiano ea04026c13 [DebugInfo] Fix tests so that each subprogram belongs to a CU.
llvm-svn: 265490
2016-04-05 23:37:08 +00:00
Philip Reames b5681138e4 Allow value forwarding past release fences in GVN
A release fence acts as a publication barrier for stores within the current thread to become visible to other threads which might observe the release fence. It does not require the current thread to observe stores performed on other threads. As a result, we can allow store-load and load-load forwarding across a release fence.  

We choose to be much more conservative about stores.  In theory, nothing prevents us from shifting a store from after a release fence to before it, and then eliminating the preceeding (previously fenced) store.  Doing this without actually moving the second store is likely also legal, but we chose to be conservative at this time.

The LangRef indicates only atomic loads and stores are effected by fences. This patch chooses to be far more conservative then that. 

This is the GVN companion to http://reviews.llvm.org/D11434 which applied the same logic in EarlyCSE and has been baking in tree for a while now.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11436

llvm-svn: 264472
2016-03-25 22:40:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 89c45a162f [PM] Port GVN to the new pass manager, wire it up, and teach a couple of
tests to run GVN in both modes.

This is mostly the boring refactoring just like SROA and other complex
transformation passes. There is some trickiness in that GVN's
ValueNumber class requires hand holding to get to compile cleanly. I'm
open to suggestions about a better pattern there, but I tried several
before settling on this. I was trying to balance my desire to sink as
much implementation detail into the source file as possible without
introducing overly many layers of abstraction.

Much like with SROA, the design of this system is made somewhat more
cumbersome by the need to support both pass managers without duplicating
the significant state and logic of the pass. The same compromise is
struck here.

I've also left a FIXME in a doxygen comment as the GVN pass seems to
have pretty woeful documentation within it. I'd like to submit this with
the FIXME and let those more deeply familiar backfill the information
here now that we have a nice place in an interface to put that kind of
documentaiton.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18019

llvm-svn: 263208
2016-03-11 08:50:55 +00:00
Paul Robinson 51fa0a87c3 Fix tests that used CHECK-NEXT-NOT and CHECK-DAG-NOT.
FileCheck actually doesn't support combo suffixes.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17588

llvm-svn: 262054
2016-02-26 19:40:34 +00:00
Krzysztof Parzyszek e261e5ac47 More detailed dependence test between volatile and non-volatile accesses
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16857

llvm-svn: 261589
2016-02-22 23:07:43 +00:00
David L Kreitzer 4d7257dfa1 Fix for two constant propagation problems in GVN with the assume intrinsic
instruction.

Patch by Yuanrui Zhang.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16100

llvm-svn: 258435
2016-01-21 21:32:35 +00:00
David Majnemer 8a1c45d6e8 [IR] Reformulate LLVM's EH funclet IR
While we have successfully implemented a funclet-oriented EH scheme on
top of LLVM IR, our scheme has some notable deficiencies:
- catchendpad and cleanupendpad are necessary in the current design
  but they are difficult to explain to others, even to seasoned LLVM
  experts.
- catchendpad and cleanupendpad are optimization barriers.  They cannot
  be split and force all potentially throwing call-sites to be invokes.
  This has a noticable effect on the quality of our code generation.
- catchpad, while similar in some aspects to invoke, is fairly awkward.
  It is unsplittable, starts a funclet, and has control flow to other
  funclets.
- The nesting relationship between funclets is currently a property of
  control flow edges.  Because of this, we are forced to carefully
  analyze the flow graph to see if there might potentially exist illegal
  nesting among funclets.  While we have logic to clone funclets when
  they are illegally nested, it would be nicer if we had a
  representation which forbade them upfront.

Let's clean this up a bit by doing the following:
- Instead, make catchpad more like cleanuppad and landingpad: no control
  flow, just a bunch of simple operands;  catchpad would be splittable.
- Introduce catchswitch, a control flow instruction designed to model
  the constraints of funclet oriented EH.
- Make funclet scoping explicit by having funclet instructions consume
  the token produced by the funclet which contains them.
- Remove catchendpad and cleanupendpad.  Their presence can be inferred
  implicitly using coloring information.

N.B.  The state numbering code for the CLR has been updated but the
veracity of it's output cannot be spoken for.  An expert should take a
look to make sure the results are reasonable.

Reviewers: rnk, JosephTremoulet, andrew.w.kaylor

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15139

llvm-svn: 255422
2015-12-12 05:38:55 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor 0615a0e65d [WinEH] Fix a case where GVN could incorrectly PRE a load into an EH pad.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14842

llvm-svn: 253908
2015-11-23 19:51:41 +00:00
Pete Cooper 67cf9a723b Revert "Change memcpy/memset/memmove to have dest and source alignments."
This reverts commit r253511.

This likely broke the bots in
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-ppc64-elf-linux2/builds/20202
http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/clang-3stage-i686-linux/builds/3787

llvm-svn: 253543
2015-11-19 05:56:52 +00:00
Weiming Zhao b69babd01e Fix bug 25440: GVN assertion after coercing loads
Optimizations like LoadPRE in GVN will insert new instructions.
If the insertion point is in a already processed BB, they should
get a value number explicitly. If the insertion point is after
current instruction, then just leave it. However, current GVN framework
has no support for it.
In this patch, we just bail out if a VN can't be found.

Dfferential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14670

A    test/Transforms/GVN/pr25440.ll
M    lib/Transforms/Scalar/GVN.cpp

llvm-svn: 253536
2015-11-19 02:45:18 +00:00
Pete Cooper 72bc23ef02 Change memcpy/memset/memmove to have dest and source alignments.
Note, this was reviewed (and more details are in) http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html

These intrinsics currently have an explicit alignment argument which is
required to be a constant integer.  It represents the alignment of the
source and dest, and so must be the minimum of those.

This change allows source and dest to each have their own alignments
by using the alignment attribute on their arguments.  The alignment
argument itself is removed.

There are a few places in the code for which the code needs to be
checked by an expert as to whether using only src/dest alignment is
safe.  For those places, they currently take the minimum of src/dest
alignments which matches the current behaviour.

For example, code which used to read:
  call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* %dest, i8* %src, i32 500, i32 8, i1 false)
will now read:
  call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* align 8 %dest, i8* align 8 %src, i32 500, i1 false)

For out of tree owners, I was able to strip alignment from calls using sed by replacing:
  (call.*llvm\.memset.*)i32\ [0-9]*\,\ i1 false\)
with:
  $1i1 false)

and similarly for memmove and memcpy.

I then added back in alignment to test cases which needed it.

A similar commit will be made to clang which actually has many differences in alignment as now
IRBuilder can generate different source/dest alignments on calls.

In IRBuilder itself, a new argument was added.  Instead of calling:
  CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)
you now call
  CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, SrcAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)

There is a temporary class (IntegerAlignment) which takes the source alignment and rejects
implicit conversion from bool.  This is to prevent isVolatile here from passing its default
parameter to the source alignment.

Note, changes in future can now be made to codegen.  I didn't change anything here, but this
change should enable better memcpy code sequences.

Reviewed by Hal Finkel.

llvm-svn: 253511
2015-11-18 22:17:24 +00:00
Mike Aizatsky c7810baaa6 Disable gvn non-local speculative loads under asan.
Summary: Fix for https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25550

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14763

llvm-svn: 253498
2015-11-18 20:43:00 +00:00
David Majnemer 8447ff6357 Add a test for r253323
Forgot to do this simultaneously with committing the fix.

llvm-svn: 253430
2015-11-18 02:50:39 +00:00
Philip Reames b6e8fe3dac [PRE] Preserve !invariant.load metadata
Spoted via inspection.  Test case included.

llvm-svn: 253275
2015-11-17 00:15:09 +00:00
Tobias Grosser 8241795d20 Revert "Fix bug 25440: GVN assertion after coercing loads"
This reverts 252919 which broke LNT: MultiSource/Applications/SPASS

llvm-svn: 252936
2015-11-12 20:04:21 +00:00
Weiming Zhao eed0145dd2 Fix bug 25440: GVN assertion after coercing loads
Summary:
when coercing loads, it inserts some instructions, which have no GV assigned.

https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25440


Reviewers: hfinkel, dberlin

Subscribers: dberlin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14479

llvm-svn: 252919
2015-11-12 18:19:59 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne d4bff30370 DI: Reverse direction of subprogram -> function edge.
Previously, subprograms contained a metadata reference to the function they
described. Because most clients need to get or set a subprogram for a given
function rather than the other way around, this created unneeded inefficiency.

For example, many passes needed to call the function llvm::makeSubprogramMap()
to build a mapping from functions to subprograms, and the IR linker needed to
fix up function references in a way that caused quadratic complexity in the IR
linking phase of LTO.

This change reverses the direction of the edge by storing the subprogram as
function-level metadata and removing DISubprogram's function field.

Since this is an IR change, a bitcode upgrade has been provided.

Fixes PR23367. An upgrade script for textual IR for out-of-tree clients is
attached to the PR.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14265

llvm-svn: 252219
2015-11-05 22:03:56 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 0298a1d0a2 [GVN] Make a test case more robust
The singleton !range metadata gets simplified more aggressively after a
later change, so change the !range metadata to contain more than one
element.

While at it, turn some `; CHECK` s to `; CHECK-LABEL:` s.

llvm-svn: 251485
2015-10-28 03:20:05 +00:00
Tim Northover d4f55c0b1b GVN: don't try to replace instruction with itself.
After some look-ahead PRE was added for GEPs, an instruction could end
up in the table of candidates before it was actually inspected. When
this happened the pass might decide it was the best candidate to
replace itself. This didn't go well.

Should fix PR25291

llvm-svn: 251145
2015-10-23 20:30:02 +00:00
Jakub Staszak f12821a43c Preserve CFG in MergedLoadStoreMotion. This fixes PR24426.
llvm-svn: 250660
2015-10-18 19:34:10 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski dc9b2cfc50 inariant.group handling in GVN
The most important part required to make clang
devirtualization works ( ͡°͜ʖ ͡°).
The code is able to find non local dependencies, but unfortunatelly
because the caller can only handle local dependencies, I had to add
some restrictions to look for dependencies only in the same BB.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12992

llvm-svn: 249196
2015-10-02 22:12:22 +00:00
David Blaikie 2f40830dde [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter for global aliases
update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re

alias_match_prefix = r"(.*(?:=|:|^)\s*(?:external |)(?:(?:private|internal|linkonce|linkonce_odr|weak|weak_odr|common|appending|extern_weak|available_externally) )?(?:default |hidden |protected )?(?:dllimport |dllexport )?(?:unnamed_addr |)(?:thread_local(?:\([a-z]*\))? )?alias"
plain = re.compile(alias_match_prefix + r" (.*?))(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*($| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|addrspacecast|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$)")
cast  = re.compile(alias_match_prefix + r") ((?:bitcast|inttoptr|addrspacecast)\s*\(.* to (.*?)(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*\)\s*(?:;.*)?$)")
gep   = re.compile(alias_match_prefix + r") ((?:getelementptr)\s*(?:inbounds)?\s*\((?P<type>.*), (?P=type)(?:\s*addrspace\(\d+\)\s*)?\* .*\)\s*(?:;.*)?$)")

def conv(line):
  m = re.match(cast, line)
  if m:
    return m.group(1) + " " + m.group(3) + ", " + m.group(2)
  m = re.match(gep, line)
  if m:
    return m.group(1) + " " + m.group(3) + ", " + m.group(2)
  m = re.match(plain, line)
  if m:
    return m.group(1) + ", " + m.group(2) + m.group(3) + "*" + m.group(4) + "\n"
  return line

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(conv(line))

apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
  python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
  rm -f "$name.tmp"
done

The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh

llvm-svn: 247378
2015-09-11 03:22:04 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7b560d40bd [PM/AA] Rebuild LLVM's alias analysis infrastructure in a way compatible
with the new pass manager, and no longer relying on analysis groups.

This builds essentially a ground-up new AA infrastructure stack for
LLVM. The core ideas are the same that are used throughout the new pass
manager: type erased polymorphism and direct composition. The design is
as follows:

- FunctionAAResults is a type-erasing alias analysis results aggregation
  interface to walk a single query across a range of results from
  different alias analyses. Currently this is function-specific as we
  always assume that aliasing queries are *within* a function.

- AAResultBase is a CRTP utility providing stub implementations of
  various parts of the alias analysis result concept, notably in several
  cases in terms of other more general parts of the interface. This can
  be used to implement only a narrow part of the interface rather than
  the entire interface. This isn't really ideal, this logic should be
  hoisted into FunctionAAResults as currently it will cause
  a significant amount of redundant work, but it faithfully models the
  behavior of the prior infrastructure.

- All the alias analysis passes are ported to be wrapper passes for the
  legacy PM and new-style analysis passes for the new PM with a shared
  result object. In some cases (most notably CFL), this is an extremely
  naive approach that we should revisit when we can specialize for the
  new pass manager.

- BasicAA has been restructured to reflect that it is much more
  fundamentally a function analysis because it uses dominator trees and
  loop info that need to be constructed for each function.

All of the references to getting alias analysis results have been
updated to use the new aggregation interface. All the preservation and
other pass management code has been updated accordingly.

The way the FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass works is to detect the
available alias analyses when run, and add them to the results object.
This means that we should be able to continue to respect when various
passes are added to the pipeline, for example adding CFL or adding TBAA
passes should just cause their results to be available and to get folded
into this. The exception to this rule is BasicAA which really needs to
be a function pass due to using dominator trees and loop info. As
a consequence, the FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass directly depends on
BasicAA and always includes it in the aggregation.

This has significant implications for preserving analyses. Generally,
most passes shouldn't bother preserving FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass
because rebuilding the results just updates the set of known AA passes.
The exception to this rule are LoopPass instances which need to preserve
all the function analyses that the loop pass manager will end up
needing. This means preserving both BasicAAWrapperPass and the
aggregating FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass.

Now, when preserving an alias analysis, you do so by directly preserving
that analysis. This is only necessary for non-immutable-pass-provided
alias analyses though, and there are only three of interest: BasicAA,
GlobalsAA (formerly GlobalsModRef), and SCEVAA. Usually BasicAA is
preserved when needed because it (like DominatorTree and LoopInfo) is
marked as a CFG-only pass. I've expanded GlobalsAA into the preserved
set everywhere we previously were preserving all of AliasAnalysis, and
I've added SCEVAA in the intersection of that with where we preserve
SCEV itself.

One significant challenge to all of this is that the CGSCC passes were
actually using the alias analysis implementations by taking advantage of
a pretty amazing set of loop holes in the old pass manager's analysis
management code which allowed analysis groups to slide through in many
cases. Moving away from analysis groups makes this problem much more
obvious. To fix it, I've leveraged the flexibility the design of the new
PM components provides to just directly construct the relevant alias
analyses for the relevant functions in the IPO passes that need them.
This is a bit hacky, but should go away with the new pass manager, and
is already in many ways cleaner than the prior state.

Another significant challenge is that various facilities of the old
alias analysis infrastructure just don't fit any more. The most
significant of these is the alias analysis 'counter' pass. That pass
relied on the ability to snoop on AA queries at different points in the
analysis group chain. Instead, I'm planning to build printing
functionality directly into the aggregation layer. I've not included
that in this patch merely to keep it smaller.

Note that all of this needs a nearly complete rewrite of the AA
documentation. I'm planning to do that, but I'd like to make sure the
new design settles, and to flesh out a bit more of what it looks like in
the new pass manager first.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12080

llvm-svn: 247167
2015-09-09 17:55:00 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 0c7d8fc1f6 assuem(X) handling in GVN bugfix
There was infinite loop because it was trying to change assume(true) into
assume(true)
Also added handling when assume(false) appear

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12516

llvm-svn: 246697
2015-09-02 20:00:03 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 28ffcbe1cc Constant propagation after hitting assume(cmp) bugfix
Last time code run into assertion `BBE.isSingleEdge()` in
lib/IR/Dominators.cpp:200.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12170

llvm-svn: 246696
2015-09-02 19:59:59 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 14e815c22b Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume
After hitting @llvm.assume(X) we can:
- propagate equality that X == true
- if X is icmp/fcmp (with eq operation), and one of operand
  is constant we can change all variables with constants in the same BasicBlock

http://reviews.llvm.org/D11918

llvm-svn: 246695
2015-09-02 19:59:53 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 814b8e91c7 DI: Require subprogram definitions to be distinct
As a follow-up to r246098, require `DISubprogram` definitions
(`isDefinition: true`) to be 'distinct'.  Specifically, add an assembler
check, a verifier check, and bitcode upgrading logic to combat testcase
bitrot after the `DIBuilder` change.

While working on the testcases, I realized that
test/Linker/subprogram-linkonce-weak-odr.ll isn't relevant anymore.  Its
purpose was to check for a corner case in PR22792 where two subprogram
definitions match exactly and share the same metadata node.  The new
verifier check, requiring that subprogram definitions are 'distinct',
precludes that possibility.

I updated almost all the IR with the following script:

    git grep -l -E -e '= !DISubprogram\(.* isDefinition: true' |
    grep -v test/Bitcode |
    xargs sed -i '' -e 's/= \(!DISubprogram(.*, isDefinition: true\)/= distinct \1/'

Likely some variant of would work for out-of-tree testcases.

llvm-svn: 246327
2015-08-28 20:26:49 +00:00
Steven Wu 61db34d12e Revert r246244 and r246243
These two commits cause clang/llvm bootstrap to hang.

llvm-svn: 246279
2015-08-28 06:52:00 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 3f81ec1e38 Constant propagation after hitting assume(cmp) bugfix
Last time code run into assertion `BBE.isSingleEdge()` in
lib/IR/Dominators.cpp:200.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12170

llvm-svn: 246244
2015-08-28 01:02:00 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 63cc5d4627 Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume
After hitting @llvm.assume(X) we can:
- propagate equality that X == true
- if X is icmp/fcmp (with eq operation), and one of operand
  is constant we can change all variables with constants in the same BasicBlock

http://reviews.llvm.org/D11918

llvm-svn: 246243
2015-08-28 01:01:57 +00:00
Justin Bogner 9f00ebaeda Revert "Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume"
This was also failing bootstrap:

http://lab.llvm.org:8080/green/job/clang-stage2-configure-Rlto_build

This reverts r245265.

llvm-svn: 245269
2015-08-18 07:00:34 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 94ca3783b8 Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume
After hitting @llvm.assume(X) we can:
- propagate equality that X == true
- if X is icmp/fcmp (with eq operation), and one of operand
  is constant we can change all variables with constants in the same BasicBlock

http://reviews.llvm.org/D11918

llvm-svn: 245265
2015-08-18 03:55:30 +00:00
David Majnemer 4232fb3f8d [PHITransAddr] Don't assume that instruction operands are translatable
We can only PHI translate instructions.  In our attempt to PHI translate
a bitcast, we attempt to translate its operand; however, the operand
might be an argument or a global instead of an instruction.  Benignly
bail out when this happens.

This fixes PR24397.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11879

llvm-svn: 244418
2015-08-09 15:43:02 +00:00
Tim Northover d5fdef016d GVN: tolerate an instruction being replaced without existing in the leaderboard
Sometimes an incidentally created instruction can duplicate a Value used
elsewhere. It then often doesn't end up in the leader table. If it's later
removed, we attempt to remove it from the leader table and segfault.

Instead we should just ignore the removal request, which won't cause any
problems. The reverse situation, where the original instruction is replaced by
the new one (which you might think could leave the leader table empty) cannot
occur, because the incidental instruction will never be found in the first
place.

llvm-svn: 242199
2015-07-14 21:03:18 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 2a3443c7c5 GVN: If a branch has two identical successors, we cannot declare either dead.
This previously caused miscompilations as a result of phi nodes receiving
undef incoming values from blocks dominated by such successors.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10726

llvm-svn: 240670
2015-06-25 18:32:02 +00:00
David Majnemer 63d606bdcb [GVN] Intersect the IR flags when CSE'ing two instructions
We performed a simple, but incomplete, intersection when it came time to
CSE instructions.  It didn't handle, for example, the 'exact' flag.

This fixes PR23922.

llvm-svn: 240595
2015-06-24 21:52:25 +00:00
David Majnemer 7fddeccb8b Move the personality function from LandingPadInst to Function
The personality routine currently lives in the LandingPadInst.

This isn't desirable because:
- All LandingPadInsts in the same function must have the same
  personality routine.  This means that each LandingPadInst beyond the
  first has an operand which produces no additional information.

- There is ongoing work to introduce EH IR constructs other than
  LandingPadInst.  Moving the personality routine off of any one
  particular Instruction and onto the parent function seems a lot better
  than have N different places a personality function can sneak onto an
  exceptional function.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10429

llvm-svn: 239940
2015-06-17 20:52:32 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov 9947e48cd1 [GVN] Use a simpler form of IRBuilder constructor.
Summary:
A side effect of this change is that it IRBuilder now automatically
created debug info locations for new instructions, which is the
same as debug location of insertion point. This is fine for the
functions in questions (GetStoreValueForLoad and
GetMemInstValueForLoad), as they are used in two situations:
  * GVN::processLoad, which tries to eliminate a load. In this case
    new instructions would have the same debug location as the load they
    eventually replace;
  * MaterializeAdjustedValue, which adds new instructions to the end
    of the basic blocks, which could later be used to replace the load
    definition. In this case we don't yet know the way the load would
    be eventually replaced (either by assembling the precomputed values
    via PHI, or by using them directly), so just using the basic block
    strategy seems to be reasonable. There is also a special case
    in the code that *would* adjust the location of the last
    instruction replacing the load definition to the location of the
    load.

Test Plan: regression test suite

Reviewers: echristo, dberlin, dblaikie

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10405

llvm-svn: 239585
2015-06-12 01:39:48 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov 89645dfa4d [GVN] Set proper debug locations for some instructions created by GVN.
Determining proper debug locations for instructions created in
PHITransAddr is tricky. We use a simple approach here and simply copy
debug locations from instructions computing load address to
"corresponding" instructions re-creating the address computation
in predecessor basic blocks.

This may not always be correct, given all the rearrangement and
simplification going on, and debug locations may jump around a lot,
as the basic blocks we copy locations between may be very far from
each other.

Still, this would work good in most simple cases (e.g. when chain
of address computing instruction is short, or our mapping turns out
to be 1-to-1), and we desire to have *some* reasonable debug locations
associated with newly inserted instructions.

See http://reviews.llvm.org/D10351 review thread for more details.

Test Plan: regression test suite

Reviewers: spatel, dblaikie

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10351

llvm-svn: 239479
2015-06-10 17:37:38 +00:00
David Majnemer 7666be70e4 [PHITransAddr] Don't translate unreachable values
Unreachable values may use themselves in strange ways due to their
dominance property.  Attempting to translate through them can lead to
infinite recursion, crashing LLVM.  Instead, claim that we weren't able
to translate the value.

This fixes PR23096.

llvm-svn: 238702
2015-06-01 00:15:08 +00:00
Daniel Berlin 3459d6ead5 Update BasicAliasAnalysis to understand that nothing aliases with undef values.
It got this in some cases (if one of them was an identified object), but not in all cases.

This caused stores to undef to block load-forwarding in some cases, etc.

Added test to Transforms/GVN to verify optimization occurs as expected.

llvm-svn: 236511
2015-05-05 18:10:49 +00:00
David Blaikie 23af64846f [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to the call instruction
See r230786 and r230794 for similar changes to gep and load
respectively.

Call is a bit different because it often doesn't have a single explicit
type - usually the type is deduced from the arguments, and just the
return type is explicit. In those cases there's no need to change the
IR.

When that's not the case, the IR usually contains the pointer type of
the first operand - but since typed pointers are going away, that
representation is insufficient so I'm just stripping the "pointerness"
of the explicit type away.

This does make the IR a bit weird - it /sort of/ reads like the type of
the first operand: "call void () %x(" but %x is actually of type "void
()*" and will eventually be just of type "ptr". But this seems not too
bad and I don't think it would benefit from repeating the type
("void (), void () * %x(" and then eventually "void (), ptr %x(") as has
been done with gep and load.

This also has a side benefit: since the explicit type is no longer a
pointer, there's no ambiguity between an explicit type and a function
that returns a function pointer. Previously this case needed an explicit
type (eg: a function returning a void() function was written as
"call void () () * @x(" rather than "call void () * @x(" because of the
ambiguity between a function returning a pointer to a void() function
and a function returning void).

No ambiguity means even function pointer return types can just be
written alone, without writing the whole function's type.

This leaves /only/ the varargs case where the explicit type is required.

Given the special type syntax in call instructions, the regex-fu used
for migration was a bit more involved in its own unique way (as every
one of these is) so here it is. Use it in conjunction with the apply.sh
script and associated find/xargs commands I've provided in rr230786 to
migrate your out of tree tests. Do let me know if any of this doesn't
cover your cases & we can iterate on a more general script/regexes to
help others with out of tree tests.

About 9 test cases couldn't be automatically migrated - half of those
were functions returning function pointers, where I just had to manually
delete the function argument types now that we didn't need an explicit
function type there. The other half were typedefs of function types used
in calls - just had to manually drop the * from those.

import fileinput
import sys
import re

pat = re.compile(r'((?:=|:|^|\s)call\s(?:[^@]*?))(\s*$|\s*(?:(?:\[\[[a-zA-Z0-9_]+\]\]|[@%](?:(")?[\\\?@a-zA-Z0-9_.]*?(?(3)"|)|{{.*}}))(?:\(|$)|undef|inttoptr|bitcast|null|asm).*$)')
addrspace_end = re.compile(r"addrspace\(\d+\)\s*\*$")
func_end = re.compile("(?:void.*|\)\s*)\*$")

def conv(match, line):
  if not match or re.search(addrspace_end, match.group(1)) or not re.search(func_end, match.group(1)):
    return line
  return line[:match.start()] + match.group(1)[:match.group(1).rfind('*')].rstrip() + match.group(2) + line[match.end():]

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(conv(re.search(pat, line), line))

llvm-svn: 235145
2015-04-16 23:24:18 +00:00
Philip Reames 4dbd88f3b4 !invariant.load semantics with potentially clobbering calls
A load from an invariant location is assumed to not alias any otherwise potentially aliasing stores. Our implementation only applied this rule to store instructions themselves whereas they it should apply for any memory accessing instruction. This results in both FRE and PRE becoming more effective at eliminating invariant loads.

Note that as a follow on change I will likely move this into AliasAnalysis itself. That's where the TBAA constant flag is handled and the semantics are essentially the same. I'd like to separate the semantic change from the refactoring and thus have extended the hack that's already in MemoryDependenceAnalysis for this change.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8591

llvm-svn: 233140
2015-03-24 23:54:54 +00:00
David Majnemer e165502ed7 MemoryDependenceAnalysis: Don't miscompile atomics
r216771 introduced a change to MemoryDependenceAnalysis that allowed it
to reason about acquire/release operations.  However, this change does
not ensure that the acquire/release operations pair.  Unfortunately,
this leads to miscompiles as we won't see an acquire load as properly
memory effecting.  This largely reverts r216771.

This fixes PR22708.

llvm-svn: 232889
2015-03-21 06:19:17 +00:00
David Blaikie f72d05bc7b [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to gep operator
Similar to gep (r230786) and load (r230794) changes.

Similar migration script can be used to update test cases, which
successfully migrated all of LLVM and Polly, but about 4 test cases
needed manually changes in Clang.

(this script will read the contents of stdin and massage it into stdout
- wrap it in the 'apply.sh' script shown in previous commits + xargs to
apply it over a large set of test cases)

import fileinput
import sys
import re

rep = re.compile(r"(getelementptr(?:\s+inbounds)?\s*\()((<\d*\s+x\s+)?([^@]*?)(|\s*addrspace\(\d+\))\s*\*(?(3)>)\s*)(?=$|%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|zeroinitializer|<|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{)", re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL)

def conv(match):
  line = match.group(1)
  line += match.group(4)
  line += ", "
  line += match.group(2)
  return line

line = sys.stdin.read()
off = 0
for match in re.finditer(rep, line):
  sys.stdout.write(line[off:match.start()])
  sys.stdout.write(conv(match))
  off = match.end()
sys.stdout.write(line[off:])

llvm-svn: 232184
2015-03-13 18:20:45 +00:00
David Blaikie a79ac14fa6 [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to load instruction
Essentially the same as the GEP change in r230786.

A similar migration script can be used to update test cases, though a few more
test case improvements/changes were required this time around: (r229269-r229278)

import fileinput
import sys
import re

pat = re.compile(r"((?:=|:|^)\s*load (?:atomic )?(?:volatile )?(.*?))(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*($| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$)")

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(re.sub(pat, r"\1, \2\3*\4", line))

Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7649

llvm-svn: 230794
2015-02-27 21:17:42 +00:00
David Blaikie 79e6c74981 [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to getelementptr instruction
One of several parallel first steps to remove the target type of pointers,
replacing them with a single opaque pointer type.

This adds an explicit type parameter to the gep instruction so that when the
first parameter becomes an opaque pointer type, the type to gep through is
still available to the instructions.

* This doesn't modify gep operators, only instructions (operators will be
  handled separately)

* Textual IR changes only. Bitcode (including upgrade) and changing the
  in-memory representation will be in separate changes.

* geps of vectors are transformed as:
    getelementptr <4 x float*> %x, ...
  ->getelementptr float, <4 x float*> %x, ...
  Then, once the opaque pointer type is introduced, this will ultimately look
  like:
    getelementptr float, <4 x ptr> %x
  with the unambiguous interpretation that it is a vector of pointers to float.

* address spaces remain on the pointer, not the type:
    getelementptr float addrspace(1)* %x
  ->getelementptr float, float addrspace(1)* %x
  Then, eventually:
    getelementptr float, ptr addrspace(1) %x

Importantly, the massive amount of test case churn has been automated by
same crappy python code. I had to manually update a few test cases that
wouldn't fit the script's model (r228970,r229196,r229197,r229198). The
python script just massages stdin and writes the result to stdout, I
then wrapped that in a shell script to handle replacing files, then
using the usual find+xargs to migrate all the files.

update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re

ibrep = re.compile(r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr inbounds )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
normrep = re.compile(       r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")

def conv(match, line):
  if not match:
    return line
  line = match.groups()[0]
  if len(match.groups()[5]) == 0:
    line += match.groups()[2]
  line += match.groups()[3]
  line += ", "
  line += match.groups()[1]
  line += "\n"
  return line

for line in sys.stdin:
  if line.find("getelementptr ") == line.find("getelementptr inbounds"):
    if line.find("getelementptr inbounds") != line.find("getelementptr inbounds ("):
      line = conv(re.match(ibrep, line), line)
  elif line.find("getelementptr ") != line.find("getelementptr ("):
    line = conv(re.match(normrep, line), line)
  sys.stdout.write(line)

apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
  python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
  rm -f "$name.tmp"
done

The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh

After that, check-all (with llvm, clang, clang-tools-extra, lld,
compiler-rt, and polly all checked out).

The extra 'rm' in the apply.sh script is due to a few files in clang's test
suite using interesting unicode stuff that my python script was throwing
exceptions on. None of those files needed to be migrated, so it seemed
sufficient to ignore those cases.

Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7636

llvm-svn: 230786
2015-02-27 19:29:02 +00:00
Sanjay Patel cc29f4f2cb only propagate equality comparisons of FP values that we are certain are non-zero
This is a follow-on to r227491 which tightens the check for propagating FP
values. If a non-constant value happens to be a zero, we would hit the same
bug as before.

Bug noted and patch suggested by Eli Friedman.

llvm-svn: 230564
2015-02-25 22:46:08 +00:00