instruction on a register bank. This will be used by the register bank select
pass to assign register banks for generic virtual registers." and the follow-on
commits while I find out a way to fix the win7 bot:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-windows/builds/19882
This reverts commit r265578, r265581, r265584, and r265585.
llvm-svn: 265587
helper class.
The default constructor creates invalid (isValid() == false) instances
and may be used to communicate that a mapping was not found.
llvm-svn: 265581
The method checks that the value is fully defined accross the different partial
mappings and that the partial mappings are compatible between each other.
llvm-svn: 265556
when DenseMap growed and moved memory. I verified it fixed the bootstrap
problem on x86_64-linux-gnu but I cannot verify whether it fixes
the bootstrap error on clang-ppc64be-linux. I will watch the build-bot
result closely.
Replace analyzeSiblingValues with new algorithm to fix its compile
time issue. The patch is to solve PR17409 and its duplicates.
analyzeSiblingValues is a N x N complexity algorithm where N is
the number of siblings generated by reg splitting. Although it
causes siginificant compile time issue when N is large, it is also
important for performance since it removes redundent spills and
enables rematerialization.
To solve the compile time issue, the patch removes analyzeSiblingValues
and replaces it with lower cost alternatives containing two parts. The
first part creates a new spill hoisting method in postOptimization of
register allocation. It does spill hoisting at once after all the spills
are generated instead of inside every instance of selectOrSplit. The
second part queries the define expr of the original register for
rematerializaiton and keep it always available during register allocation
even if it is already dead. It deletes those dead instructions only in
postOptimization. With the two parts in the patch, it can remove
analyzeSiblingValues without sacrificing performance.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15302
llvm-svn: 265547
While preserving the return value for @llvm.experimental.deoptimize at
the IR level is useful during mid-level optimization, doing so at the
machine instruction level requires generating some extra code and a
return that is non-ideal. This change has LLVM lower
```
%val = call @llvm.experimental.deoptimize
ret %val
```
to effectively
```
call @__llvm_deoptimize()
unreachable
```
instead.
llvm-svn: 265502
As part of the TRI argument of addRegBankCoverage we already have access to
the TargetRegisterClass through the ID of that register class.
Therefore, there is no point in needing a TargetRegisterClass instance,
the ID is enough to get to it.
llvm-svn: 265487
Bionic has a defined thread-local location for the stack protector
cookie. Emit a direct load instead of going through __stack_chk_guard.
llvm-svn: 265481
Change the default constructor to create invalid object.
The target will have to properly initialize the register banks before
using them.
llvm-svn: 265460
At IR level, the swifterror argument is an input argument with type
ErrorObject**. For targets that support swifterror, we want to optimize it
to behave as an inout value with type ErrorObject*; it will be passed in a
fixed physical register.
The main idea is to track the virtual registers for each swifterror value. We
define swifterror values as AllocaInsts with swifterror attribute or a function
argument with swifterror attribute.
In SelectionDAGISel.cpp, we set up swifterror values (SwiftErrorVals) before
handling the basic blocks.
When iterating over all basic blocks in RPO, before actually visiting the basic
block, we call mergeIncomingSwiftErrors to merge incoming swifterror values when
there are multiple predecessors or to simply propagate them. There, we create a
virtual register for each swifterror value in the entry block. For predecessors
that are not yet visited, we create virtual registers to hold the swifterror
values at the end of the predecessor. The assignments are saved in
SwiftErrorWorklist and will be materialized at the end of visiting the basic
block.
When visiting a load from a swifterror value, we copy from the current virtual
register assignment. When visiting a store to a swifterror value, we create a
virtual register to hold the swifterror value and update SwiftErrorMap to
track the current virtual register assignment.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18108
llvm-svn: 265433
Presently, CodeGenPrepare deletes all nearly empty (only phi and branch)
basic blocks. This pass can delete loop preheaders which frequently creates
critical edges. A preheader can be a convenient place to spill registers to
the stack. If the entrance to a loop body is a critical edge, then spills
may occur in the loop body rather than immediately before it. This patch
protects loop preheaders from deletion in CodeGenPrepare even if they are
nearly empty.
Since the patch alters the CFG, it affects a large number of test cases.
In most cases, the changes are merely cosmetic (basic blocks have different
names or instruction orders change slightly). I am somewhat concerned about
the test/CodeGen/Mips/brdelayslot.ll test case. If the loop preheader is not
deleted, then the MIPS backend does not take advantage of a branch delay
slot. Consequently, I would like some close review by a MIPS expert.
The patch also partially subsumes D16893 from George Burgess IV. George
correctly notes that CodeGenPrepare does not actually preserve the dominator
tree. I think the dominator tree was usually not valid when CodeGenPrepare
ran, but I am using LoopInfo to mark preheaders, so the dominator tree is
now always valid before CodeGenPrepare.
Author: Tom Jablin (tjablin)
Reviewers: hfinkel george.burgess.iv vkalintiris dsanders kbarton cycheng
http://reviews.llvm.org/D16984
llvm-svn: 265397
There is no problem with the code today, but the fix will avoid a crash
in test/CodeGen/AMDGPU/subreg-coalescer-undef-use.ll once the
DetectDeadLanes pass is added.
llvm-svn: 265351
I noticed that this isn't covered by our existing tests and spent some
time trying to come up with an example it actually hits. I tried hand
rolling something based on the explanation in the comment, but couldn't
get anything that didn't abort tail duplication earlier for one reason
or another.
Then, I tried cranking tail-dup-size cranked up so this would fire
more and ran a bootstrap of clang and the nightly test suite - those
don't hit this either.
This reverts r132816 and replaces it with an assert.
llvm-svn: 265347
That commit looks wonderful and awesome. Sadly, it greatly exacerbates
PR17409 and effectively regresses build time for a lot of (very large)
code when compiled with ASan or MSan.
We thought this could be fixed forward by landing D15302 which at last
fixes that PR, but some issues were discovered and it looks like that
got reverted, so reverting this as well temporarily. As soon as the fix
for PR17409 lands and sticks, we should re-land this patch as it won't
trigger more significant test cases hitting that bug.
Many thanks to Quentin and Wei here as they're doing all the awesome
hard work!!!
llvm-svn: 265331
We can only perform a tail call to a callee that preserves all the
registers that the caller needs to preserve.
This situation happens with calling conventions like preserver_mostcc or
cxx_fast_tls. It was explicitely handled for fast_tls and failing for
preserve_most. This patch generalizes the check to any calling
convention.
Related to rdar://24207743
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18680
llvm-svn: 265329
Use the MachineFunctionProperty mechanism to indicate whether a MachineFunction
is in SSA form instead of a custom method on MachineRegisterInfo. NFC
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18574
llvm-svn: 265318
Summary:
This adds the same checks that were added in r264593 to all
target-specific passes that run after register allocation.
Reviewers: qcolombet
Subscribers: jyknight, dsanders, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18525
llvm-svn: 265313
time issue. The patch is to solve PR17409 and its duplicates.
analyzeSiblingValues is a N x N complexity algorithm where N is
the number of siblings generated by reg splitting. Although it
causes siginificant compile time issue when N is large, it is also
important for performance since it removes redundent spills and
enables rematerialization.
To solve the compile time issue, the patch removes analyzeSiblingValues
and replaces it with lower cost alternatives containing two parts. The
first part creates a new spill hoisting method in postOptimization of
register allocation. It does spill hoisting at once after all the spills
are generated instead of inside every instance of selectOrSplit. The
second part queries the define expr of the original register for
rematerializaiton and keep it always available during register allocation
even if it is already dead. It deletes those dead instructions only in
postOptimization. With the two parts in the patch, it can remove
analyzeSiblingValues without sacrificing performance.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15302
llvm-svn: 265309
Sinking comparisons in CGP can undo the job of hoisting them done
earlier by LICM, and soft-FP makes this an expensive mistake.
A common pattern that produces floating point comparisons uniform
over a loop is an explicit check for division by zero. If the divisor
is hoisted out of the loop, the comparison can also be, but hoisting
the function that unwinds is never legal, since it may cause side
effects in the loop body prior to the unwinding to not be executed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18744
llvm-svn: 265264
A ``swifterror`` attribute can be applied to a function parameter or an
AllocaInst.
This commit does not include any target-specific change. The target-specific
optimization will come as a follow-up patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18092
llvm-svn: 265189
Re-enable an assertion enabled by Justin Lebar in rL265092. rL265092
was breaking test/CodeGen/X86/deopt-intrinsic.ll because webkit_jscc
does not like non-i64 return types. Change the test case to not do
that.
llvm-svn: 265099
Previously, HandleLastUse would delete RegRef information for sub-registers
if they were dead even if their corresponding super-register were still live.
If the super-register were later renamed, then the definitions of the
sub-register would not be updated appropriately. This patch alters the
behavior so that RegInfo information for sub-registers is only deleted when
the sub-register and super-register are both dead.
This resolves PR26775. This is the mirror image of Hal's r227311 commit.
Author: Tom Jablin (tjablin)
Reviewers: kbarton uweigand nemanjai hfinkel
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18448
llvm-svn: 265097
This mostly cosmetic patch moves the DebugEmissionKind enum from DIBuilder
into DICompileUnit. DIBuilder is not the right place for this enum to live
in — a metadata consumer should not have to include DIBuilder.h.
I also added a Verifier check that checks that the emission kind of a
DICompileUnit is actually legal.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18612
<rdar://problem/25427165>
llvm-svn: 265077
Print aliases in topological order, that is, for any alias a = b,
b must be printed before a. This is because on some targets (e.g. PowerPC)
linker expects aliases in such an order to generate correct TOC information.
GCC also prints aliases in topological order.
llvm-svn: 265064
Patch by Jonas Paulsson. Original description:
Bugfix in buildSchedGraph() to make -dag-maps-huge-region work properly
I found that the reduction of the maps did in fact never happen in this
test case. This was because *all* the stores / loads were made with
addresses from arguments and they thus became "unknown" stores / loads.
Fixed by removing continue statements and making sure that the test for
reduction always takes place.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18673
llvm-svn: 265063
This will become necessary in a subsequent change to make this method
merge adjacent stack adjustments, i.e. it might erase the previous
and/or next instruction.
It also greatly simplifies the calls to this function from Prolog-
EpilogInserter. Previously, that had a bunch of logic to resume iteration
after the call; now it just continues with the returned iterator.
Note that this changes the behaviour of PEI a little. Previously,
it attempted to re-visit the new instruction created by
eliminateCallFramePseudoInstr(). That code was added in r36625,
but I can't see any reason for it: the new instructions will obviously
not be pseudo instructions, they will not have FrameIndex operands,
and we have already accounted for the stack adjustment.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18627
llvm-svn: 265036
If the lhs is evaluated before the rhs, FuncletI's operator-> can trigger the
assert(isHandleInSync() && "invalid iterator access!");
at include/llvm/ADT/DenseMap.h:1061. (Happens e.g. when compiled with GCC 6.)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18440
llvm-svn: 265024
Change isConsecutiveLoads to check that loads are non-volatile as this
is a requirement for any load merges. Propagate change to two callers.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18546
llvm-svn: 265013
For the same reason as the corresponding load change.
Note that ExpandStore is completely broken for non-byte sized element
vector stores, but preserve the current broken behavior which has tests
for it. The behavior should be the same, but now introduces a new typed
store that is incorrectly split later rather than doing it directly.
llvm-svn: 264928
On AMDGPU we want to be able to promote i64/f64 loads to v2i32.
If the access is unaligned, this would conclude that since i64 is legal,
it would convert it back to i64 and there is an endless legalization
loop.
Extract the logic for scalarizing the load into a new TargetLowering
function, where this can also replace the custom function AMDGPU
has for this.
llvm-svn: 264927
This makes check failures much easier to understand.
Make it empty (but leave it in the class) for NDEBUG builds.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18529
llvm-svn: 264780
Add function soft attribute to the generation of Jump Tables in CodeGen
as initial step towards clang support of gcc's no-jump-table support
Reviewers: hans, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18321
llvm-svn: 264756
Summary:
Check that any function that has the property set is free of virtual
register operands.
Also, it is actually VirtRegMap (and not the register allocators) that
acutally remove the VReg operands (except for RegAllocFast).
Reviewers: qcolombet
Subscribers: MatzeB, llvm-commits, qcolombet
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18535
llvm-svn: 264755
Split RegisterOperands code that collects defs/uses into a variant with
and without lanemask tracking. This is a bit of code duplication, but
there are enough subtle differences between the two variants that this
seems cleaner (and potentially faster).
This also fixes a problem where lanes where tracked even though
TrackLaneMasks was false. This is part of the fix for
http://llvm.org/PR27106. I will commit the testcase when it is
completely fixed.
llvm-svn: 264696
Minimum density for both optsize and non optsize are now options
-sparse-jump-table-density (default 10) for non optsize functions
-dense-jump-table-density (default 40) for optsize functions, which
matches the current default. This improves several benchmarks at google
at the cost of a small codesize increase. For code compiled with -Os,
the old behavior continues
llvm-svn: 264689
MachineFunctionProperties represents a set of properties that a MachineFunction
can have at particular points in time. Existing examples of this idea are
MachineRegisterInfo::isSSA() and MachineRegisterInfo::tracksLiveness() which
will eventually be switched to use this mechanism.
This change introduces the AllVRegsAllocated property; i.e. the property that
all virtual registers have been allocated and there are no VReg operands
left.
With this mechanism, passes can declare that they require a particular property
to be set, or that they set or clear properties by implementing e.g.
MachineFunctionPass::getRequiredProperties(). The MachineFunctionPass base class
verifies that the requirements are met, and handles the setting and clearing
based on the delcarations. Passes can also directly query and update the current
properties of the MF if they want to have conditional behavior.
This change annotates the target-independent post-regalloc passes; future
changes will also annotate target-specific ones.
Reviewers: qcolombet, hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18421
llvm-svn: 264593
This reverts commit fa36fcff16c7d4f78204d6296bf96c3558a4a672.
Causes the following Windows failure:
C:\Buildbot\Slave\llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-windows10pro-fast\llvm.src\lib\CodeGen\MachineInstr.cpp(762):
error C2338: must be trivially copyable to memmove
llvm-svn: 264516
Summary: isPodLike is as close as we have for is_trivially_copyable.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18483
llvm-svn: 264515
When encountering instructions with regmasks, instead of cleaning up all the
elements in MaybeDeadCopies map, remove only the instructions erased. By keeping
more instruction in MaybeDeadCopies, this change will expose more dead copies
across instructions with regmasks.
llvm-svn: 264462
When merging stores in DAGCombiner, add check to ensure that no
dependenices exist that would cause the construction of a cycle in our
DAG. This may happen if one store has a data dependence on another
instruction (e.g. a load) which itself has a (chain) dependence on
another store being merged. These stores cannot be merged safely and
doing so results in a cycle that is discovered in LegalizeDAG.
This test is only done in cases where Antialias analysis is used (UseAA)
as non-AA store merge candidates will be merged logically after all
loads which have been checked to not alias.
Reviewers: ahatanak, spatel, niravd, arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight
Subscribers: llvm-commits, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18336
llvm-svn: 264461
This fixes a use-after-free introduced 3 years ago, in r182872 ;)
The code more or less worked because the memory that CopyMI was
pointing to happened to still be valid, but lots of tests would crash
if you ran under ASAN with the recycling allocator changes from
llvm.org/PR26808
llvm-svn: 264455
Now register parameters that aren't saved to the stack or CSRs are
considered dead after the first call. Previously the debugger would show
whatever was in the register.
Fixes PR26589
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17211
llvm-svn: 264429
It is incorrect to get the corresponding MBB for a ReturnInst before
SelectAllBasicBlocks since SelectAllBasicBlocks can change the
correspondence between a ReturnInst and the MBB it is in.
PR27062
llvm-svn: 264358
Earlier we were ignoring varargs in LowerCallSiteWithDeoptBundle because
populateCallLoweringInfo does not set CallLoweringInfo::IsVarArg.
llvm-svn: 264354
Summary:
Only adds support for "naked" calls to llvm.experimental.deoptimize.
Support for round-tripping through RewriteStatepointsForGC will come
as a separate patch (should be simpler than this one).
Reviewers: reames
Subscribers: sanjoy, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18429
llvm-svn: 264329
Given that StatepointLowering now uniques derived pointers before
putting them in the per-statepoint spill map, we may end up with missing
entries for derived pointers when we visit a gc.relocate on a pointer
that was de-duplicated away.
Fix this by keeping two maps, one mapping gc pointers to their
de-duplicated values, and one mapping a de-duplicated value to the slot
it is spilled in.
llvm-svn: 264320
When multiple DWP files are merged together and duplicate DWO IDs are
found it's currently difficult to give an actionable error message - the
DW_AT_name of the CU could be provided, but might be identical (if the
same source file is built into two different configurations), which
doesn't help the user identify the problem.
When no intermediate DWP files are generated, the path to the two DWO
files could be provided - but is lost once the DWOs are merged into a
DWP.
So, include the name of the DWO (dwo_name) in the split file so that
collissions involving a source CU from a DWP can be better diagnosed.
(improvements to llvm-dwp using this to come shortly)
llvm-svn: 264316
If the operation's type has been promoted during type legalization, we
need to account for the fact that the high bits of the comparison
operand are likely unspecified.
The LHS is usually zero-extended, but MIPS sign extends it, so we have
to be slightly careful.
Patch by Simon Dardis.
llvm-svn: 264296
Summary:
Some target lowerings of FP_TO_FP16, for instance ARM's vcvtb.f16.f32
instruction, do not guarantee that the top 16 bits are zeroed out.
Remove the unsafe AssertZext and add tests to exercise this.
Reviewers: jmolloy, sbaranga, kristof.beyls, aadg
Subscribers: llvm-commits, srhines, aemerson
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18426
llvm-svn: 264285
Currently, AnalyzeBranch() fails non-equality comparison between floating points
on X86 (see https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23875). This is because this
function can modify the branch by reversing the conditional jump and removing
unconditional jump if there is a proper fall-through. However, in the case of
non-equality comparison between floating points, this can turn the branch
"unanalyzable". Consider the following case:
jne.BB1
jp.BB1
jmp.BB2
.BB1:
...
.BB2:
...
AnalyzeBranch() will reverse "jp .BB1" to "jnp .BB2" and then "jmp .BB2" will be
removed:
jne.BB1
jnp.BB2
.BB1:
...
.BB2:
...
However, AnalyzeBranch() cannot analyze this branch anymore as there are two
conditional jumps with different targets. This may disable some optimizations
like block-placement: in this case the fall-through behavior is enforced even if
the fall-through block is very cold, which is suboptimal.
Actually this optimization is also done in block-placement pass, which means we
can remove this optimization from AnalyzeBranch(). However, currently
X86::COND_NE_OR_P and X86::COND_NP_OR_E are not reversible: there is no defined
negation conditions for them.
In order to reverse them, this patch defines two new CondCode X86::COND_E_AND_NP
and X86::COND_P_AND_NE. It also defines how to synthesize instructions for them.
Here only the second conditional jump is reversed. This is valid as we only need
them to do this "unconditional jump removal" optimization.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11393
llvm-svn: 264199
Now that StatepointLoweringInfo represents base pointers, derived
pointers and gc relocates as SmallVectors and not ArrayRefs, we no
longer need to allocate "backing storage" on stack in LowerStatepoint.
So elide the backing storage, and inline the trivial body of
getIncomingStatepointGCValues.
llvm-svn: 264128
CGP modifies the domtree in some cases, so saying that it preserves the
domtree is a lie. We'll be able to selectively preserve it with the new
pass manager.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16893
llvm-svn: 264099
We were just completely ignoring the types when determining whether we could
safely emit a libcall as a tail call. This is clearly wrong.
Theoretically, we could dig deeper looking for incidental matches (much like
the generic code in Analysis.cpp does), but it's probably not worth it for the
few libcalls that exist.
llvm-svn: 264084
Improve vector extension of vectors on hardware without dedicated VSEXT/VZEXT instructions.
We already convert these to SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG/ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG but can further improve this by using the legalizer instead of prematurely splitting into legal vectors in the combine as this only properly helps for lowering to VSEXT/VZEXT.
Removes a lot of unnecessary any_extend + mask pattern - (Fix for PR25718).
Reapplied with a fix for PR26953 (missing vector widening legalization).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17932
llvm-svn: 264062
Summary:
After this change, deopt operand bundles can be lowered directly by
SelectionDAG into STATEPOINT instructions (which are then lowered to a
call or sequence of nop, with an associated __llvm_stackmaps entry0.
This obviates the need to round-trip deoptimization state through
gc.statepoint via RewriteStatepointsForGC.
Reviewers: reames, atrick, majnemer, JosephTremoulet, pgavlin
Subscribers: sanjoy, mcrosier, majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18257
llvm-svn: 264015
Summary:
extract_vector_elt can cause an implicit any_ext if the types don't
match. When processing the following pattern:
(and (extract_vector_elt (load ([non_ext|any_ext|zero_ext] V))), c)
DAGCombine was ignoring the possible extend, and sometimes removing
the AND even though it was required to maintain some of the bits
in the result to 0, resulting in a miscompile.
This change fixes the issue by limiting the transformation only to
cases where the extract_vector_elt doesn't perform the implicit
extend.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, jmolloy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18247
llvm-svn: 263935
A virtual index of -1u indicates that the subprogram's virtual index is
unrepresentable (for example, when using the relative vtable ABI), so do
not emit a DW_AT_vtable_elem_location attribute for it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18236
llvm-svn: 263765
Summary:
This is a step towards implementing "direct" lowering of calls and
invokes with deopt operand bundles into STATEPOINT nodes (as opposed to
having them mandatorily pass through RewriteStatepointsForGC, which is
the case today).
This change extracts out a `SelectionDAGBuilder::LowerAsStatepoint`
helper function that is able to lower a "statepoint like thing", and
uses it to lower `gc.statepoint` calls. This is an NFC now, but in a
later change we will use `LowerAsStatepoint` to directly lower calls and
invokes with operand bundles without going through an intermediate
`gc.statepoint` IR representation.
FYI: I expect `SelectionDAGBuilder::StatepointInfo` will evolve as I add
support for lowering non gc.statepoints, right now it is fairly tightly
coupled with an IR level `gc.statepoint`.
Reviewers: reames, pgavlin, JosephTremoulet
Subscribers: sanjoy, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18106
llvm-svn: 263671
- Rename getATOMIC to getSYNC, as llvm will soon be able to emit both
'__sync' libcalls and '__atomic' libcalls, and this function is for
the '__sync' ones.
- getInsertFencesForAtomic() has been replaced with
shouldInsertFencesForAtomic(Instruction), so that the decision can be
made per-instruction. This functionality will be used soon.
- emitLeadingFence/emitTrailingFence are no longer called if
shouldInsertFencesForAtomic returns false, and thus don't need to
check the condition themselves.
llvm-svn: 263665
SelectionDAGBuilder::populateCallLoweringInfo is now used instead of
SelectionDAGBuilder::lowerCallOperands. The populateCallLoweringInfo
interface is more composable in face of design changes like
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18106
llvm-svn: 263663
This patch adds support for the MachO .alt_entry assembly directive, and uses
it for global aliases with non-zero GEP offsets. The alt_entry flag indicates
that a symbol should be layed out immediately after the preceding symbol.
Conceptually it introduces an alternate entry point for a function or data
structure. E.g.:
safe_foo:
// check preconditions for foo
.alt_entry fast_foo
fast_foo:
// body of foo, can assume preconditions.
The .alt_entry flag is also implicitly set on assembly aliases of the form:
a = b + C
where C is a non-zero constant, since these have the same effect as an
alt_entry symbol: they introduce a label that cannot be moved relative to the
preceding one. Setting the alt_entry flag on aliases of this form fixes
http://llvm.org/PR25381.
llvm-svn: 263521
Instead of running an explicit loop over `gc.relocate` calls hanging off
of a `gc.statepoint`, assert the validity of the type of the value being
relocated in `visitRelocate`.
llvm-svn: 263516
Summary: There are places in MachineBlockPlacement where a worklist is filled in pretty much identical way. The code is duplicated. This refactor it so that the same code is used in both scenarii.
Reviewers: chandlerc, majnemer, rafael, MatzeB, escha, silvas
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18077
llvm-svn: 263495
The bad behavior happens when we have a function with a long linear chain of
basic blocks, and have a live range spanning most of this chain, but with very
few uses.
Let say we have only 2 uses.
The Hopfield network is only seeded with two active blocks where the uses are,
and each iteration of the outer loop in `RAGreedy::growRegion()` only adds two
new nodes to the network due to the completely linear shape of the CFG.
Meanwhile, `SpillPlacer->iterate()` visits the whole set of discovered nodes,
which adds up to a quadratic algorithm.
This is an historical accident effect from r129188.
When the Hopfield network is expanding, most of the action is happening on the
frontier where new nodes are being added. The internal nodes in the network are
not likely to be flip-flopping much, or they will at least settle down very
quickly. This means that while `SpillPlacer->iterate()` is recomputing all the
nodes in the network, it is probably only the two frontier nodes that are
changing their output.
Instead of recomputing the whole network on each iteration, we can maintain a
SparseSet of nodes that need to be updated:
- `SpillPlacement::activate()` adds the node to the todo list.
- When a node changes value (i.e., `update()` returns true), its neighbors are
added to the todo list.
- `SpillPlacement::iterate()` only updates the nodes in the list.
The result of Hopfield iterations is not necessarily exact. It should converge
to a local minimum, but there is no guarantee that it will find a global
minimum. It is possible that updating nodes in a different order will cause us
to switch to a different local minimum. In other words, this is not NFC, but
although I saw a few runtime improvements and regressions when I benchmarked
this change, those were side effects and actually the performance change is in
the noise as expected.
Huge thanks to Jakob Stoklund Olesen <stoklund@2pi.dk> for his feedbacks,
guidance and time for the review.
llvm-svn: 263460
Fundamentally, the length of a variable or function name is bound by the
maximum size of a record: 0xffff. However, the name doesn't live in a
vacuum; other data is associated with the name, lowering the bound
further.
We would naively attempt to emit the name, causing us to assert because
the record would no-longer fit in 16-bits. Instead, truncate the name
but preserve as much as we can.
While I have tested this locally, I've decided to not commit it due to
the test's size.
N.B. While this behavior is undesirable, it is better than MSVC's
behavior. They seem to truncate to ~4000 characters.
llvm-svn: 263378
Improve vector extension of vectors on hardware without dedicated VSEXT/VZEXT instructions.
We already convert these to SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG/ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG but can further improve this by using the legalizer instead of prematurely splitting into legal vectors in the combine as this only properly helps for lowering to VSEXT/VZEXT.
Removes a lot of unnecessary any_extend + mask pattern - (Fix for PR25718).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17932
llvm-svn: 263303
The truncation was causing the sorting algorithm to behave oddly when comparing
positive and negative offsets. Fortunately, this doesn't currently happen in
practice and was exposed by a WIP. Thus, I can't test this change now, but the
follow on patch will.
llvm-svn: 263255
llvm::getDISubprogram walks the instructions in a function, looking for one in the scope of the current function, so that it can find the !dbg entry for the subprogram itself.
Now that !dbg is attached to functions, this should not be necessary. This patch changes all uses to just query the subprogram directly on the function.
Ideally this should be NFC, but in reality its possible that a function:
has no !dbg (in which case there's likely a bug somewhere in an opt pass), or
that none of the instructions had a scope referencing the function, so we used to not find the !dbg on the function but now we will
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18074
llvm-svn: 263184
Generalise the existing SIGN_EXTEND to SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG combine to support zero extension as well and get rid of a lot of unnecessary ANY_EXTEND + mask patterns.
Reapplied with a fix for PR26870 (avoid premature use of TargetConstant in ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG expansion).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17691
llvm-svn: 263159
This is a fairly straightforward port to the new pass manager with one
exception. It removes a very questionable use of releaseMemory() in
the old pass to invalidate its caches between runs on a function.
I don't think this is really guaranteed to be safe. I've just used the
more direct port to the new PM to address this by nuking the results
object each time the pass runs. While this could cause some minor malloc
traffic increase, I don't expect the compile time performance hit to be
noticable, and it makes the correctness and other aspects of the pass
much easier to reason about. In some cases, it may make things faster by
making the sets and maps smaller with better locality. Indeed, the
measurements collected by Bruno (thanks!!!) show mostly compile time
improvements.
There is sadly very limited testing at this point as there are only two
tests of memdep, and both rely on GVN. I'll be porting GVN next and that
will exercise this heavily though.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17962
llvm-svn: 263082
This patch teaches CGP to duplicate addressing mode computations into cold paths (detected via explicit cold attribute on calls) if required to let addressing mode be safely sunk into the basic block containing each load and store.
In general, duplicating code into cold blocks may result in code growth, but should not effect performance. In this case, it's better to duplicate some code than to put extra pressure on the register allocator by making it keep the address through the entirely of the fast path.
This patch only handles addressing computations, but in principal, we could implement a more general cold cold scheduling heuristic which tries to reduce register pressure in the fast path by duplicating code into the cold path. Getting the profitability of the general case right seemed likely to be challenging, so I stuck to the existing case (addressing computation) we already had.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17652
llvm-svn: 263074
Summary:
The code in SelectionDAG did not handle the case where the
register type and output types were different, but had the same size.
Reviewers: arsenm, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17940
llvm-svn: 263022
This re-applies r262886 with a fix for 32 bit platforms that have 8 byte
pointer alignment, effectively reverting r262892.
Original Message:
Currently some SDNode operands are malloc'd, some are stored inline in
subclasses of SDNode, and some are thrown into a BumpPtrAllocator.
This scheme is complex, inconsistent, and makes refactoring SDNodes
fairly difficult.
Instead, we can allocate all of the operands using an ArrayRecycler
that wraps a BumpPtrAllocator. This keeps the cache locality when
iterating operands, improves locality when iterating SDNodes without
looking at operands, and vastly simplifies the ownership semantics.
It also means we stop overallocating SDNodes by 2-3x and will make it
simpler to fix the rampant undefined behaviour we have in how we
mutate SDNodes from one kind to another (See llvm.org/pr26808).
This is NFC other than the changes in memory behaviour, and I ran some
LNT tests to make sure this didn't hurt compile time. Not many tests
changed: there were a couple of 1-2% regressions reported, but there
were more improvements (of up to 4%) than regressions.
llvm-svn: 262902
Looks like the largest SDNode is different between 32 and 64 bit now,
so this is breaking 32 bit bots. Reverting while I figure out a fix.
This reverts r262886.
llvm-svn: 262892
Currently some SDNode operands are malloc'd, some are stored inline in
subclasses of SDNode, and some are thrown into a BumpPtrAllocator.
This scheme is complex, inconsistent, and makes refactoring SDNodes
fairly difficult.
Instead, we can allocate all of the operands using an ArrayRecycler
that wraps a BumpPtrAllocator. This keeps the cache locality when
iterating operands, improves locality when iterating SDNodes without
looking at operands, and vastly simplifies the ownership semantics.
It also means we stop overallocating SDNodes by 2-3x and will make it
simpler to fix the rampant undefined behaviour we have in how we
mutate SDNodes from one kind to another (See llvm.org/pr26808).
This is NFC other than the changes in memory behaviour, and I ran some
LNT tests to make sure this didn't hurt compile time. Not many tests
changed: there were a couple of 1-2% regressions reported, but there
were more improvements (of up to 4%) than regressions.
llvm-svn: 262886
Before this change, we would get the type definition in the middle
of the instruction.
E.g., %0(48) = G_ADD %struct_alias = type { i32, i16 } %edi, %edi
Now, we have just the expected type name:
%0(48) = G_ADD %struct_alias %edi, %edi
llvm-svn: 262885
Now the type API is always available, but when global-isel is not
built the implementation does nothing.
Note: The implementation free of ifdefs is WIP and tracked here in PR26576.
llvm-svn: 262873
Rematerializing and merging into a bigger register class at the same
time, requires the subregister range lanemasks getting remapped to the
new register class.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR26805
llvm-svn: 262768
copy coalescing with enabled subregister liveness can reveal undef uses,
previously this was only checked for the SrcReg in updateRegDefsUses()
but we need to check DstReg as well.
llvm-svn: 262767
The divrem combine assumed the type of the div/rem is simple, which isn't
necessarily true. This probably worked fine until r250825, since it only
saw legal types, but now breaks when it runs as a pre-type-legalization
combine.
This fixes PR26835.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17878
llvm-svn: 262746
When div+rem calls on the same arguments are found, the ARM back-end merges the
two calls into one __aeabi_divmod call for up to 32-bits values. However,
for 64-bit values, which also have a lib call (__aeabi_ldivmod), it wasn't
merging the calls, and thus calling ldivmod twice and spilling the temporary
results, which generated pretty bad code.
This patch legalises 64-bit lib calls for divmod, so that now all the spilling
and the second call are gone. It also relaxes the DivRem combiner a bit on the
legal type check, since it was already checking for isLegalOrCustom on every
value, so the extra check for isTypeLegal was redundant.
Second attempt, creating TLI.isOperationCustom like isOperationExpand, to make
sure we only emit valid types or the ones that were explicitly marked as custom.
Now, passing check-all and test-suite on x86, ARM and AArch64.
This patch fixes PR17193 (and a long time FIXME in the tests).
llvm-svn: 262738
Generalise the existing SIGN_EXTEND to SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG combine to support zero extension as well and get rid of a lot of unnecessary ANY_EXTEND + mask patterns.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17691
llvm-svn: 262599
Summary:
Removing MMOs is not our prefer behavior any more.
Reviewers: mcrosier, reames
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17668
llvm-svn: 262580
If we have a loop with a rarely taken path, we will prune that from the blocks which get added as part of the loop chain. The problem is that we weren't then recognizing the loop chain as schedulable when considering the preheader when forming the function chain. We'd then fall to various non-predecessors before finally scheduling the loop chain (as if the CFG was unnatural.) The net result was that there could be lots of garbage between a loop preheader and the loop, even though we could have directly fallen into the loop. It also meant we separated hot code with regions of colder code.
The particular reason for the rejection of the loop chain was that we were scanning predecessor of the header, seeing the backedge, believing that was a globally more important predecessor (true), but forgetting to account for the fact the backedge precessor was already part of the existing loop chain (oops!.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17830
llvm-svn: 262547
Catch objects with a displacement of zero do not initialize a catch
object. The displacement is relative to %rsp at the end of the
function's prologue for x86_64 targets.
If we place an object at the top-of-stack, we will end up wit a
displacement of zero resulting in our catch object remaining
uninitialized.
Address this by creating our catch objects as fixed objects. We will
ensure that the UnwindHelp object is created after the catch objects so
that no catch object will have a displacement of zero.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17823
llvm-svn: 262546
When div+rem calls on the same arguments are found, the ARM back-end merges the
two calls into one __aeabi_divmod call for up to 32-bits values. However,
for 64-bit values, which also have a lib call (__aeabi_ldivmod), it wasn't
merging the calls, and thus calling ldivmod twice and spilling the temporary
results, which generated pretty bad code.
This patch legalises 64-bit lib calls for divmod, so that now all the spilling
and the second call are gone. It also relaxes the DivRem combiner a bit on the
legal type check, since it was already checking for isLegalOrCustom on every
value, so the extra check for isTypeLegal was redundant.
This patch fixes PR17193 (and a long time FIXME in the tests).
llvm-svn: 262507
The placement new calls here were all calling the allocation function
in RecyclingAllocator/Recycler for SDNode, instead of the function for
the specific subclass we were constructing.
Since this particular allocator always overallocates it more or less
worked, but would hide what we're actually doing from any memory
tools. Also, if you tried to change this allocator so something like a
BumpPtrAllocator or MallocAllocator, the compiler would crash horribly
all the time.
Part of llvm.org/PR26808.
llvm-svn: 262500
On AMDGPU where operations i64 operations are often bitcasted to v2i32
and back, this pattern shows up regularly where it breaks some
expected combines on i64, such as load width reducing.
This fixes some test failures in a future commit when i64 loads
are changed to promote.
llvm-svn: 262397
This reverts commit r262316.
It seems that my change breaks an out-of-tree chromium buildbot, so
I'm reverting this in order to investigate the situation further.
llvm-svn: 262387
Summary:
Calls sometimes need to be convergent. This is already handled at the
LLVM IR level, but it also needs to be handled at the MI level.
Ideally we'd propagate convergence from instructions, down through the
selection DAG, and into MIs. But this is Hard, and would affect
optimizations in the SDNs -- right now only SDNs with two operands have
any flags at all.
Instead, here's a much simpler hack: Add new opcodes for NVPTX for
convergent calls, and generate these when lowering convergent LLVM
calls.
Reviewers: jholewinski
Subscribers: jholewinski, chandlerc, joker.eph, jhen, tra, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17423
llvm-svn: 262373
Summary:
This patch modifies the existing comparison, branch, conditional-move
and select patterns, and adds new ones where needed. Also, the updated
SLT{u,i,iu} set of instructions generate a GPR width result.
The majority of the code changes in the Mips back-end fix the wrong
assumption that the result of SETCC nodes always produce an i32 value.
The changes in the common code path account for the fact that in 64-bit
MIPS targets, i1 is promoted to i32 instead of i64.
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: dsanders, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10970
llvm-svn: 262316
The CatchObjOffset is relative to the end of the EH registration node
for 32-bit x86 WinEH targets. A special sentinel value, 0, is used to
indicate that no catch object should be initialized.
This means that a catch object allocated immediately before the
registration node would be assigned a CatchObjOffset of 0, leading the
runtime to believe that a catch object should not be initialized.
To handle this, allocate the registration node prior to any other frame
object. This will ensure that catch objects will not be allocated
before the registration node.
This fixes PR26757.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17689
llvm-svn: 262294
When a variable is described by a single DBG_VALUE instruction we can
often use a more efficient inline DW_AT_location instead of using a
location list.
This commit makes the heuristic that decides when to apply this
optimization stricter by also verifying that the DBG_VALUE is live at the
entry of the function (instead of just checking that it is valid until
the end of the function).
<rdar://problem/24611008>
llvm-svn: 262247
InlineSpiller::rematerializeFor() never uses its parameter as an
iterator, so take it by reference instead. This removes an implicit
conversion from MachineBasicBlock::iterator to MachineInstr*.
llvm-svn: 262152