generalizing its implementation sufficiently to support this value
number scenario as well.
This cuts out another significant performance hit in large functions
(over 10k basic blocks, etc), especially those with "natural" CFG
structures.
llvm-svn: 160026
back of it.
I don't have anything even remotely close to a test case for this. It
only broke two build bots, both of them doing bootstrap builds, one of
them a dragonegg bootstrap. It doesn't break for me when I bootstrap
either. It doesn't reproduce every time or on many machines during the
bootstrap. Many thanks to Duncan Sands who got the exact command (and
stage of the bootstrap) which failed on the dragonegg bootstrap and
managed to get it to trigger under valgrind with debug symbols. The fix
was then found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 159993
quadratic behavior when performing pathological merges. Fixes the core
element of PR12652.
There is only one user of addRangeFrom left: join. I'm hoping to
refactor further in a future patch and have join use this merge
operation as well.
llvm-svn: 159982
of the trick merge routines. This adds a layer of testing that was
necessary when implementing more efficient (and complex) merge logic for
this datastructure.
No functionality changed here.
llvm-svn: 159981
Don't print out the register number and spill weight, making the TRI
argument unnecessary.
This allows callers to interpret the reg field. It can currently be a
virtual register, a physical register, a spill slot, or a register unit.
llvm-svn: 158031
Dead copies cause problems because they are trivial to coalesce, but
removing them gived the live range a dangling end point. This patch
enables full dead code elimination which trims live ranges to their uses
so end points don't dangle.
DCE may erase multiple instructions. Put the pointers in an ErasedInstrs
set so we never risk visiting erased instructions in the work list.
There isn't supposed to be any dead copies entering RegisterCoalescer,
but they do slip by as evidenced by test/CodeGen/X86/coalescer-dce.ll.
llvm-svn: 157101
A live range that has an early clobber tied redef now looks like a
normal tied redef, except the early clobber def uses the early clobber
slot.
This is enough to handle any strange interference problems.
llvm-svn: 149769
more than two adjacent ranges needed to be merged. The new version should be
able to handle an arbitrary sequence of adjancent ranges.
llvm-svn: 149588
The old naming scheme (load/use/def/store) can be traced back to an old
linear scan article, but the names don't match how slots are actually
used.
The load and store slots are not needed after the deferred spill code
insertion framework was deleted.
The use and def slots don't make any sense because we are using
half-open intervals as is customary in C code, but the names suggest
closed intervals. In reality, these slots were used to distinguish
early-clobber defs from normal defs.
The new naming scheme also has 4 slots, but the names match how the
slots are really used. This is a purely mechanical renaming, but some
of the code makes a lot more sense now.
llvm-svn: 144503
It is conservatively correct to keep the hasPHIKill flags, even after
deleting PHI-defs.
The calculation can be very expensive after taildup has created a
quadratic number of indirectbr edges in the CFG, and the hasPHIKill flag
isn't used for anything after RenumberValues().
llvm-svn: 139780
There are too many compatibility problems with using mixed types in
std::upper_bound, and I don't want to spend 110 lines of boilerplate setting up
a call to a 10-line function. Binary search is not /that/ hard to implement
correctly.
I tried terminating the binary search with a linear search, but that actually
made the algorithm slower against my expectation. Most live intervals have less
than 4 segments. The early test against endIndex() does pay, and this version is
25% faster than plain std::upper_bound().
llvm-svn: 127522
The existing CompEnd predicate does not define a strict weak order as required
by the C++03 standard; therefore, its use as a predicate to std::upper_bound
is invalid. For a discussion of this issue, see
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-defects.html#270
This patch replaces the asymmetrical comparison with an iterator adaptor that
achieves the same effect while being strictly standard-conforming by ensuring
an apples-to-apples comparison.
llvm-svn: 127462
This method could probably be used by LiveIntervalAnalysis::shrinkToUses, and
now it can use extendIntervalEndTo() which coalesces ranges.
llvm-svn: 126803
Region splitting includes loop splitting as a subset, and it is more generic.
The splitting heuristics for variables that are live in more than one block are
now:
1. Try to create a region that covers multiple basic blocks.
2. Try to create a new live range for each block with multiple uses.
3. Spill.
Steps 2 and 3 are similar to what the standard spiller is doing.
llvm-svn: 123853
physical register numbers.
This makes the hack used in LiveInterval official, and lets LiveInterval be
oblivious of stack slots.
The isPhysicalRegister() and isVirtualRegister() predicates don't know about
this, so when a variable may contain a stack slot, isStackSlot() should always
be tested first.
llvm-svn: 123128
Print virtual registers numbered from 0 instead of the arbitrary
FirstVirtualRegister. The first virtual register is printed as %vreg0.
TRI::NoRegister is printed as %noreg.
llvm-svn: 123107
We don't want unused values forming their own equivalence classes, so we lump
them all together in one class, and then merge them with the class of the last
used value.
llvm-svn: 117670
connected components. These components should be allocated different virtual
registers because there is no reason for them to be allocated together.
Add the ConnectedVNInfoEqClasses class to calculate the connected components,
and move values to new LiveIntervals.
Use it from SplitKit::rewrite by creating new virtual registers for the
components.
llvm-svn: 116006
LiveInterval::MergeValueNumberInto instead of trying to extend LiveRanges and
getting it wrong.
This fixed PR8249 where a valno with a multi-segment live range was defined by
an identity copy created by RemoveCopyByCommutingDef. Some of the live
segments disappeared.
llvm-svn: 115385
instead of calling lower_bound or upper_bound directly.
This cleans up the search logic a bit because {lower,upper}_bound compare
LR->start by default, and it is usually simpler to search LR->end.
Funnelling all searches through one function also makes it possible to replace
the search algorithm with something faster than binary search.
llvm-svn: 114448
register at a time. This turns out to be slightly faster than iterating over
instructions, but more importantly, it allows us to compute spill weights for
new registers created after the spill weight pass has run.
Also compute the allocation hint at the same time as the spill weight. This
allows us to use the spill weight as a cost metric for copies, and choose the
most profitable hint if there is more than one possibility.
The new hints provide a very small (< 0.1%) but universal code size improvement.
llvm-svn: 110631
After heavy editing of a live interval, it is much easier to simply renumber the
live values instead of trying to keep track of the unused ones.
llvm-svn: 110463
LiveInterval::overlapsFrom dereferences end() if it is called on an empty
interval.
It would be reasonable to just return false - an empty interval doesn't overlap
anything, but I want to know who is doing it first.
llvm-svn: 108264
The VNInfo.kills vector was almost unused except for all the code keeping it
updated. The few places using it were easily rewritten to check for interval
ends instead.
The two new methods LiveInterval::killedAt and killedInRange are replacements.
This brings us down to 3 independent data structures tracking kills.
llvm-svn: 106905
This fixes PR7479 and PR7485. The test cases from those PRs are big, so not
included. However, PR7485 comes from self hosting on FreeBSD, so we will surely
hear about any regression.
llvm-svn: 106811
When a call is placed to spill an interval this spiller will first try to
break the interval up into its component values. Single value intervals and
intervals which have already been split (or are the result of previous splits)
are spilled by the default spiller.
Splitting intervals as described above may improve the performance of generated
code in some circumstances. This work is experimental however, and it still
miscompiles many benchmarks. It's not recommended for general use yet.
llvm-svn: 90951
This introduces a new pass, SlotIndexes, which is responsible for numbering
instructions for register allocation (and other clients). SlotIndexes numbering
is designed to match the existing scheme, so this patch should not cause any
changes in the generated code.
For consistency, and to avoid naming confusion, LiveIndex has been renamed
SlotIndex.
The processImplicitDefs method of the LiveIntervals analysis has been moved
into its own pass so that it can be run prior to SlotIndexes. This was
necessary to match the existing numbering scheme.
llvm-svn: 85979
a new class, MachineInstrIndex, which hides arithmetic details from
most clients. This is a step towards allowing the register allocator
to update/insert code during allocation.
llvm-svn: 81040
range's weight properly. This is turned off right now in the sense that
you'll get an assert if you get into a situation that can only be caused
by an iterative coalescer. All other code paths operate exactly as
before so there is no functional change with this patch. The asserts
should be disabled if/when an iterative coalescer gets added to trunk.
llvm-svn: 76680
as an (index,bool) pair. The bool flag records whether the kill is a
PHI kill or not. This code will be used to enable splitting of live
intervals containing PHI-kills.
A slight change to live interval weights introduced an extra spill
into lsr-code-insertion (outside the critical sections). The test
condition has been updated to reflect this.
llvm-svn: 75097
- Change register allocation hint to a pair of unsigned integers. The hint type is zero (which means prefer the register specified as second part of the pair) or entirely target dependent.
- Allow targets to specify alternative register allocation orders based on allocation hint.
Part 2.
- Use the register allocation hint system to implement more aggressive load / store multiple formation.
- Aggressively form LDRD / STRD. These are formed *before* register allocation. It has to be done this way to shorten live interval of base and offset registers. e.g.
v1025 = LDR v1024, 0
v1026 = LDR v1024, 0
=>
v1025,v1026 = LDRD v1024, 0
If this transformation isn't done before allocation, v1024 will overlap v1025 which means it more difficult to allocate a register pair.
- Even with the register allocation hint, it may not be possible to get the desired allocation. In that case, the post-allocation load / store multiple pass must fix the ldrd / strd instructions. They can either become ldm / stm instructions or back to a pair of ldr / str instructions.
This is work in progress, not yet enabled.
llvm-svn: 73381
with SUBREG_TO_REG, teach SimpleRegisterCoalescing to coalesce
SUBREG_TO_REG instructions (which are similar to INSERT_SUBREG
instructions), and teach the DAGCombiner to take advantage of this on
targets which support it. This eliminates many redundant
zero-extension operations on x86-64.
This adds a new TargetLowering hook, isZExtFree. It's similar to
isTruncateFree, except it only applies to actual definitions, and not
no-op truncates which may not zero the high bits.
Also, this adds a new optimization to SimplifyDemandedBits: transform
operations like x+y into (zext (add (trunc x), (trunc y))) on targets
where all the casts are no-ops. In contexts where the high part of the
add is explicitly masked off, this allows the mask operation to be
eliminated. Fix the DAGCombiner to avoid undoing these transformations
to eliminate casts on targets where the casts are no-ops.
Also, this adds a new two-address lowering heuristic. Since
two-address lowering runs before coalescing, it helps to be able to
look through copies when deciding whether commuting and/or
three-address conversion are profitable.
Also, fix a bug in LiveInterval::MergeInClobberRanges. It didn't handle
the case that a clobber range extended both before and beyond an
existing live range. In that case, multiple live ranges need to be
added. This was exposed by the new subreg coalescing code.
Remove 2008-05-06-SpillerBug.ll. It was bugpoint-reduced, and the
spiller behavior it was looking for no longer occurrs with the new
instruction selection.
llvm-svn: 68576
1. Use the same value# to represent unknown values being merged into sub-registers.
2. When coalescer commute an instruction and the destination is a physical register, update its sub-registers by merging in the extended ranges.
llvm-svn: 66610
RA problem by expanding the live interval of an
earlyclobber def back one slot. Remove
overlap-earlyclobber throughout. Remove
earlyclobber bits and their handling from
live internals.
llvm-svn: 56539