register dependency (rather than glue them together). This is general
goodness as it gives scheduler more freedom. However it is motivated by
a nasty bug in isel.
When a i64 sub is expanded to subc + sube.
libcall #1
\
\ subc
\ / \
\ / \
\ / libcall #2
sube
If the libcalls are not serialized (i.e. both have chains which are dag
entry), legalizer can serialize them in arbitrary orders. If it's
unlucky, it can force libcall #2 before libcall #1 in the above case.
subc
|
libcall #2
|
libcall #1
|
sube
However since subc and sube are "glued" together, this ends up being a
cycle when the scheduler combine subc and sube as a single scheduling
unit.
The right solution is to fix LegalizeType too chains the libcalls together.
However, LegalizeType is not processing nodes in order so that's harder than
it should be. For now, the move to physical register dependency will do.
rdar://10019576
llvm-svn: 138791
I don't really like the patterns, but I'm having trouble coming up with a
better way to handle them.
I plan on making other targets use the same legalization
ARM-without-memory-barriers is using... it's not especially efficient, but
if anyone cares, it's not that hard to fix for a given target if there's
some better lowering.
llvm-svn: 138621
Apparently we never added code to expand these pseudo instructions, and in
over a year, no one has noticed. Our register allocator must be awesome!
llvm-svn: 137551
Coalescing can remove copy-like instructions with sub-register operands
that constrained the register class. Examples are:
x86: GR32_ABCD:sub_8bit_hi -> GR32
arm: DPR_VFP2:ssub0 -> DPR
Recompute the register class of any virtual registers that are used by
less instructions after coalescing.
This affects code generation for the Cortex-A8 where we use NEON
instructions for f32 operations, c.f. fp_convert.ll:
vadd.f32 d16, d1, d0
vcvt.s32.f32 d0, d16
The register allocator is now free to use d16 for the temporary, and
that comes first in the allocation order because it doesn't interfere
with any s-registers.
llvm-svn: 137133
This hidden llc option runs the machine code verifier after expanding
ARM pseudo-instructions, but before if-conversion.
The machine code verifier is much better at pointing out liveness errors
that can trip up the register scavenger.
llvm-svn: 136439
Code like that would only be produced by bugpoint, but we should still
handle it correctly.
When a register is defined by a REG_SEQUENCE of undefs, the register
itself is undef. Previously, we would create a register with uses but no
defs.
Fixes part of PR10520.
llvm-svn: 136401
When splitting a live range immediately before an LDR_POST instruction
that redefines the address register, make sure to use the correct value
number in leaveIntvBefore.
We need the value number entering the instruction.
<rdar://problem/9793765>
llvm-svn: 135413
if (x != 0) x = 1
if (x == 1) x = 1
Previous codegen looks like this:
mov r1, r0
cmp r1, #1
mov r0, #0
moveq r0, #1
The naive lowering select between two different values. It should recognize the
test is equality test so it's more a conditional move rather than a select:
cmp r0, #1
movne r0, #0
rdar://9758317
llvm-svn: 135017
Print shifted immediate values directly rather than as a payload+shifter
value pair. This makes for more readable output assembly code, simplifies
the instruction printer, and is consistent with how Thumb immediates are
displayed.
llvm-svn: 134902
RAGreedy::tryAssign will now evict interference from the preferred
register even when another register is free.
To support this, add the EvictionCost struct that counts how many hints
are broken by an eviction. We don't want to break one hint just to
satisfy another.
Rename canEvict to shouldEvict, and add the first bit of eviction policy
that doesn't depend on spill weights: Always make room in the preferred
register as long as the evictees can be split and aren't already
assigned to their preferred register.
Also make the CSR avoidance more accurate. When looking for a cheaper
register it is OK to use a new volatile register. Only CSR aliases that
have never been used before should be avoided.
llvm-svn: 134735
already makes the assumption, which is correct on ARM, that a type's alignment is
less than its alloc size. This improves codegen with Clang (which inserts a lot of
extraneous alignment specifiers) and fixes <rdar://problem/9695089>.
llvm-svn: 134106
instructions can be used to match combinations of multiply/divide and VCVT
(between floating-point and integer, Advanced SIMD). Basically the VCVT
immediate operand that specifies the number of fraction bits corresponds to a
floating-point multiply or divide by the corresponding power of 2.
For example, VCVT (floating-point to fixed-point, Advanced SIMD) can replace a
combination of VMUL and VCVT (floating-point to integer) as follows:
Example (assume d17 = <float 8.000000e+00, float 8.000000e+00>):
vmul.f32 d16, d17, d16
vcvt.s32.f32 d16, d16
becomes:
vcvt.s32.f32 d16, d16, #3
Similarly, VCVT (fixed-point to floating-point, Advanced SIMD) can replace a
combinations of VCVT (integer to floating-point) and VDIV as follows:
Example (assume d17 = <float 8.000000e+00, float 8.000000e+00>):
vcvt.f32.s32 d16, d16
vdiv.f32 d16, d17, d16
becomes:
vcvt.f32.s32 d16, d16, #3
llvm-svn: 133813
1. (((x) & 0xFF00) >> 8) | (((x) & 0x00FF) << 8)
=> (bswap x) >> 16
2. ((x&0xff)<<8)|((x&0xff00)>>8)|((x&0xff000000)>>8)|((x&0x00ff0000)<<8))
=> (rotl (bswap x) 16)
This allows us to eliminate most of the def : Pat patterns for ARM rev16
revsh instructions. It catches many more cases for ARM and x86.
rdar://9609108
llvm-svn: 133503
for pre-2.9 bitcode files. We keep x86 unaligned loads, movnt, crc32, and the
target indep prefetch change.
As usual, updating the testsuite is a PITA.
llvm-svn: 133337
accumulator forwarding. Specifically (from SVN log entry):
Distribute (A + B) * C to (A * C) + (B * C) to make use of NEON multiplier
accumulator forwarding:
vadd d3, d0, d1
vmul d3, d3, d2
=>
vmul d3, d0, d2
vmla d3, d1, d2
Make sure it catches cases where operand 1 is add/fadd/sub/fsub, which was
intended in the original revision.
llvm-svn: 133127
the bits being cleared by the AND are not demanded by the BFI.
The previous BFI dag combine rule was actually incorrect (or used to be
correct until BFI representation changed).
rdar://9609030
llvm-svn: 133034
In particular, don't spill dirty registers only to satisfy a hint. It is
not worth it.
The attached test case provides an example where the fast allocator
would spill a register when other registers are available.
llvm-svn: 132900
causing an assertion failure downstream. This fixes <rdar://problem/9562908>.
This really seems like it should always be set at CCState creation time, so mistakes like
this can never happen. I'll take a look at doing that.
llvm-svn: 132811
Instead, use simpler approach and let DBG_VALUE follow its predecessor instruction. After live debug value analysis pass, all DBG_VALUE instruction are placed at the right place. Thanks Jakob for the hint!
llvm-svn: 132483
This is important for the correct lowering of unwind instructions
(which doesn't matter at all) and llvm.eh.resume calls (which does).
Take 2, now with more basic competence.
llvm-svn: 132295
This is important for the correct lowering of unwind instructions
(which doesn't matter at all) and llvm.eh.resume calls (which does).
llvm-svn: 132291
to load/store i64 values. Since there's no current support to explicitly
declare such restrictions, implement it by using specific hardcoded register
pairs during isel.
llvm-svn: 132248
register allocation dependent and will occasionally break. WIP in the
register allocator to model paired/etc registers.
rdar://9119939
llvm-svn: 132242
The practical effects here are that x86-64 fast-isel can now handle trunc from i8 to i1, and ARM fast-isel can handle many more constructs involving integers narrower than 32 bits (including loads, stores, and many integer casts).
rdar://9437928 .
llvm-svn: 132099