BasicAA in r290603.
I've kept the basic testing in the new PM test file as that also covers
the AAManager invalidation logic. If/when there is a good place for
broader AA testing it could move there.
This test is somewhat unsatisfying as I can't get it to fail even with
ASan outside of explicit checks of the invalidation. Apparently we don't
yet have any test coverage of the BasicAA code paths using either the
domtree or loopinfo -- I made both of them always be null and check-llvm
passed.
llvm-svn: 290612
The effect of the bug was that we would incorrectly create summaries
for global and weak values defined in module asm (since we were
essentially testing for bit 1 which is SF_Undefined, and the
RecordStreamer ignores local undefined references). This would have
resulted in conservatively disabling importing of anything referencing
globals and weaks defined in module asm. Added these cases to the test
which now fails without this bug fix.
Fixes PR31459.
llvm-svn: 290610
The feature allows for conditional assembly, filling the entries
of .amd_kernel_code_t etc.
Symbols are defined with value 0 at the beginning of each kernel scope.
After each register usage, the respective symbol is set to:
value = max( value, ( register index + 1 ) )
Thus, at the end of scope the value represents a count of used registers.
Kernel scopes begin at .amdgpu_hsa_kernel directive, end at the
next .amdgpu_hsa_kernel (or EOF, whichever comes first). There is also
dummy scope that lies from the beginning of source file til the
first .amdgpu_hsa_kernel.
Test added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27859
llvm-svn: 290608
Because operand was not marked as seen it was visited twice.
It doesn't change behavior of optimization, it just saves redudant
visit, so no test changes.
llvm-svn: 290607
This requires custom handling because BasicAA caches handles to other
analyses and so it needs to trigger indirect invalidation.
This fixes one of the common crashes when using the new PM in real
pipelines. I've also tweaked a regression test to check that we are at
least handling the most immediate case.
I'm going to work at re-structuring this test some to both scale better
(rather than all being in one file) and check more invalidation paths in
a follow-up commit, but I wanted to get the basic bug fix in place.
llvm-svn: 290603
not really wired into the loop pass manager in a way that will let us
productively use these passes yet.
This lets the new PM get farther in basic testing which is useful for
establishing a good baseline of "doesn't explode". There are still
plenty of crashers in basic testing though, this just gets rid of some
noise that is well understood and not representing a specific or narrow
bug.
llvm-svn: 290601
inter-analysis dependencies) to use the new invalidation infrastructure.
This teaches it to invalidate itself when any of the peer function
AA results that it uses become invalid. We do this by just tracking the
originating IDs. I've kept it in a somewhat clunky API since some users
of AAResults are outside the new PM right now. We can clean this API up
if/when those users go away.
Secondly, it uses the registration on the outer analysis manager proxy
to trigger deferred invalidation when a module analysis result becomes
invalid.
I've included test cases that specifically try to trigger use-after-free
in both of these cases and they would crash or hang pretty horribly for
me even without ASan. Now they work nicely.
The `InvalidateAnalysis` utility pass required some tweaking to be
useful in this context and it still is pretty garbage. I'd like to
switch it back to the previous implementation and teach the explicit
invalidate method on the AnalysisManager to take care of correctly
triggering indirect invalidation, but I wanted to go ahead and send this
out so folks could see how all of this stuff works together in practice.
And, you know, that it does actually work. =]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27205
llvm-svn: 290595
that require deferred invalidation.
This handles the other real-world invalidation scenario that we have
cases of: a function analysis which caches references to a module
analysis. We currently do this in the AA aggregation layer and might
well do this in other places as well.
Since this is relative rare, the technique is somewhat more cumbersome.
Analyses need to register themselves when accessing the outer analysis
manager's proxy. This proxy is already necessarily present to allow
access to the outer IR unit's analyses. By registering here we can track
and trigger invalidation when that outer analysis goes away.
To make this work we need to enhance the PreservedAnalyses
infrastructure to support a (slightly) more explicit model for "sets" of
analyses, and allow abandoning a single specific analyses even when
a set covering that analysis is preserved. That allows us to describe
the scenario of preserving all Function analyses *except* for the one
where deferred invalidation has triggered.
We also need to teach the invalidator API to support direct ID calls
instead of always going through a template to dispatch so that we can
just record the ID mapping.
I've introduced testing of all of this both for simple module<->function
cases as well as for more complex cases involving a CGSCC layer.
Much like the previous patch I've not tried to fully update the loop
pass management layer because that layer is due to be heavily reworked
to use similar techniques to the CGSCC to handle updates. As that
happens, we'll have a better testing basis for adding support like this.
Many thanks to both Justin and Sean for the extensive reviews on this to
help bring the API design and documentation into a better state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27198
llvm-svn: 290594
most of the inliner test cases.
The inliner involves a bunch of interesting code and tends to be where
most of the issues I've seen experimenting with the new PM lie. All of
these test cases pass, but I'd like to keep some more thorough coverage
here so doing a fairly blanket enabling.
There are a handful of interesting tests I've not enabled yet because
they're focused on the always inliner, or on functionality that doesn't
(yet) exist in the inliner.
llvm-svn: 290592
skipping indirectly recursive inline chains.
To do this, we implicitly build an inline stack for each callsite and
check prior to inlining that doing so would not form a cycle. This uses
the exact same technique and even shares some code with the legacy PM
inliner.
This solution remains deeply unsatisfying to me because it means we
cannot actually iterate the inliner externally. Doing so would not be
able to easily detect and avoid such cycles. Some day I would very much
like to have a solution that works without this internal state to detect
cycles, but this is not that day.
llvm-svn: 290590
Nothing really interesting here, but I had to improve the test to use
variables rather than hard coding value names as we happen to end up
with different value names in the new PM.
llvm-svn: 290589
We currently ignore the `allocsize` attribute on functions calls with
the `nobuiltin` attribute when trying to lower `@llvm.objectsize`. We
shouldn't care about `nobuiltin` here: `allocsize` is explicitly added
by the user, not inferred based on a function's symbol.
llvm-svn: 290588
This also makes us no longer check for `allocsize` on intrinsic calls.
This shouldn't matter, since intrinsics should provide the information
we get from `allocsize` on their own.
llvm-svn: 290585
PMULDQ/PMULUDQ vXi64 instructions only use the even numbered v2Xi32 input elements which SimplifyDemandedVectorElts should try and use.
This builds on r290554 which added supported for 128 and 256-bit.
llvm-svn: 290582
constant expression and to correctly form function reference edges
through them without crashing because one of the operands (the
`BasicBlock` isn't actually a constant despite being an operand of
a constant).
llvm-svn: 290581
The 128 and 256 bit masked intrinsics are currently unused by clang. The sse and avx2 unmasked intrinsics are used instead. The new 512-bit intrinsic will be used to do the same. Then all masked versions will removed and autoupgraded.
llvm-svn: 290573
This mostly involved converting from grep to FileCheck and tidying up
the IR used.
In one case (invoke_test-3.ll) the test had become completely pointless
as we use 'resume' rather than 'unwind' now, and even then it did not
occur at the end of the line.
llvm-svn: 290570
An earlier commit added support for unmasked scalar operations. At that time isel wouldn't generate an optimal sequence for masked operations, but that has now been fixed.
llvm-svn: 290566
These particular sequences will be generated after a future change to teach InstCombine to turn masked scalar arithmetic intrinsics into native IR.
llvm-svn: 290563
inside of `InlineFunction`. Prior to this, call instructions are
specifically being rewritten and replaced within the inlined region,
invalidating some of the call sites.
Several of these regions are using the same technique to walk the
inlined region so this seems clearly safe up to this point.
I've also added a short circuit to the scan for call sites based on what
other code is doing.
With this, the most common crash I've found in the new inliner code is
fixed. I've turned it on for another test case that covers this
scenario.
I'll make my way through most of the other inliner test cases
just to get some easy coverage next.
llvm-svn: 290562
removing fully-dead comdats without removing dead entries in comdats
with live members.
This factors the core logic out of the current inliner's internals to
a reusable utility and leverages that in both places. The factored out
code should also be (minorly) more efficient in cases where we have very
few dead functions or dead comdats to consider.
I've added a test case to cover this behavior of the always inliner.
This is the last significant bug in the new PM's always inliner I've
found (so far).
llvm-svn: 290557
PMULDQ/PMULUDQ vXi64 instructions only use the even numbered v2Xi32 input elements which SimplifyDemandedVectorElts should try and use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28119
llvm-svn: 290554
Mostly use a bit more idiomatic C++ where we can,
so we can combine some things later.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28111
llvm-svn: 290550
The current GVN algorithm folds unconditional branches to, it claims,
expose more PRE oportunities. The folding, if really needed,
(which is not sure, as it's not really proved it improves analysis)
can be done by an earlier cleanup pass instead of GVN itself.
Ack'ed/SGTM'd by Daniel Berlin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28117
llvm-svn: 290546
systematically and document in the test what all is going on.
This replaces the PR-named test that was the only coverage for GlobalDCE
and comdats previously. I wrote this because I wasn't certain how
comdat DCE was supposed to work and wanted to step through what
GlobalDCE did to fully understand it. After talking to folks and reading
the code and really staring at things it all makes sense but it seemed
good to help write down some of this in a more explicit and fully
covering test case.
For example, it seemed like a bug that GlobalDCE didn't consider comdat
participation of ifuncs. Specifically it seemed like an accident because
testing didn't really cover that case. But in fact, ifuncs specifically
cannot participate in a comdat despite having that API. The new test
case covers this and explicitly documents that DCE gets to fire here
even though there are comdats involved.
Also, we didn't have any positive tests for the challenging cases such
as usage cycles between comdat participants that might make them seem
alive except that there is no external edge into the cycle.
llvm-svn: 290537
Summary:
I only do this for unmasked cases for now because isel is failing to fold the mask. I'll try to fix that soon.
I'll do the same thing for packed add/sub/mul/div in a future patch.
Reviewers: delena, RKSimon, zvi, craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27879
llvm-svn: 290535
Summary:
This patch adds support for converting the masked vpermv intrinsics into shufflevector instructions if the indices are constants.
We also need to wrap a select instruction around the shuffle to take care of the masking part. InstCombine will take care of optimizing the select if the mask is constant so I didn't bother checking for that.
Reviewers: zvi, delena, spatel, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27825
llvm-svn: 290530
This recommits r290512 that was reverted when MSVC failed to compile it. Since
then I've played with various approaches using rextester.com (where I was able
to reproduce the failure) and think that I have a solution thanks in part to
the help of Dave Blaikie! It seems MSVC just has a defective `decltype` in this
version. Manually writing out the type seems to do the trick, even though it is
.... quite complicated.
Original commit message:
This allows both defining convenience iterator/range accessors on types
which walk across N different independent ranges within the object, and
more direct and simple usages with range based for loops such as shown
in the unittest. The same facilities are used for both. They end up
quite small and simple as it happens.
I've also switched an iterator on `Module` to use this. I would like to
add another convenience iterator that includes even more sequences as
part of it and seeing this one already present motivated me to actually
abstract it away and introduce a general utility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28093
llvm-svn: 290528
multiple asynchronous RPC calls.
ParallelCallGroup allows multiple asynchronous calls to be dispatched,
and provides a wait method that blocks until all asynchronous calls have
been executed on the remote and all return value handlers run on the
local machine.
This will allow, for example, the JIT client to issue memory allocation calls
for all sections in parallel, then block until all memory has been allocated
on the remote and the allocated addresses registered with the client, at which
point the JIT client can proceed to applying relocations.
llvm-svn: 290523
This code doesn't work on MSVC for reasons that elude me and I've not
yet covinced a workaround to compile cleanly so reverting for now while
I play with it.
llvm-svn: 290513
This allows both defining convenience iterator/range accessors on types
which walk across N different independent ranges within the object, and
more direct and simple usages with range based for loops such as shown
in the unittest. The same facilities are used for both. They end up
quite small and simple as it happens.
I've also switched an iterator on `Module` to use this. I would like to
add another convenience iterator that includes even more sequences as
part of it and seeing this one already present motivated me to actually
abstract it away and introduce a general utility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28093
llvm-svn: 290512
This makes it explicit what is the exact list to handle, and it
looks much more easy to manipulate and understand that the
previous custom tracking of min/max to express the range where
to look for.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28089
llvm-svn: 290507
whether functions are removed, and fix the new PM's always inliner to
actually pass this test.
Without this, the new PM's always inliner leaves all the functions
kicking around which won't work out very well given the semantics of
always inline.
Doing this really highlights how frustrating the current alwaysinline
semantic contract is though -- why can we put it on *external*
functions, etc?
Also I've added a number of tricky and interesting test cases for
removing functions with the always inliner. There is one remaining case
not handled -- fully removing comdats -- and I've left a FIXME about
this.
llvm-svn: 290457
Pretty boring and lame as-is but necessary. This is definitely a place
we'll end up with extension hooks longer term. =]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28076
llvm-svn: 290449
The pass creates some state which expects to be cleaned up by
a later instance of the same pass. opt-bisect happens to expose
this not ideal design because calling skipLoop() will result in
this state not being cleaned up at times and an assertion firing
in `doFinalization()`. Chandler tells me the new pass manager will
give us options to avoid these design traps, but until it's not ready,
we need a workaround for the current pass infrastructure. Fix provided
by Andy Kaylor, see the review for a complete discussion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25848
llvm-svn: 290427
According to the Cortex-A57 doc, FDIV/FSQRT instructions should use F0 unit
(W-unit in AArch64SchedA57.td, the same as cryptography instructions),
not F1 unit (X-unit in td, like ASIMD absolute diff accum SABA/UABA).
This patch changes FDIV/FSQRT scheduling declarations to use A57UnitW
instead of A57UnitX. Also, latencies for those instructions are
corrected.
Patch by Andrew Zhogin.
llvm-svn: 290426
Summary:
In mergeSPUpdates, debug values need to be ignored when getting the
previous element, otherwise debug data could have an impact on codegen.
In eliminateCallFramePseudoInstr, debug values after the erased element
could have an impact on codegen and should be skipped.
Closes PR31319 (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31319)
Reviewers: mkuper, MatzeB, aprantl
Subscribers: gbedwell, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27688
llvm-svn: 290423
1.Fix pessimized case in FIXME.
2.Add tests for it.
3.The canonicalisation on shifts results in different sequence for
tests of machine-licm.Correct some check lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27916
llvm-svn: 290410
This patch fixes some ASAN unittest failures on FreeBSD. See the
cfe-commits email thread for r290169 for more on those.
According to the LangRef, the allocsize attribute only tells us about
the number of bytes that exist at the memory location pointed to by the
return value of a function. It does not necessarily mean that the
function will only ever allocate. So, we need to be very careful about
treating functions with allocsize as general allocation functions. This
patch makes us fully conservative in this regard, though I suspect that
we have room to be a bit more aggressive if we want.
This has a FIXME that can be fixed by a relatively straightforward
refactor; I just wanted to keep this patch minimal. If this sticks, I'll
come back and fix it in a few days.
llvm-svn: 290397
Summary:
This change rewrites a core component in the ImplicitNullChecks pass for
greater simplicity since the original design was over-complicated for no
good reason. Please review this as essentially a new pass. The change
is almost NFC and I've added a test case for a scenario that this new
code handles that wasn't handled earlier.
The implicit null check pass, at its core, is a code hoisting transform.
It differs from "normal" code transforms in that it speculates
potentially faulting instructions (by design), but a lot of the usual
hazard detection logic (register read-after-write etc.) still applies.
We previously detected hazards by keeping track of registers defined and
used by machine instructions over an instruction range, but that was
unwieldy and did not actually confer any performance benefits. The
intent was to have linear time complexity over the number of machine
instructions considered, but it ended up being N^2 is practice.
This new version is more obviously O(N^2) (with N capped to 8 by
default) in hazard detection. It does not attempt to be clever in
tracking register uses or defs (the previous cleverness here was a
source of bugs).
Once this is checked in, I'll extract out the `IsSuitableMemoryOp` and
`CanHoistLoadInst` lambda into member functions (they're too complicated
to be inline lambdas) and do some other related NFC cleanups.
Reviewers: reames, anna, atrick
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27592
llvm-svn: 290394
This patch adds support for YAML<->DWARF for debug_info sections.
This re-lands r290147, reverted in 290148, re-landed in r290204 after fixing the issue that caused bots to fail (thank you UBSan!), and reverted again in r290209 due to failures on big endian systems.
After adding support for preserving endianness, this should be good now.
llvm-svn: 290386
Use a dummy private function with inline asm calls instead of module
level asm blocks for CFI jumptables.
The main advantage is that now jumptable codegen can be affected by
the function attributes (like target_cpu on ARM). Module level asm
gets the default subtarget based on the target triple, which is often
not good enough.
This change also uses asm constraints/arguments to reference
jumptable targets and aliases directly. We no longer do asm name
mangling in an IR pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28012
llvm-svn: 290384
We used to not check generic vregs, but that is actually a mistake given
nothing in the GlobalISel pipeline is going to fix the constraints on
target specific instructions. Therefore, the target has to have them
right from the start.
llvm-svn: 290380
Target specific instructions have requirements that are not compatible
with what we want to test here. Namely, target specific instructions
must have their operands properly mapped on register classes.
llvm-svn: 290379
The InstructionSelect pass will not look at target specific instructions
since they are already selected. As a result, the operands of target
specific instructions must be properly constrained, because it is not
going to fix them.
This fixes invalid register classes on call instruction.
llvm-svn: 290377
When generic virtual registers get constrained, because of a use on a
target specific operation for instance, we end up with regular virtual
registers with a type and that's perfectly fine.
llvm-svn: 290376
This is going to be needed to be able to constraint register class on
target specific instruction while the RegBankSelect pass did not run
yet.
llvm-svn: 290375
Move the logic to constraint register from InstructionSelector to a
utility function. It will be required by other passes in the GlobalISel
pipeline.
llvm-svn: 290374
Canonicalize a select with a constant to the false side. This
enables more instruction shrinking opportunities since an
inline immediate can be used for the false side of v_cndmask_b32_e32.
This seems to usually be better but causes some code size regressions
in some tests.
llvm-svn: 290372
This is a succeeding patch of https://reviews.llvm.org/D22840 to address the
issue when a value to be merged into an int64 pair is in a different BB. Redoing
the store splitting in CodeGenPrepare so we can match the pattern across multiple
BBs and move some instructions into the same BB. We still keep the code in dag
combine so that we can catch cases that show up after DAG combining runs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25914
llvm-svn: 290365
This is for splitMergedValStore in DAG Combine to share the target query interface
with similar logic in CodeGenPrepare.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24707
llvm-svn: 290363
Follow up to D27209 fix, this patch now properly handles single transient
instruction in basic block.
Patch by Aleksandar Beserminji.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27856
llvm-svn: 290361
COFF has a 2**16 section limit, and on Win64, every COMDAT function
creates at least 3 sections: .text, .pdata, and .xdata. For MSVC, we
enable bigobj on a file-by-file basis, but GCC appears to hit the limit
on different files.
Fixes PR25953
llvm-svn: 290358
When the pipeliner is renaming phi values, it may need to iterate through
the phi operands to check for other phis. However, the pipeliner should
stop once it reaches a phi that is outside the pipelined loop.
Also, when the generateExistingPhis code is unable to reuse an existing
phi, the default code that computes the PhiOp2 is only to be used when
the pipeliner is generating the kernel. Otherwise, the phi may be a value
computed earlier in the same epilog.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 290355
The code have been developed by Daniel Berlin over the years, and
the new implementation goal is that of addressing shortcomings of
the current GVN infrastructure, i.e. long compile time for large
testcases, lack of phi predication, no load/store value numbering
etc...
The current code just implements the "core" GVN algorithm, although
other pieces (load coercion, phi handling, predicate system) are
already implemented in a branch out of tree. Once the core is stable,
we'll start adding pieces on top of the base framework.
The test currently living in test/Transform/NewGVN are a copy
of the ones in GVN, with proper `XFAIL` (missing features in NewGVN).
A flag will be added in a future commit to enable NewGVN, so that
interested parties can exercise this code easily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26224
llvm-svn: 290346
Summary: This is needed for later SDWA support in CodeGen.
Reviewers: vpykhtin, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tony-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27412
llvm-svn: 290338
Summary: Real instruction should copy constraints from real instruction. This allows auto-generated disassembler to correctly process tied operands.
Reviewers: nhaustov, vpykhtin, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tony-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27847
llvm-svn: 290336
Replacing the memory operand in the ymm version of VPMADDWD from i128mem to i256mem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28024
llvm-svn: 290333
I was staring at these and didn't realize these were module-layer
proxies as opposed to some other layer. Justin and I have a plan to
rename things to make the names themselves much easier to reason about,
but I at least want the CHECK lines to be precise for now.
llvm-svn: 290328
declarations.
We're using a custom class here instead of the helper template, these
bits just didn't get deleted when the other bits did get deleted. This
was found by a really nice MSVC warning about explicitly instantiating
a template where some member functions aren't defined and thus can't be
instantiatied.
llvm-svn: 290327
from the old pass manager in the new one.
I'm not trying to support (initially) the numerous options that are
currently available to customize the pass pipeline. If we end up really
wanting them, we can add them later, but I suspect many are no longer
interesting. The simplicity of omitting them will help a lot as we sort
out what the pipeline should look like in the new PM.
I've also documented to the best of my ability *why* each pass or group
of passes is used so that reading the pipeline is more helpful. In many
cases I think we have some questionable choices of ordering and I've
left FIXME comments in place so we know what to come back and revisit
going forward. But for now, I've left it as similar to the current
pipeline as I could.
Lastly, I've had to comment out several places where passes are not
ported to the new pass manager or where the loop pass infrastructure is
not yet ready. I did at least fix a few bugs in the loop pass
infrastructure uncovered by running the full pipeline, but I didn't want
to go too far in this patch -- I'll come back and re-enable these as the
infrastructure comes online. But I'd like to keep the comments in place
because I don't want to lose track of which passes need to be enabled
and where they go.
One thing that seemed like a significant API improvement was to require
that we don't build pipelines for O0. It seems to have no real benefit.
I've also switched back to returning pass managers by value as at this
API layer it feels much more natural to me for composition. But if
others disagree, I'm happy to go back to an output parameter.
I'm not 100% happy with the testing strategy currently, but it seems at
least OK. I may come back and try to refactor or otherwise improve this
in subsequent patches but I wanted to at least get a good starting point
in place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28042
llvm-svn: 290325
When DwarfExpression is emitting a fragment that is located in a
register and that fragment is smaller than the register, and the
register must be composed from sub-registers (are you still with me?)
the last DW_OP_piece operation must not be larger than the size of the
fragment itself, since the last piece of the fragment could be smaller
than the last subregister that is being emitted.
rdar://problem/29779065
llvm-svn: 290324
There are helpers for testing for constant or constant build_vector,
and for splat ConstantFP vectors, but not for a constantfp or
non-splat ConstantFP vector.
llvm-svn: 290317
This is to put the vector into a well defined state. Apparently the state of a
vector after being moved from is valid but unspecified. Found with clang-tidy.
llvm-svn: 290298
This patch renumbers the metadata nodes in debug info testcases after
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769. This is a separate patch because it
causes so much churn. This was implemented with a python script that
pipes the testcases through llvm-as - | llvm-dis - and then goes
through the original and new output side-by side to insert all
comments at a close-enough location.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27765
llvm-svn: 290292
This adds a basic tablegen backend that analyzes the SelectionDAG
patterns to find simple ones that are eligible for GlobalISel-emission.
That's similar to FastISel, with one notable difference: we're not fed
ISD opcodes, so we need to map the SDNode operators to generic opcodes.
That's done using GINodeEquiv in TargetGlobalISel.td.
Otherwise, this is mostly boilerplate, and lots of filtering of any kind
of "complicated" pattern. On AArch64, this is sufficient to match G_ADD
up to s64 (to ADDWrr/ADDXrr) and G_BR (to B).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26878
llvm-svn: 290284
Each function summary has an attached list of type identifier GUIDs. The
idea is that during the regular LTO phase we would match these GUIDs to type
identifiers defined by the regular LTO module and store the resolutions in
a top-level "type identifier summary" (which will be implemented separately).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27967
llvm-svn: 290280
In order for the llvm DWARF parser to be used in LLDB we will need to be able to get the parent of a DIE. This patch adds that functionality by changing the DWARFDebugInfoEntry class to store a depth field instead of a sibling index. Using a depth field allows us to easily calculate the sibling and the parent without increasing the size of DWARFDebugInfoEntry.
I tested llvm-dsymutil on a debug version of clang where this fully parses DWARF in over 1200 .o files to verify there was no serious regression in performance.
Added a full suite of unit tests to test this functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27995
llvm-svn: 290274
This sets USES_TERMINAL for the native llvm-config build, so that it
doesn't run at the same time as builds of other native tools (namely,
tablegen). Without this, if you're very unlucky with the timing it's
possible to be relinking libSupport as one of the tools is linking,
causing a spurious failure.
The tablegen build adopted USES_TERMINAL for this same reason in
r280748.
llvm-svn: 290271
RTDyldMemoryManager.cpp describes the differing __register_frame
API between libunwind and libgcc, with a mailing list posting URL.
The original link was 404; replace it with what I believe is the
intended post, as well as a reference to the "OS X" implementation in
libunwind.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27965
llvm-svn: 290269
The constantexpr parsing was too constrained and rejected legal vector GEPs.
This relaxes it to be similar to the ones for instruction parsing.
This fixes PR30816.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28013
llvm-svn: 290261
For vector GEPs, CastGEPIndices can end up in an infinite recursion, because
we compare the vector type to the scalar pointer type, find them different,
and then try to cast a type to itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28009
llvm-svn: 290260
I added API for creation a target specific memory node in DAG. Today, all memory nodes are common for all targets and their constructors are located in SelectionDAG.cpp.
There are some cases in X86 where we need to create a special node - truncation-with-saturation store, float-to-half-store.
In the current patch I added truncation-with-saturation nodes and I'm using them for intrinsics. In the future I plan to implement DAG lowering for truncation-with-saturation pattern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27899
llvm-svn: 290250
The vectorcall calling convention specifies that arguments to functions are to be passed in registers, when possible.
vectorcall uses more registers for arguments than fastcall or the default x64 calling convention use.
The vectorcall calling convention is only supported in native code on x86 and x64 processors that include Streaming SIMD Extensions 2 (SSE2) and above.
The current implementation does not handle Homogeneous Vector Aggregates (HVAs) correctly and this review attempts to fix it.
This aubmit also includes additional lit tests to cover better HVAs corner cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27392
llvm-svn: 290240
In r267672, where the loop distribution pragma was introduced, I tried
it hard to keep the old behavior for opt: when opt is invoked
with -loop-distribute, it should distribute the loop (it's off by
default when ran via the optimization pipeline).
As MichaelZ has discovered this has the unintended consequence of
breaking a very common developer work-flow to reproduce compilations
using opt: First you print the pass pipeline of clang
with -debug-pass=Arguments and then invoking opt with the returned
arguments.
clang -debug-pass will include -loop-distribute but the pass is invoked
with default=off so nothing happens unless the loop carries the pragma.
While through opt (default=on) we will try to distribute all loops.
This changes opt's default to off as well to match clang. The tests are
modified to explicitly enable the transformation.
llvm-svn: 290235
we used to print UNKNOWN instructions when the instruction to be printer was not
yet inserted in any BB: in that case the pretty printer would not be able to
compute a TII as the instruction does not belong to any BB or function yet.
This patch explicitly passes the TII to the pretty-printer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27645
llvm-svn: 290228
The usual method, and the one employed before my change, of displaying strings in natvis is to make use of the "<variable>,s" format specifier; however, this method only works for null-terminated strings. My fix here is to use the "<pointer>,[size]" format specifier to display a bounded array, and then cast it to "const char*", which in the MSVC debugger has the desired effect of rendering the character array as a string.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27972
llvm-svn: 290224
No existing client is passing a non-null value here. This will come back
in a slightly different form as part of the type identifier summary work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28006
llvm-svn: 290222
We're currently doing nearly the same thing for @llvm.objectsize in
three different places: two of them are missing checks for overflow,
and one of them could subtly break if InstCombine gets much smarter
about removing alloc sites. Seems like a good idea to not do that.
llvm-svn: 290214
GlobPattern is a class to handle glob pattern matching. Currently
only LLD is using that, but technically that feature is not specific
to linkers, so in this patch I move that file to LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27969
llvm-svn: 290212
Summary:
In getRangeForAffineAR we compute ranges for affine exprs E = A + B*C,
where ranges for A, B, and C are known. To avoid overflow, we need to
operate on a bigger bitwidth, and originally we chose 2*x+1 for this
(x being the original bitwidth). However, it is safe to use just 2*x:
A+B*C <= (2^x - 1) + (2^x - 1)*(2^x - 1) =
= 2^x - 1 + 2^2x - 2^x - 2^x + 1 =
= 2^2x - 2^x <= 2^2x - 1
Unnecessary extending of bitwidths results in noticeable slowdowns: ranges
perform arithmetic operations using APInt, which are much slower when bitwidths
are bigger than 64.
Reviewers: sanjoy, majnemer, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27795
llvm-svn: 290211
This patch adds support for YAML<->DWARF for debug_info sections.
This re-lands r290147, after fixing the issue that caused bots to fail (thank you UBSan!).
llvm-svn: 290204
Also make the summary ref and call graph vectors immutable. This means
a smaller API surface and fewer places to audit for non-determinism.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27875
llvm-svn: 290200
Make it clear that TripCount is the upper bound of the iteration on which
control exits LatchBlock.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26675
llvm-svn: 290199
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D6678 for the history of
isExtractSubvectorCheap. Essentially the same considerations apply
to ARM.
This temporarily breaks the formation of vpadd/vpaddl in certain cases;
AddCombineToVPADDL essentially assumes that we won't form VUZP shuffles.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D27779 for followup fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27774
llvm-svn: 290198
When the instruction is processed the first time, it may be
deleted resulting in crashes. While the new test adds the same
user to the worklist twice, this particular case doesn't crash
but I'm not sure why.
llvm-svn: 290191
By putting the assert behind a conditional in the initializer list
we can ensure that it will still work in a constexpr context as
the else branch of the ternary operator won't be examined unless
the condition fails.
llvm-svn: 290188
I haven't managed to get this to fail yet but its technically possible for the AND -> shuffle decomposition to result in illegal types.
llvm-svn: 290183
Summary:
Without a MachineMemOperand, the scheduler was assuming MIMG instructions
were ordered memory references, so no loads or stores could be reordered
across them.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tony-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27536
llvm-svn: 290179
Include of llvm/IR/Verifier.h was removed from HexagonCommonGEP.cpp in r289604
as unused. In fact it is required when expensive checks are enabled, because
it declared function `verifyFunction`, which is called in conditionally compiled
part of the file.
llvm-svn: 290170
clear. The current RefSCC can occur in exactly one position so we should
just enforce that and leverage the property rather than checking for it
anywhere.
This addresses review comments made on another patch.
llvm-svn: 290162
This doesn't implement *every* feature of the existing inliner, but
tries to implement the most important ones for building a functional
optimization pipeline and beginning to sort out bugs, regressions, and
other problems.
Notable, but intentional omissions:
- No alloca merging support. Why? Because it isn't clear we want to do
this at all. Active discussion and investigation is going on to remove
it, so for simplicity I omitted it.
- No support for trying to iterate on "internally" devirtualized calls.
Why? Because it adds what I suspect is inappropriate coupling for
little or no benefit. We will have an outer iteration system that
tracks devirtualization including that from function passes and
iterates already. We should improve that rather than approximate it
here.
- Optimization remarks. Why? Purely to make the patch smaller, no other
reason at all.
The last one I'll probably work on almost immediately. But I wanted to
skip it in the initial patch to try to focus the change as much as
possible as there is already a lot of code moving around and both of
these *could* be skipped without really disrupting the core logic.
A summary of the different things happening here:
1) Adding the usual new PM class and rigging.
2) Fixing minor underlying assumptions in the inline cost analysis or
inline logic that don't generally hold in the new PM world.
3) Adding the core pass logic which is in essence a loop over the calls
in the nodes in the call graph. This is a bit duplicated from the old
inliner, but only a handful of lines could realistically be shared.
(I tried at first, and it really didn't help anything.) All told,
this is only about 100 lines of code, and most of that is the
mechanics of wiring up analyses from the new PM world.
4) Updating the LazyCallGraph (in the new PM) based on the *newly
inlined* calls and references. This is very minimal because we cannot
form cycles.
5) When inlining removes the last use of a function, eagerly nuking the
body of the function so that any "one use remaining" inline cost
heuristics are immediately refined, and queuing these functions to be
completely deleted once inlining is complete and the call graph
updated to reflect that they have become dead.
6) After all the inlining for a particular function, updating the
LazyCallGraph and the CGSCC pass manager to reflect the
function-local simplifications that are done immediately and
internally by the inline utilties. These are the exact same
fundamental set of CG updates done by arbitrary function passes.
7) Adding a bunch of test cases to specifically target CGSCC and other
subtle aspects in the new PM world.
Many thanks to the careful review from Easwaran and Sanjoy and others!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24226
llvm-svn: 290161
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades and a change
to the Bitcode record for DIGlobalVariable, that makes upgrading the
old format unambiguous also for variables without DIExpressions.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 290153
Just the minimal support to get it working at the moment.
Includes checks for test/CodeGen/ARM/vzip.ll as an example.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27829
llvm-svn: 290144
Summary:
The expression for computing the return value of getMemOpBaseRegImmOfs has only
one possible value. The other value would result in a return earlier in the
function. This patch replaces the expression with its only possible value.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27437
llvm-svn: 290133
DWARF 4 and later supports encoding the PC as an address or as as offset from the low PC. Clients using DWARFDie should be insulated from how to extract the high PC value. This function takes care of extracting the form value and looking for the correct form.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27885
llvm-svn: 290131
This allows lowering i8 and i16 arguments if they can fit in the registers. Note
that the lowering is incomplete - ABI extensions are handled in a subsequent
patch.
(Last part of)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27704
llvm-svn: 290106
Teach the instruction selector and legalizer that it's ok to have adds with 8 or
16-bit integers.
This is the second part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D27704
llvm-svn: 290105
Teach the instruction selector that it's ok to copy small values from physical
registers.
First part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D27704
llvm-svn: 290104
PWR9 processor model for instruction scheduling. A subsequent patch will migrate
PWR9 to Post RA MIScheduler.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24525
llvm-svn: 290102
This adds support for lowering more than 4 arguments (although still i32 only).
It uses the handleAssignments / ValueHandler infrastructure extracted from
the AArch64 backend in r288658.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27195
llvm-svn: 290098
Summary:
Added pair of directives .hsa_code_object_metadata/.end_hsa_code_object_metadata.
Between them user can put YAML string that would be directly put to the generated note. E.g.:
'''
.hsa_code_object_metadata
{
amd.MDVersion: [ 2, 0 ]
}
.end_hsa_code_object_metadata
'''
Based on D25046
Reviewers: vpykhtin, nhaustov, yaxunl, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, mgorny, tony-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27619
llvm-svn: 290097
Add support for selecting simple G_LOAD and G_FRAME_INDEX instructions (32-bit
scalars only). This will be useful for functions that need to pass arguments on
the stack.
First part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D27195.
llvm-svn: 290096
Summary:
MachineInstr::isIdenticalTo() is for some reason not
symmetric when comparing bundles, which gives us the
property:
I1->isIdenticalTo(*I2) != I2->isIdenticalTo(*I1)
when comparing bundles where one bundle is longer than
the other.
This patch makes sure that bundles of different length
always are considered as not being identical. Thus, the
result of the comparison will be the same regardless of
which side that happens to be to the left.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, jonpa, andrew.w.kaylor
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27508
llvm-svn: 290095
The original version of the code in XRayInstrumentation.cpp assumed that
functions may not have empty machine basic blocks (or that the first one
couldn't be). This change addresses that by special-casing that specific
situation.
We provide two .mir test-cases to make sure we're handling this
appropriately.
Fixes llvm.org/PR31424.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: varno, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27913
llvm-svn: 290091
Make sure FileCheck --strict-whitespace --match-full-lines translates
'CHECK: bla ' into pattern '^ bla $' instead of pattern '^bla$'.
llvm-svn: 290069
Long is not the same size across a number of the platforms we support.
Use unsigned int here instead, it is more appropriate because
overflow/wrap-around is possible and, in this case, expected.
llvm-svn: 290068
Background/motivation - I was circling back around to:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28296
I made a simple patch for that and noticed some regressions, so added test cases for
those with rL281055, and this is hopefully the minimal fix for just those cases.
But as you can see from the surrounding untouched folds, we are missing commuted patterns
all over the place, and of course there are no regression tests to cover any of those cases.
We could sprinkle "m_c_" dust all over this file and catch most of the missing folds, but
then we still wouldn't have test coverage, and we'd still miss some fraction of commuted
patterns because they require adjustments to the match order.
I'm aware of the concern about the potential compile-time performance impact of adding
matches like this (currently being discussed on llvm-dev), but I don't think there's any
evidence yet to suggest that handling commutative pattern matching more thoroughly is not
a worthwhile goal of InstCombine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24419
llvm-svn: 290067
Not sure whether it causes and ASAN false positive or whether it
actually leads to incorrect code or whether it even exposes bad code.
Hans, I'll get you instructions to reproduce this.
llvm-svn: 290066
Commit on behalf of Gadi Haber
Removed EVEX_V512 prefix from scalar EVEX instructions since HW ignores L'L bits anyway (LIG). 4 instructions are modified.
The changed encodings are validated with XED.
Rviewers: delena, igorb
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27802
llvm-svn: 290065
The comment in ReadCheckFile claims that both leading and trailing whitespace
are removed, but the associated statement only removes leading whitespace.
llvm-svn: 290061
These nodes are only emitted for lowering FABS/FNEG/FNABS/FCOPYSIGN. Ideally we just wouldn't create these nodes if SSE2 or higher is available, but it was simple to just convert them in DAG combine.
For SSE2, AVX, and AVX512 with DQI this is no functional change as the execution domain fixing pass ensures the right domain is selected regardless of the ISD opcode.
For AVX-512 without DQI we end up using integer instructions since the floating point versions aren't available. But we were already doing that for any logical operations in code that didn't come from FABS/FNEG/FNABS/FCOPYSIGN so this seems no worse. And we get the benefit of being able to fold broadcasts now.
llvm-svn: 290060
Patch implements parser of pubnames/pubtypes tables instead of static
function used before. It is now should be possible to reuse it
in LLD or other projects and clean up the duplication code.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27851
llvm-svn: 290040
Summary:
PseudoSourceValue can be used to attach a target specific value for "well behaved" side-effects lowered from target specific intrinsics.
This is useful whenever there is not an LLVM IR Value around when representing such "well behaved" side-effected operations in backends by attaching a MachineMemOperand with a custom PseudoSourceValue as this makes the scheduler not treating them as "GlobalMemoryObjects" which triggers a logic that makes the operation act like a barrier in the Schedule DAG.
This patch adds another Kind to the PseudoSourceValue object which is "TargetCustom". It indicates a type of PseudoSourceValue that has a target specific meaning (aka. LLVM shouldn't assume any specific usage for such a PSV).
It supports the possibility of having many different kinds of "TargetCustom" PseudoSourceValues.
We had a discussion about if this was valuable or not (in particular because there was a believe that PSV were going away sooner or later) but seems like they are not going anywhere and I think they are useful backend side.
It is not clear the interaction of this with MIRParser (do we need a target hook to parse these?) and I would like a comment from Alex about that :)
Reviewers: arphaman, hfinkel, arsenm
Subscribers: Eugene.Zelenko, llvm-commits
Patch By: Marcello Maggioni
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D13575
llvm-svn: 290037
unittests/ADT/TwineTest.cpp:106:38: error: field 'Count' will be initialized after base 'llvm::FormatAdapter<int>' [-Werror,-Wreorder]
explicit formatter(int &Count) : Count(Count), FormatAdapter(0) {}
llvm-svn: 290029
Re-apply r288561: Liveness tracking should be correct now after r290014.
Previously this pass was using up to 5% compile time in some cases which
is a bit much for what it is doing. The pass featured a full blown
data-flow analysis which in the default configuration was restricted to a
single block.
This rewrites the pass under the assumption that we only ever work on a
single block. This is done in a single pass maintaining a state machine
per general purpose register to catch LOH patterns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27329
llvm-svn: 290026
BPI may trigger signed overflow UB while computing branch probabilities for
cold calls or to unreachables. For example, with our current choice of weights,
we'll crash if there are >= 2^12 branches to an unreachable.
Use a safer BranchProbability constructor which is better at handling fractions
with large denominators.
Changes since the initial commit:
- Use explicit casts to ensure that multiplication operands are 64-bit
ints.
rdar://problem/29368161
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27862
llvm-svn: 290022
This reverts commit r290016. It breaks this bot, even though the test
passes locally:
http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/32956/
AnalysisTests: /home/bb/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/BranchProbability.cpp:52: static llvm::BranchProbability llvm::BranchProbability::getBranchProbability(uint64_t, uint64_t): Assertion `Numerator <= Denominator && "Probability cannot be bigger than 1!"' failed.
llvm-svn: 290019
BPI may trigger signed overflow UB while computing branch probabilities
for cold calls or to unreachables. For example, with our current choice
of weights, we'll crash if there are >= 2^12 branches to an unreachable.
Use a safer BranchProbability constructor which is better at handling
fractions with large denominators.
rdar://problem/29368161
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27862
llvm-svn: 290016
Still prints the empty/tombstone keys (which some people would prefer,
but I find pretty noisy) because I haven't yet found a reliable way to
skip them (it requires calling into the running process to do so, which
isn't ideal for a pretty printer (doesn't work on a core file, for
example) - and gdb's ability to do so (or my ability to figure out how
to get gdb to do so) is limited) left some breadcrumbs for the next
person who might try to address that.
llvm-svn: 290011
The Mach-O command line flag like "-arch armv7m" does not match the
arch name part of its llvm Triple which is "thumbv7m-apple-darwin”.
I think the best way to fix this is to have
llvm::object::MachOObjectFile::getArchTriple() optionally return the
name of the Mach-O arch flag that would be used with -arch that
matches the CPUType and CPUSubType. Then change
llvm::object::MachOUniversalBinary::ObjectForArch::getArchTypeName()
to use that and change it to getArchFlagName() as the type name is
really part of the Triple and the -arch flag name is a Mach-O thing
for a specific Triple with a specific Mcpu value.
rdar://29663637
llvm-svn: 290001
Summary:
When reading the metadata bitcode, create a type declaration when
possible for composite types when we are importing. Doing this in
the bitcode reader saves memory. Also it works naturally in the case
when the type ODR map contains a definition for the same composite type
because it was used in the importing module (buildODRType will
automatically use the existing definition and not create a type
declaration).
For Chromium built with -g2, this reduces the aggregate size of the
generated native object files by 66% (from 31G to 10G). It reduced
the time through the ThinLTO link and backend phases by about 20% on
my machine.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, dblaikie, aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27775
llvm-svn: 289993
This is recommit of r287553 after fixing the invalid loop info after eliminating an empty block and unit test failures in AVR and WebAssembly :
Summary: Merging an empty case block into the header block of switch could cause ISel to add COPY instructions in the header of switch, instead of the case block, if the case block is used as an incoming block of a PHI. This could potentially increase dynamic instructions, especially when the switch is in a loop. I added a test case which was reduced from the benchmark I was targetting.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, mcrosier, manmanren, wmi, joerg, davidxl
Subscribers: joerg, qcolombet, danielcdh, hfinkel, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22696
llvm-svn: 289988
This reverts commit 289920 (again).
I forgot to implement a Bitcode upgrade for the case where a DIGlobalVariable
has not DIExpression. Unfortunately it is not possible to safely upgrade
these variables without adding a flag to the bitcode record indicating which
version they are.
My plan of record is to roll the planned follow-up patch that adds a
unit: field to DIGlobalVariable into this patch before recomitting.
This way we only need one Bitcode upgrade for both changes (with a
version flag in the bitcode record to safely distinguish the record
formats).
Sorry for the churn!
llvm-svn: 289982
This is the 3rd of 3 patches to get reading and writing of
CodeView symbol and type records to use a single codepath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26427
llvm-svn: 289978
(some other implementations of an optional pretty printer print the full
name of the optional type (including template parameter) - but seems if
the template parameter isn't printed for std::vector, not sure why it
would be printed for optional, so erring on the side of consistency in
that direction here - compact, etc, as well)
llvm-svn: 289976
This patch reapplies r289863. The original patch was reverted because it
exposed a bug causing the loop vectorizer to crash in the Python runtime on
PPC. The underlying issue was fixed with r289958.
llvm-svn: 289975
`dropUnknownNonDebugMetadata` takes a list of "known" metadata IDs. The
only reason it worked at all is that `getMetadataID` returns something
unrelated -- it returns the subclass ID of the receiver (which is used
in `dyn_cast` etc.). That does not numerically match
`LLVMContext::MD_invariant_group` and ends up dropping `invariant_group`
along with every other metadata that does not numerically match
`LLVMContext::MD_invariant_group`.
llvm-svn: 289973
Currently, there are substantial problems forming vld1_dup even if the
VDUP survives legalization. The lack of an actual node
leads to terrible results: not only can we not form post-increment vld1_dup
instructions, but we form scalar pre-increment and post-increment
loads which force the loaded value into a GPR. This patch fixes that
by combining the vdup+load into an ARMISD node before DAGCombine
messes it up.
Also includes a crash fix for vld2_dup (see testcase @vld2dupi8_postinc_variable).
Recommiting with fix to avoid forming vld1dup if the type of the load
doesn't match the type of the vdup (see
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31404).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27694
llvm-svn: 289972
Replace sleep() posix function by a more portable sleep_for() function
from std. Also, ignore memmem() and strcasestr() on Windows.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27729
llvm-svn: 289964
Reverting because this breaks lld's gdb_index support - it's probably
double counting the abbrev relocation offset.
This reverts commit r289954.
llvm-svn: 289961
After r288909, instructions feeding predicated instructions may be scalarized
if profitable. Since these instructions will remain scalar, we shouldn't
attempt to type-shrink them. We should only truncate vector types to their
minimal bit widths. This bug was exposed by enabling the vectorization of loops
containing conditional stores by default.
llvm-svn: 289958
Summary: ThinLTO needs to invoke SampleProfileLoader pass during link time in order to annotate profile correctly after module importing.
Reviewers: davidxl, mehdi_amini, tejohnson
Subscribers: pcc, davide, llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27790
llvm-svn: 289957
atomic_load_add returns the value before addition, but sets EFLAGS based on the
result of the addition. That means it's setting the flags based on effectively
subtracting C from the value at x, which is also what the outer cmp does.
This targets a pattern that occurs frequently with reference counting pointers:
void decrement(long volatile *ptr) {
if (_InterlockedDecrement(ptr) == 0)
release();
}
Clang would previously compile it (for 32-bit at -Os) as:
00000000 <?decrement@@YAXPCJ@Z>:
0: 8b 44 24 04 mov 0x4(%esp),%eax
4: 31 c9 xor %ecx,%ecx
6: 49 dec %ecx
7: f0 0f c1 08 lock xadd %ecx,(%eax)
b: 83 f9 01 cmp $0x1,%ecx
e: 0f 84 00 00 00 00 je 14 <?decrement@@YAXPCJ@Z+0x14>
14: c3 ret
and with this patch it becomes:
00000000 <?decrement@@YAXPCJ@Z>:
0: 8b 44 24 04 mov 0x4(%esp),%eax
4: f0 ff 08 lock decl (%eax)
7: 0f 84 00 00 00 00 je d <?decrement@@YAXPCJ@Z+0xd>
d: c3 ret
(Equivalent variants with _InterlockedExchangeAdd, std::atomic<>'s fetch_add
or pre-decrement operator generate the same code.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27781
llvm-svn: 289955
Input can be produced by ld -r, for example (a normal LLVM workflow
never hits this - LLVM only ever produces a single abbrev table in an
object (shared by multiple CUs), so the reloc's always 0, and when it's
linked together the relocation's resolved so it doesn't need to be
handled)
llvm-svn: 289954
This is recommit of r287553 after fixing the invalid loop info after eliminating an empty block:
Summary: Merging an empty case block into the header block of switch could cause ISel to add COPY instructions in the header of switch, instead of the case block, if the case block is used as an incoming block of a PHI. This could potentially increase dynamic instructions, especially when the switch is in a loop. I added a test case which was reduced from the benchmark I was targetting.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, mcrosier, manmanren, wmi, joerg, davidxl
Subscribers: joerg, qcolombet, danielcdh, hfinkel, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22696
llvm-svn: 289951
It currently is in an unnamed namespace and then it shouldn't be used
from something in the header file. This actually triggers a warning with
GCC:
../include/llvm/IR/Verifier.h:39:7: warning: ‘llvm::TBAAVerifier’ has a field ‘llvm::TBAAVerifier::Diagnostic’ whose type uses the anonymous namespace [enabled by default]
llvm-svn: 289942
Add the minimal support necessary to select a function that returns the sum of
two i32 values.
This includes some support for argument/return lowering of i32 values through
registers, as well as the handling of copy and add instructions throughout the
GlobalISel pipeline.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26677
llvm-svn: 289940
stores by default
This uncovers a crasher in the loop vectorizer on PPC when building the
Python runtime. I'll send the testcase to the review thread for the
original commit.
llvm-svn: 289934
Summary:
This commits moves skipDebugInstructionsForward and
skipDebugInstructionsBackward from lib/CodeGen/IfConversion.cpp
to include/llvm/CodeGen/MachineBasicBlock.h and updates
some codgen files to use them.
This refactoring was suggested in https://reviews.llvm.org/D27688
and I thought it's best to do the refactoring in a separate
review, but I could also put both changes in a single review
if that's preferred.
Also, the names for the functions aren't the snappiest and
I would be happy to rename them if anybody has suggestions.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, iteratee, aprantl, MatzeB
Subscribers: MatzeB, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27782
llvm-svn: 289933
Add two public methods to ARMTargetLowering: CCAssignFnForCall and
CCAssignFnForReturn, which are just calling the already existing private method
CCAssignFnForNode. These will come in handy for GlobalISel on ARM.
We also replace all calls to CCAssignFnForNode in ARMISelLowering.cpp, because
the new methods are friendlier to the reader.
llvm-svn: 289932
This patch appears to result in trampolines in vtables being miscompiled
when they in turn tail call a method.
I've posted some preliminary details about the failure on the thread for
this commit and talked to Hal. He was comfortable going ahead and
reverting until we sort out what is wrong.
llvm-svn: 289928
This is intended to be used (in a later patch) by the BitcodeReader
to detect invalid TBAA and drop them when loading bitcode, so that
we don't break client that have legacy bitcode with possible invalid
TBAA.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27838
llvm-svn: 289927
One more attempt to re-commit the patch r285355, which I had to revert in r285362, because some tests were failing (the reason is because the size of the line_table varied depending on the full file name).
In the past the compiler always emitted .debug_line version 2, though some opcodes from DWARF 3 (e.g. DW_LNS_set_prologue_end, DW_LNS_set_epilogue_begin or DW_LNS_set_isa) and from DWARF 4 could be emitted by the compiler.
This patch changes version information of .debug_line to exactly match the DWARF version. For .debug_line version 4, a new field maximum_operations_per_instruction is emitted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D16697
llvm-svn: 289925
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289920
Summary:
Instead of checking whether a global referenced by a function being
imported is defined in the same module, speculatively always add the
referenced globals to the module's export list. After all imports are
computed, for each module prune any not in its defined set from its
export list.
For a huge C++ app with aggressive importing thresholds, even with
D27687 we spent a lot of time invoking modulePath() from
exportGlobalInModule (modulePath() was still the 2nd hottest routine in
profile). The reason is that with comdat/linkonce the summary lists for
each GUID can be long. For the app in question, for example, we were
invoking exportGlobalInModule almost 2 million times, and we traversed
an average of 63 entries in the summary list each time.
This patch reduced the thin link time for the app by about 10% (on top
of D27687) when using aggressive importing thresholds, and about 3.5% on
average with default importing thresholds.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27755
llvm-svn: 289918
idiom.
r289538: Match load by bytes idiom and fold it into a single load
r289540: Fix a buildbot failure introduced by r289538
r289545: Use more detailed assertion messages in the code ...
r289646: Add a couple of assertions to the load combine code ...
This DAG combine has a bad crash in it that is quite hard to trigger
sadly -- it relies on sneaking code with UB through the SDAG build and
into this particular combine. I've responded to the original commit with
a test case that reproduces it.
However, the code also has other problems that will require substantial
changes to address and so I'm going ahead and reverting it for now. This
should unblock us and perhaps others that are hitting the crash in the
wild and will let a fresh patch with updated approach come in cleanly
afterward.
Sorry for any trouble or disruption!
llvm-svn: 289916
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289902
Removing sensitivity to scheduling (by using CHECK-DAG instead of CHECK) and
some other minor corrections.
In preparation to commit Power9 processor model.
llvm-svn: 289900
This pass prepares a module containing type metadata for ThinLTO by splitting
it into regular and thin LTO parts if possible, and writing both parts to
a multi-module bitcode file. Modules that do not contain type metadata are
written unmodified as a single module.
All globals with type metadata are added to the regular LTO module, and
the rest are added to the thin LTO module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27324
llvm-svn: 289899
Summary:
We were reinvoking exportGlobalInModule numerous times redundantly.
No need to re-export globals referenced by a global that was already
imported from its module. This resulted in a large speedup in the thin
link for a big application, particularly when importing aggressiveness
was cranked up.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27687
llvm-svn: 289896
The IRTranslator uses an additional block before the LLVM-IR entry block
to perform all the ABI lowering and the constant hoisting. Thus, this
block is the actual entry block and it falls through the LLVM-IR entry
block. However, with such representation, we end up with two basic
blocks that are not maximal.
Therefore, this patch adds a bit of canonicalization by merging both the
LLVM-IR entry block and the ABI lowering/constants hoisting into one
block, making the resulting block more likely to be maximal (indeed the
LLVM-IR entry block might not have been maximal).
llvm-svn: 289891
Lowering to llvm.cttz() will result in constant folding anyway
if the argument to ffs is a constant. Pointed out by Eli for
fls() in D14590.
llvm-svn: 289888
Summary: The relocation is missing mask so an address that has non-zero bits in 47:43 may overwrite the register number. (Frequently shows up as target register changed to `xzr`....)
Reviewers: t.p.northover, lhames
Subscribers: davide, aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27609
llvm-svn: 289880
Needed due to change to require datalayout (r289719).
Found this in my own testing, maybe there aren't any bots using a v1.12
gold yet.
llvm-svn: 289876