If the offset cannot fit into the instruction, an addition to the
pointer is emitted before the actual access. However, BPF offsets are
16-bit but LLVM considers them to be, for the matter of this check,
to be 32-bit long.
This causes the following program:
int bpf_prog1(void *ign)
{
volatile unsigned long t = 0x8983984739ull;
return *(unsigned long *)((0xffffffff8fff0002ull) + t);
}
To generate the following (wrong) code:
0: 18 01 00 00 39 47 98 83 00 00 00 00 89 00 00 00
r1 = 590618314553ll
2: 7b 1a f8 ff 00 00 00 00 *(u64 *)(r10 - 8) = r1
3: 79 a1 f8 ff 00 00 00 00 r1 = *(u64 *)(r10 - 8)
4: 79 10 02 00 00 00 00 00 r0 = *(u64 *)(r1 + 2)
5: 95 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 exit
Fix it by changing the offset check to 16-bit.
Patch by Nadav Amit <nadav.amit@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32055
llvm-svn: 300269
Switch from Euclid's algorithm to Stein's algorithm for computing GCD. This
avoids the (expensive) APInt division operation in favour of bit operations.
Remove all memory allocation from within the GCD loop by tweaking our `lshr`
implementation so it can operate in-place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31968
llvm-svn: 300252
Summary:
Bug noticed by inspection.
Extend the test to handle invokes as well as calls, and rewrite it to
not depend on the inliner and other passes.
Also simplify the call site replacement code with CallSite, similar to
what I did to dead arg elimination and arg promotion (rL300235 and
rL300229).
Reviewers: danielcdh, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32041
llvm-svn: 300251
Summary: For iterative SamplePGO, an indirect call can be speculatively promoted to multiple direct calls and get inlined. All these promoted direct calls will share the same callsite location (offset+discriminator). With the current implementation, we cannot distinguish between different promotion candidates and its inlined instance. This patch adds callee_name to the key of the callsite sample map. And added helper functions to get all inlined callee samples for a given callsite location. This helps the profile annotator promote correct targets and inline it before annotation, and ensures all indirect call targets to be annotated correctly.
Reviewers: davidxl, dnovillo
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: andreadb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31950
llvm-svn: 300240
Summary:
In first order recurrences where phi's are used outside the loop,
we should generate an additional vector.extract of the second last element from
the vectorized phi update.
This is because we require the phi itself (which is the value at the second last
iteration of the vector loop) and not the phi's update within the loop.
Also fix the code gen when we just unroll, but don't vectorize.
Fixes PR32396.
Reviewers: mssimpso, mkuper, anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31979
llvm-svn: 300238
This is effectively a retry of:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL299851
but now we have tests and an assert to make sure the bug
that was exposed with that attempt will not happen again.
I'll fix the code duplication and missing sibling fold next,
but I want to make this change as small as possible to reduce
risk since I messed it up last time.
This should fix:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32524
llvm-svn: 300236
Noticed by inspection while doing attribute work. DAE, InstCombineCalls,
and ArgPromotion have a fair amount of duplicated code for hacking on
call sites, and you can find bugs by comparing them.
Add a test case for this.
llvm-svn: 300229
In many cases ds operations can be combined even if offsets do not
fit into 8 bit encoding. What it takes is to adjust base address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31993
llvm-svn: 300227
Summary:
* Add a bitreverse case in the demanded bits analysis pass.
* Add tests for the bitreverse (and bswap) intrinsic in the
demanded bits pass.
* Add a test case to the BDCE tests: that manipulations to
high-order bits are eliminated once the bits are reversed
and then right-shifted.
Reviewers: mkuper, jmolloy, hfinkel, trentxintong
Reviewed By: jmolloy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31857
llvm-svn: 300215
Summary:
The linker needs to be able to determine whether a symbol is text or data to
handle the case of a common being overridden by a strong definition in an
archive. If the archive contains a text member of the same name as the common,
that function is discarded. However, if the archive contains a data member of
the same name, that strong definition overrides the common. This is a behavior
of ld.bfd, which the Qualcomm linker also supports in LTO.
Here's a test case to illustrate:
####
cat > 1.c << \!
int blah;
!
cat > 2.c << \!
int blah() {
return 0;
}
!
cat > 3.c << \!
int blah = 20;
!
clang -c 1.c
clang -c 2.c
clang -c 3.c
ar cr lib.a 2.o 3.o
ld 1.o lib.a -t
####
The correct output is:
1.o
(lib.a)3.o
Thanks to Shankar Easwaran and Hemant Kulkarni for the test case!
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, rafael, pcc, davide
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: davide, llvm-commits, inglorion
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31901
llvm-svn: 300205
If we had these tests, the bug caused by https://reviews.llvm.org/rL299851 would have been caught sooner.
There's also an assert in the code that should have caught that bug, but the assert line itself has a bug.
llvm-svn: 300201
In a followup patch I intend to introduce an additional dumping
mode which dumps a graphical representation of a class's layout.
In preparation for this, the text-based layout printer needs to
be split out from the graphical layout printer, and both need
to be able to use the same code for printing the intro and outro
of a class's definition (e.g. base class list, etc).
This patch does so, and in the process introduces a skeleton
definition for the graphical printer, while currently making
the graphical printer just print nothing.
NFC
llvm-svn: 300134
Previously the dumping of class definitions was very primitive,
and it made it hard to do more than the most trivial of output
formats when dumping. As such, we would only dump one line for
each field, and then dump non-layout items like nested types
and enums.
With this patch, we do a complete analysis of the object
hierarchy including aggregate types, bases, virtual bases,
vftable analysis, etc. The only immediately visible effects
of this are that a) we can now dump a line for the vfptr where
before we would treat that as padding, and b) we now don't
treat virtual bases that come at the end of a class as padding
since we have a more detailed analysis of the class's storage
usage.
In subsequent patches, we should be able to use this analysis
to display a complete graphical view of a class's layout including
recursing arbitrarily deep into an object's base class / aggregate
member hierarchy.
llvm-svn: 300133
If workgroup size is known inform llvm about range returned by local
id and local size queries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31804
llvm-svn: 300102
Summary:
Readnone attribute would cause CSE of two barriers with
the same argument, which is invalid by example:
struct Base {
virtual int foo() { return 42; }
};
struct Derived1 : Base {
int foo() override { return 50; }
};
struct Derived2 : Base {
int foo() override { return 100; }
};
void foo() {
Base *x = new Base{};
new (x) Derived1{};
int a = std::launder(x)->foo();
new (x) Derived2{};
int b = std::launder(x)->foo();
}
Here 2 calls of std::launder will produce @llvm.invariant.group.barrier,
which would be merged into one call, causing devirtualization
to devirtualize second call into Derived1::foo() instead of
Derived2::foo()
Reviewers: chandlerc, dberlin, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rsmith, amharc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31531
llvm-svn: 300101
As discussed in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32486
...the canonicalization of vector select to shufflevector does not hold up
when undef elements are present in the condition vector.
Try to make the undef handling clear in the code and the LangRef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31980
llvm-svn: 300092
Currently if we reach an instruction with multiples uses we know we can't do any optimizations to that instruction itself since we only have the demanded bits for one of the users. But if we know all of the bits are zero/one for that one user we can still go ahead and create a constant to give to that user.
This might then reduce the instruction to having a single use and allow additional optimizations on the other path.
This picks up an additional case that r300075 didn't catch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31552
llvm-svn: 300084
If we are adding/subtractings 0s below the highest demanded bit we can just use the other operand and remove the operation.
My primary motivation is observing that we can call ShrinkDemandedConstant for the add/sub and create a 0 constant, rather than removing the add completely. In the case I saw, we modified the constant on an add instruction to a 0, but the add is not put into the worklist. So we didn't revisit it until the next InstCombine iteration. This caused an IR modification to remove add and a subsequent iteration to be ran.
With this change we get bypass the add in the first iteration and prevent the second iteration from changing anything.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31120
llvm-svn: 300075
One potential way to make InstCombine (very slightly?) faster is to recycle instructions
when possible instead of creating new ones. It's not explicitly stated AFAIK, but we don't
consider this an "InstSimplify". We could, however, make a new layer to house transforms
like this if that makes InstCombine more manageable (just throwing out an idea; not sure
how much opportunity is actually here).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31863
llvm-svn: 300067
Use '2>&1 |' and not '|&' to pipe debug output to FileCheck
Hopefully handles a "shell parser error" on
llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win
test/Transforms/SLPVectorizer/SystemZ/SLP-cmp-cost-query.ll
llvm-svn: 300064
In getEntryCost(), make the scalar type for a compare instruction that of the
operands, not i1. This is needed in order to call getCmpSelInstrCost() for a
compare in a sensible way, the same way as the LoopVectorizer does.
New test: test/Transforms/SLPVectorizer/SystemZ/SLP-cmp-cost-query.ll
Review: Matthew Simpson
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31601
llvm-svn: 300061
The cost for a branch after vectorization is very different depending on if
the vectorizer will if-convert the block (branch is eliminated), or if
scalarized and predicated blocks will be produced (branch duplicated before
each block). There is also the case of remaining scalar branches, such as the
back-edge branch.
This patch handles these cases differently with TTI based cost estimates.
Review: Matthew Simpson
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31175
llvm-svn: 300058
Since SystemZ supports vector element load/store instructions, there is no
need for extracts/inserts if a vector load/store gets scalarized.
This patch lets Target specify that it supports such instructions by means of
a new TTI hook that defaults to false.
The use for this is in the LoopVectorizer getScalarizationOverhead() method,
which will with this patch produce a smaller sum for a vector load/store on
SystemZ.
New test: test/Transforms/LoopVectorize/SystemZ/load-store-scalarization-cost.ll
Review: Adam Nemet
https://reviews.llvm.org/D30680
llvm-svn: 300056
getArithmeticInstrCost(), getShuffleCost(), getCastInstrCost(),
getCmpSelInstrCost(), getVectorInstrCost(), getMemoryOpCost(),
getInterleavedMemoryOpCost() implemented.
Interleaved access vectorization enabled.
BasicTTIImpl::getCastInstrCost() improved to check for legal extending loads,
in which case the cost of the z/sext instruction becomes 0.
Review: Ulrich Weigand, Renato Golin.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29631
llvm-svn: 300052
Summary:
As far as instruction selection is concerned, all three appear to be same thing.
Support for these operands is experimental since AArch64 doesn't make use
of them and the in-tree targets that do use them (AMDGPU for
OperandWithDefaultOps, AMDGPU/ARM/Hexagon/Lanai for PredicateOperand, and ARM
for OperandWithDefaultOps) are not using tablegen-erated GlobalISel yet.
Reviewers: rovka, aditya_nandakumar, t.p.northover, qcolombet, ab
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: inglorion, aemerson, rengolin, mehdi_amini, dberris, kristof.beyls, igorb, tpr, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31135
llvm-svn: 300037
Summary:
Dead basic blocks may be forming a loop, for which SSA form is
fulfilled, but with a circular def-use chain. LoadCombine could
enter an infinite loop when analysing such dead code. This patch
solves the problem by simply avoiding to analyse all basic blocks
that aren't forward reachable, from function entry, in LoadCombine.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27065
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, chandlerc, grosser, Bigcheese, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: dberlin, zzheng, bjope, grandinj, Ka-Ka, materi, jholewinski, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31032
llvm-svn: 300034
Collection of PostDominatedByUnreachable and PostDominatedByColdCall have been
split out of heuristics itself. Update of the data happens now for each basic
block (before update for PostDominatedByColdCall might be skipped if
unreachable or matadata heuristic handled this basic block).
This separation allows re-ordering of heuristics without loosing
the post-domination information.
Reviewers: sanjoy, junbuml, vsk, chandlerc, reames
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31701
llvm-svn: 300029
Summary:
COFF requires that every comdat contain a symbol with the same name as
the comdat. ThinLTOBitcodeWriter renames symbols, which may cause this
requirement to be violated. This change avoids such violations by
renaming comdats if their leaders are renamed. It also keeps comdats
together when splitting modules.
Reviewers: pcc, mehdi_amini, tejohnson
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: rnk, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31963
llvm-svn: 300019
Check if the scale operand is identical (doesn't have to be 1) and
do not check the chaain operand.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31833
llvm-svn: 299986
In the vectorization of first order recurrence, we vectorize such
that the last element in the vector will be the one extracted to pass into the
scalar remainder loop. However, this is not true when there is a phi (other
than the primary induction variable) is used outside the loop.
In such a case, we need the value from the second last iteration (i.e.
the phi value), not the last iteration (which would be the phi update).
I've added a test case for this. Also see PR32396.
A follow up patch would generate the correct code gen for such cases,
and turn this vectorization on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31910
Reviewers: mssimpso
llvm-svn: 299985
Analysis, it has Analysis passes, and once NewGVN is made an Analysis,
this removes the cross dependency from Analysis to Transform/Utils.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 299980
If you run llc -stop-after=codegenprepare and feed the resulting MIR
to llc -start-after=codegenprepare, you'll have an empty machine
function since we haven't run any isel yet. Of course, this only works
if the MIRParser believes you that this is okay.
This is essentially a revert of r241862 with a fix for the problem it
was papering over.
llvm-svn: 299975
Before this patch, pass AddDiscriminators always avoided to assign
discriminators to intrinsic calls. This was done mainly for two reasons:
1) We wanted to minimize the number of based discriminators used.
2) We wanted to avoid non-deterministic discriminator assignment for
different debug levels.
Unfortunately, that approach was problematic for MemIntrinsic calls.
MemIntrinsic calls can be split by SROA into loads and stores, and each new
load/store instruction would obtain the debug location from the original
intrinsic call.
If we don't assign a discriminator to MemIntrinsic calls, then we cannot
correctly set the discriminator for the newly created loads and stores.
This may have a negative impact on the basic block weight computation
performed by the SampleLoader.
This patch fixes the issue by letting MemIntrinsic calls have a discriminator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31900
llvm-svn: 299972
Move LTO::run() to a "run" subcommand so that we can introduce new subcommands
for testing different parts of the LTO implementation.
This doesn't use llvm::cl subcommands because it doesn't appear to be currently
possible to pass an argument not associated with a subcommand to a subcommand
(e.g. -lto-use-new-pm, -mcpu=yonah).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31410
llvm-svn: 299967
Summary:
This lets PDB readers lookup type record data by type index in O(log n)
time. It also enables makes `cvdump -t` work on PDBs produced by LLD.
cvdump will not dump a PDB that doesn't have an index-to-offset table.
The table is sorted by type index, and has an entry every 8KB. Looking
up a type record by index is a binary search of this table, followed by
a scan of at most 8KB.
Reviewers: ruiu, zturner, inglorion
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31636
llvm-svn: 299958
Summary:
In rL299692 I improved strip-dead-debug-info's ability to drop CUs that are not
referenced from the current module. However, in doing so I neglected to realize
that some SPs could be referenced entirely from inlined functions. It appears
I was not the only one to make this mistake, because DebugInfoFinder, doesn't
find those SPs either. Fix this in DebugInfoFinder and then use that to make
sure not to drop those CUs in strip-dead-debug-info.
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31904
llvm-svn: 299936
Use the same handling in the generic legalizer code as for the other
libcalls (G_FREM, G_FPOW).
Enable it on ARM for float and double so we can test it.
llvm-svn: 299931
Summary: Legalize only if the type is marked as Legal or Custom. If not, return Unsupported as LegalizerHelper is not able to handle non-power-of-2 types right now.
Reviewers: qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar, dsanders, t.p.northover, kristof.beyls, javed.absar, ab
Reviewed By: kristof.beyls, ab
Subscribers: dberris, rovka, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31711
llvm-svn: 299929
A fix for the bug reported in PR30911.
The issue arises when multiple CALLSEQ_BEGIN nodes are unscheduled as
the last node to be unscheduled will gain access to the CallResource
register. But when a node is being picked, only CALLSEQ_END nodes are
checked against the CallResource and have their chains evaluated.
This then means that other CALLSEQ_BEGIN nodes can be scheduled
before the existing call sequence has been finalised. This patch adds
a check against the FrameSetup nodes in DelayForLiveRegs to prevent
this from happening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31536
llvm-svn: 299926
(h/t to Chandler for pointing this out)
The test in question was not at all testing what it was supposed to
test. We do not //care// about placing `!make.implicit` in inner
constant branch (since it will be folded away anyway). We care about
placing `!make.implicit` in the outer branch that switches between
either version of the loop.
Having said that, it is _correct_ to leave behind the `!make.implicit`
in the inner branch, but there is no need to do so.
llvm-svn: 299912
When allowed, we can hoist a division out of a loop in favor of a
multiplication by the reciprocal. Fixes PR32157.
Patch by vit9696!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30819
llvm-svn: 299911
Check the legality of ISD::[US]MULO to see whether
Intrinsic::[us]mul_with_overflow will legalize into a function call (and, thus,
will use the CTR register). Fixes PR32485.
Patch by Tim Neumann!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31790
llvm-svn: 299910
The math works out where it can actually be counter-productive. The probability
calculations correctly handle the case where the alternative is 0 probability,
rely on those calculations.
Includes a test case that demonstrates the problem.
llvm-svn: 299892
Qin may be large, and Succ may be more frequent than BB. Take these both into
account when deciding if tail-duplication is profitable.
llvm-svn: 299891
Merging identical blocks when it doesn't reduce fallthrough. It is common for
the blocks created from critical edge splitting to be identical. We would like
to merge these blocks whenever doing so would not reduce fallthrough.
llvm-svn: 299890
LLVM makes several assumptions about address space 0. However,
alloca is presently constrained to always return this address space.
There's no real way to avoid using alloca, so without this
there is no way to opt out of these assumptions.
The problematic assumptions include:
- That the pointer size used for the stack is the same size as
the code size pointer, which is also the maximum sized pointer.
- That 0 is an invalid, non-dereferencable pointer value.
These are problems for AMDGPU because alloca is used to
implement the private address space, which uses a 32-bit
index as the pointer value. Other pointers are 64-bit
and behave more like LLVM's notion of generic address
space. By changing the address space used for allocas,
we can change our generic pointer type to be LLVM's generic
pointer type which does have similar properties.
llvm-svn: 299888
Summary: Now the SamplePGO support is more stable, we do not need so many verbose optimization remarks emitted.
Reviewers: dnovillo, davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: fhahn, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31826
llvm-svn: 299883
When dumping classes, show where padding occurs, and at the end of the
class print statistics about how many bytes total of padding exist in a
class.
Since PDB doesn't specifically contain information about padding, we have
to mimic this by sort of reversing a small portion of the record layout
algorithm (e.g. looking at offsets and sizes and trying to determine
whether something is part of the same field or a new field).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31800
llvm-svn: 299869
Summary:
While we don't want them aliasing with other pointers, there seems to
be no point in not having them clobber must-aliased'd pointers.
If some day, we split the aliasing and ordering chains, we'd make this
not aliasing but an ordering barrier (IE it doesn't affect it's
memory, but we can't hoist it above it).
Reviewers: hfinkel, george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31865
llvm-svn: 299865
This patch refactors and strengthens the type checks performed for interleaved
accesses. The primary functional change is to ensure that the interleaved
accesses have valid element types. The added test cases previously failed
because the element type is f128.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31817
llvm-svn: 299864
The unused dummy src2_modifiers is missing, so it crashes
when trying to print it.
I tried to fully remove src2_modifiers, but there are some
irritations in the places where it is converted to mad since
it starts to require modifying use lists while iterating over
them.
llvm-svn: 299861
Also, make the same change in and-of-icmps and remove a hack for detecting that case.
Finally, add some FIXME comments because the code duplication here is awful.
This should fix the remaining IR problem noted in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32524
llvm-svn: 299851
* Adds support for pointers to arrays, which was missing
* Adds some tests
* Improves consistency of const and volatile qualifiers
* Eliminates non-composable special case code for arrays and function by using
a more general recursive approach
* Has a hack for getting the calling convention into the right spot for
pointer-to-functions
Given the rapid changes happenning in llvm-pdbdump, this may be difficult to
merge.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31832
llvm-svn: 299848
We currently only fold scalar add of constants into selects. This improves this to support vectors too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31683
llvm-svn: 299847
Summary: I noticed in the select folding code that we copied fast math flags, but did not do the same for the similar handling in phi nodes. This patch fixes that to do the same thing as select
Reviewers: spatel, davide, majnemer, hfinkel
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31690
llvm-svn: 299838
Summary:
Resolve indirect branch target when possible.
This potentially eliminates more basicblocks and result in better evaluation for phi and other things.
Reviewers: davide, efriedma, sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30322
llvm-svn: 299830
In isUseTriviallyOptimizableToLiveOnEntry, pointsToConstantMemory needs to be
called on the load's pointer operand, not on the result of the load (which
might not even be a pointer).
llvm-svn: 299823
Introducing a new error to macro parameters' parsing:
currently, llvm-mc won't complain if a macro have two (or more) named params with the same name.
this behavior is false, as there's no merit in having some params sharing a name.
now, instead of tolerate such a phenomena - emit an appropriate error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31674
llvm-svn: 299815
coro-split-after-phi.ll test was flaky due to non-determinism in
the coroutine frame construction that was sorting the spill
vector using a pointer to a def as a part of the key.
The sorting was intended to make sure that spills for the same def
are kept together, however, we populate the vector by processing
defs in order, so the spill entires will end up together anyways.
This change removes spill sorting and restores the determinism
in the test.
llvm-svn: 299809
BIC is generally faster, and it can put the output in a different
register from the input.
We already do this in Thumb2 mode; not sure why the equivalent fix
never got applied to ARM mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31797
llvm-svn: 299803
The original instruction might get legalized and erased and expanded
into intermediate instructions and the intermediate instructions might
fail legalization. This end up in reporting GISelFailure on the erased
instruction.
Instead report GISelFailure on the intermediate instruction which failed
legalization.
Reviewed by: ab
llvm-svn: 299802
When using -ffixed-x18, the x18 (or w18) register can safely be used
with the "global register variable" GCC extension, but the backend
fails to recognize it.
Patch by Roland McGrath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31793
llvm-svn: 299799
This reverts commit r299766. This change appears to have broken the MIPS
buildbots. Reverting while I investigate.
Revert "[mips] Remove usage of debug only variable (NFC)"
This reverts commit r299769. Follow up commit.
llvm-svn: 299788
Increase threshold to unroll a loop which contains an "if" statement
whose condition defined by a PHI belonging to the loop. This may help
to eliminate if region and potentially even PHI itself, saving on
both divergence and registers used for the PHI.
Add a small bonus for each of such "if" statements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31693
llvm-svn: 299779
Summary:
Fix a bug where we were inserting a spill in between the PHIs in the beginning of the block.
Consider this fragment:
```
begin:
%phi1 = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ 2, %alt ]
%phi2 = phi i32 [ 1, %entry ], [ 3, %alt ]
%sp1 = call i8 @llvm.coro.suspend(token none, i1 false)
switch i8 %sp1, label %suspend [i8 0, label %resume
i8 1, label %cleanup]
resume:
call i32 @print(i32 %phi1)
```
Unless we are spilling the argument or result of the invoke, we were always inserting the spill immediately following the instruction.
The fix adds a check that if the spilled instruction is a PHI Node, select an appropriate insert point with `getFirstInsertionPt()` that
skips all the PHI Nodes and EH pads.
Reviewers: majnemer, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: qcolombet, EricWF, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31799
llvm-svn: 299771
This patch reapplies r298620. The original patch was reverted because of two
issues. First, the patch exposed a bug in InstCombine that caused the Chromium
builds to fail (PR32414). This issue was fixed in r299017. Second, the patch
introduced a bug in the vectorizer's scalars analysis that caused test suite
builds to fail on SystemZ. The scalars analysis was too aggressive and marked a
memory instruction scalar, even though it was going to be vectorized. This
issue has been fixed in the current patch and several new test cases for the
scalars analysis have been added.
llvm-svn: 299770
We have two cases here, the first one being the following instruction
selection from the builtin function:
bm(n)zi builtin -> vselect node -> bins[lr]i machine instruction
In case of bm(n)zi having an immediate which has either its high or low bits
set, a bins[lr] instruction can be selected through the selectVSplatMask[LR]
function. The function counts the number of bits set, and that value is
being passed to the bins[lr]i instruction as its immediate, which in turn
copies immediate modulo the size of the element in bits plus 1 as per specs,
where we get the off-by-one-error.
The other case is:
bins[lr]i -> vselect node -> bsel.v
In this case, a bsel.v instruction gets selected with a mask having one bit
less set than required.
Patch by Stefan Maksimovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30579
llvm-svn: 299768
- corrected DS_GWS_* opcodes (see VI_Shader_Programming#16.pdf for detailed description)
- address operand is not used
- several opcodes have data operand
- all opcodes have offset modifier
- DS_AND_SRC2_B32: corrected typo in mnemo
- DS_WRAP_RTN_F32 replaced with DS_WRAP_RTN_B32
- added CI/VI opcodes:
- DS_CONDXCHG32_RTN_B64
- DS_GWS_SEMA_RELEASE_ALL
- added VI opcodes:
- DS_CONSUME
- DS_APPEND
- DS_ORDERED_COUNT
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31707
llvm-svn: 299767
By target hookifying getRegisterType, getNumRegisters, getVectorBreakdown,
backends can request that LLVM to scalarize vector types for calls
and returns.
The MIPS vector ABI requires that vector arguments and returns are passed in
integer registers. With SelectionDAG's new hooks, the MIPS backend can now
handle LLVM-IR with vector types in calls and returns. E.g.
'call @foo(<4 x i32> %4)'.
Previously these cases would be scalarized for the MIPS O32/N32/N64 ABI for
calls and returns if vector types were not legal. If vector types were legal,
a single 128bit vector argument would be assigned to a single 32 bit / 64 bit
integer register.
By teaching the MIPS backend to inspect the original types, it can now
implement the MIPS vector ABI which requires a particular method of
scalarizing vectors.
Previously, the MIPS backend relied on clang to scalarize types such as "call
@foo(<4 x float> %a) into "call @foo(i32 inreg %1, i32 inreg %2, i32 inreg %3,
i32 inreg %4)".
This patch enables the MIPS backend to take either form for vector types.
Reviewers: zoran.jovanovic, jaydeep, vkalintiris, slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27845
llvm-svn: 299766
A test case was found with llvm-stress that caused DAGCombiner to crash
when compiling for an older subtarget without vector support.
SystemZTargetLowering::combineTruncateExtract() should do nothing for older
subtargets.
This check was placed in canTreatAsByteVector(), which also helps in a few
other places.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
llvm-svn: 299763
It turns out -float-abi=hard doesn't set the hard float calling
convention for libcalls. We need to use a hard float triple instead
(e.g. gnueabihf).
llvm-svn: 299761
Summary:
Difference beetween PreRegAlloc() and MachineSSAOptimization() are that the former is run despite of -O0 optimization level. In my undestanding SiShrinkInstructions and SDWAPeephole shouldn't run when optimizations are disabled.
With this change order of passes will not change.
Reviewers: arsenm, vpykhtin, rampitec
Subscribers: qcolombet, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31705
llvm-svn: 299757
Legalize to a libcall.
On this occasion, also start allowing soft float subtargets. For the
moment G_FREM is the only legal floating point operation for them.
llvm-svn: 299753
Summary:
getModRefInfo is meant to answer the question "what impact does this
instruction have on a given memory location" (not even another
instruction).
Long debate on this on IRC comes to the conclusion the answer should be "nothing special".
That is, a noalias volatile store does not affect a memory location
just by being volatile. Note: DSE and GVN and memdep currently
believe this, because memdep just goes behind AA's back after it says
"modref" right now.
see line 635 of memdep. Prior to this patch we would get modref there, then check aliasing,
and if it said noalias, we would continue.
getModRefInfo *already* has this same AA check, it just wasn't being used because volatile was
lumped in with ordering.
(I am separately testing whether this code in memdep is now dead except for the invariant load case)
Reviewers: jyknight, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31726
llvm-svn: 299741
Previously when dumping class definitions, there were only
two modes - on or off. But it's useful to sometimes get a
little more fine-grained. For example, you might only want
to see the record layout (for example to look for extraneous
padding). This patch adds a third mode, layout mode, which
does exactly that. Only this-relative data members are
displayed in this mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31794
llvm-svn: 299733
The new codepath has been in the tree for years, and there isn't any
reason to use two codepaths here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30596
llvm-svn: 299723
This is possible in ways that are not compiler bugs,
so stop asserting on them.
This emits an extra error when emitting objects when it
can't encode the new pseudo, but I'm not sure that matters.
llvm-svn: 299712
Summary:
Particularly, with --delete, this can be very useful for testing
new optimizations on some hotspots, without having to run it on the whole
application. E.g. as such:
```
llvm-extract app.bc --recursive --rfunc .*hotspot.* > hotspot.bc
llvm-extract app.bc --recursive --delete --rfunc .*hotspot.* > residual.bc
llc -filetype=obj residual.bc > residual.o
llc -filetype=obj hotspot.bc > hotspot.o
cc -o app residual.o hotspot.o
```
Reviewed By: davide
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31722
llvm-svn: 299706
In LowerMUL, the chain information is not preserved for the new
created Load SDNode.
For example, if a Store alias with one of the operand of Mul.
The Load for that operand need to be scheduled before the Store.
The dependence is recorded in the chain of Store, in TokenFactor.
However, when lowering MUL, the SDNodes for the new Loads for
VMULL are not updated in the TokenFactor for the Store. Thus the
chain is not preserved for the lowered VMULL.
llvm-svn: 299701
Use a combination of !associated, comdat, @llvm.compiler.used and
custom sections to allow dead stripping of globals and their asan
metadata. Sometimes.
Currently this works on LLD, which supports SHF_LINK_ORDER with
sh_link pointing to the associated section.
This also works on BFD, which seems to treat comdats as
all-or-nothing with respect to linker GC. There is a weird quirk
where the "first" global in each link is never GC-ed because of the
section symbols.
At this moment it does not work on Gold (as in the globals are never
stripped).
This is a re-land of r298158 rebased on D31358. This time,
asan.module_ctor is put in a comdat as well to avoid quadratic
behavior in Gold.
llvm-svn: 299697
When possible, put ASan ctor/dtor in comdat.
The only reason not to is global registration, which can be
TU-specific. This is not the case when there are no instrumented
globals. This is also limited to ELF targets, because MachO does
not have comdat, and COFF linkers may GC comdat constructors.
The benefit of this is a lot less __asan_init() calls: one per DSO
instead of one per TU. It's also necessary for the upcoming
gc-sections-for-globals change on Linux, where multiple references to
section start symbols trigger quadratic behaviour in gold linker.
This is a rebase of r298756.
llvm-svn: 299696
Create the constructor in the module pass.
This in needed for the GC-friendly globals change, where the constructor can be
put in a comdat in some cases, but we don't know about that in the function
pass.
This is a rebase of r298731 which was reverted due to a false alarm.
llvm-svn: 299695
Summary:
Prior to this while it would delete the dead DIGlobalVariables, it would
leave dead DICompileUnits and everything referenced therefrom. For a bit
bitcode file with thousands of compile units those dead nodes easily
outnumbered the real ones. Clean that up.
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31720
llvm-svn: 299692
memorydefs, not just stores. Along the way, we audit and fixup issues
about how we were tracking memory leaders, and improve the verifier
to notice more memory congruency issues.
llvm-svn: 299682
Summary:
Host CPU detection now supports Kryo, so we need to recognize it in ARM
target.
Reviewers: mcrosier, t.p.northover, rengolin, echristo, srhines
Reviewed By: t.p.northover, echristo
Subscribers: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31775
llvm-svn: 299674
If a workgroup size is known to be not greater than wavefront size
the s_barrier instruction is not needed since all threads are guarantied
to come to the same point at the same time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31731
llvm-svn: 299659
During the optimisation of jump tables in the constant island pass,
an extra ADD could be left over, now dead but not removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31389
llvm-svn: 299634
Summary:
LSV wants to know the maximum size that can be loaded to a vector register.
On X86, this always matches the maximum register width. Implement this
accordingly and add a test to make sure that LSV can vectorize up to the
maximum permissible width on X86.
Reviewers: delena, arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31504
llvm-svn: 299589
This is a follow-on to r299096 which added support for fmadd.
Subtract does not have the case where with two multiply operands we commute in
order to fuse with the multiply with the fewer uses.
llvm-svn: 299572
Commit r298799 changed code that made the XFAIL on MachineBranchProb.ll
irrelevant, but some configurations still failed. I can't reproduce it
locally, so I'm hoping that enabling this will tell me if some
configurations will really fail or if they were just too slow.
llvm-svn: 299558
This test case depends on the loop being vectorized without forcing the
vectorization factor. If the profitability ever changes in the future (due to
cost model improvements), the test may no longer work as intended. Instead of
checking the resulting IR, we should just check the instruction costs. The
costs will be computed regardless if vectorization is profitable.
llvm-svn: 299545
This is a generic combine enabled via target hook to reduce icmp logic as discussed in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32401
It's likely that other targets will want to enable this hook for scalar transforms,
and there are probably other patterns that can use bitwise logic to reduce comparisons.
Note that we are missing an IR canonicalization for these patterns, and we will probably
prefer the pair-of-compares form in IR (shorter, more likely to fold).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31483
llvm-svn: 299542
When DAGCombiner visits a SIGN_EXTEND_INREG of a BUILD_VECTOR with
constant operands, a new BUILD_VECTOR node will be created transformed
constants.
Llvm-stress found a case where the new BUILD_VECTOR had constant operands
of an illegal type, because the (legal) element type is in fact not a legal
scalar type.
This patch changes this so that the new BUILD_VECTOR has the same operand
type as the old one.
Review: Eli Friedman, Nirav Dave
https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=32422
llvm-svn: 299540
Summary:
Temporaries are now allocated to operands instead of predicates and this
allocation is used to correctly pair up the rendered operands with the
matched operands.
Previously, ComplexPatterns were allocated temporaries independently in the
Src Pattern and Dst Pattern, leading to mismatches. Additionally, the Dst
Pattern failed to account for the allocated index and therefore always used
temporary 0, 1, ... when it should have used base+0, base+1, ...
Thanks to Aditya Nandakumar for noticing the bug.
Depends on D30539
Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: igorb, dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31054
llvm-svn: 299538
A number of backends (AArch64, MIPS, ARM) have been using
MCContext::reportError to report issues such as out-of-range fixup values in
their TgtAsmBackend. This is great, but because MCContext couldn't easily be
threaded through to the adjustFixupValue helper function from its usual
callsite (applyFixup), these backends ended up adding an MCContext* argument
and adding another call to applyFixup to processFixupValue. Adding an
MCContext parameter to applyFixup makes this unnecessary, and even better -
applyFixup can take a reference to MCContext rather than a potentially null
pointer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30264
llvm-svn: 299529
This is a latent bug that's been hanging around for a while. For a loop-invariant
pointer, expandBounds would return the range {Ptr, Ptr}, but this was interpreted
as a half-open range, not a closed range. So we ended up planting incorrect
bounds checks. Even worse, they were tautological, so we ended up incorrectly
executing the optimized loop.
llvm-svn: 299526
Fix a bug in ARC contract pass where an iterator that pointed to a
deleted instruction was dereferenced.
It appears that tryToContractReleaseIntoStoreStrong was incorrectly
assuming that a call to objc_retain would not immediately follow a call
to objc_release.
rdar://problem/25276306
llvm-svn: 299507
Before r294774, there was a problem when lowering broadcasts to use
128-bit subvectors.
When we looked through a bitcast to find the broadcast input, we'd keep
using the original type, so you'd end up with things like:
(v8f32 (broadcast
(v4f32 (extract_subvector
(v8i32 V),
...))
))
r294774 fixed it to always emit subvectors with the scalar type of the
original source.
It also introduced some asserts, to check that we use scalars with
the same size, and vectors with the same number of elements.
The scalar size equality is checked earlier when looking through bitcasts,
and is a useful assert.
However, the number of elements don't have to be identical: we're always
going to extract a 128-bit subvector, and we can have different size
inputs if we looked through a concat_vector to find a 256-bit source.
Relax the overzealous assert.
Replace it with a check of the original source vector being 256 or 512
bits. If it's 128 bits, we can't extract_subvector from it.
Fixes PR32371.
llvm-svn: 299490
Set correct default flags and section type based on its name for .text,
.data, .bss, .init_array, .fini_array, .preinit_array, .tdata, and .tbss
and support section name suffixes for .data.*, .rodata.*, .text.*,
.bss.*, .tdata.* and .tbss.* which matches the behavior of GAS.
Fixes PR31888.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30229
llvm-svn: 299484
This improves upon r246462: that prevented FMOVs from being emitted
for the cross-class INSERT_SUBREGs by disabling the formation of
INSERT_SUBREGs of LOAD. But the ld1.s that we started selecting
caused us to introduce partial dependencies on the vector register.
Avoid that by using SCALAR_TO_VECTOR: it's a first-class citizen that
is folded away by many patterns, including the scalar LDRS that we
want in this case.
Credit goes to Adam for finding the issue!
llvm-svn: 299482
Currently we only fold with ConstantInt RHS. This generalizes to any Constant RHS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31610
llvm-svn: 299466
This mode is just like -mcmodel=small except that it moves the
thread pointer from TPIDR_EL0 to TPIDR_EL1.
Patch by Roland McGrath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31624
llvm-svn: 299462
This patch optimizes two memory intrinsic operations: memset and memcpy based
on the profiled size of the operation. The high level transformation is like:
mem_op(..., size)
==>
switch (size) {
case s1:
mem_op(..., s1);
goto merge_bb;
case s2:
mem_op(..., s2);
goto merge_bb;
...
default:
mem_op(..., size);
goto merge_bb;
}
merge_bb:
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D28966
llvm-svn: 299446