I want to use the same logic as LoopSimplify to form dedicated exits in
another pass (SimpleLoopUnswitch) so I wanted to factor it out here.
I also noticed that there is a pretty significantly more efficient way
to implement this than the way the code in LoopSimplify worked. We don't
need to actually retain the set of unique exit blocks, we can just
rewrite them as we find them and use only a set to deduplicate.
This did require changing one part of LoopSimplify to not re-use the
unique set of exits, but it only used it to check that there was
a single unique exit. That part of the code is about to walk the exiting
blocks anyways, so it seemed better to rewrite it to use those exiting
blocks to compute this property on-demand.
I also had to ditch a statistic, but it doesn't seem terribly valuable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34049
llvm-svn: 306081
Summary:
This allows strlen to be moved out of the loop in case its argument is
not modified in the loop in LICM.
Reviewers: hfinkel, davide, sanjoy, dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34323
llvm-svn: 305641
This is a fix for PR33292 that shows a case of extremely long compilation
of a single .c file with clang, with most time spent within SCEV.
We have a mechanism of limiting recursion depth for getAddExpr to avoid
long analysis in SCEV. However, there are calls from getAddExpr to getMulExpr
and back that do not propagate the info about depth. As result of this, a chain
getAddExpr -> ... .> getAddExpr -> getMulExpr -> getAddExpr -> ... -> getAddExpr
can be extremely long, with every segment of getAddExpr's being up to max depth long.
This leads either to long compilation or crash by stack overflow. We face this situation while
analyzing big SCEVs in the test of PR33292.
This patch applies the same limit on max expression depth for getAddExpr and getMulExpr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33984
llvm-svn: 305463
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.
I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.
This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.
Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).
llvm-svn: 304787
Summary:
This problem stems from the fact that instructions are allocated using new
in LLVM, i.e. there is no relationship that can be derived by just looking
at the pointer value.
This interface dispatches to appropriate dominance check given 2 instructions,
i.e. in case the instructions are in the same basic block, ordered basicblock
(with instruction numbering and caching) are used. Otherwise, dominator tree
is used.
This is a preparation patch for https://reviews.llvm.org/D32720
Reviewers: dberlin, hfinkel, davide
Subscribers: davide, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33380
llvm-svn: 304764
This was rL304226, reverted in 304228 due to a clang assertion failure
on the build bots. That problem should have been addressed by clang
commit rL304470.
llvm-svn: 304488
Summary:
Sort OpsToRename before iterating to make iteration order deterministic.
Thanks to Daniel Berlin for the sorting logic.
Reviewers: dberlin, RKSimon, efriedma, davide
Reviewed By: dberlin, davide
Subscribers: sanjoy, davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33265
llvm-svn: 304447
This patch does an inline expansion of memcmp.
It changes the memcmp library call into an inline expansion when the size is
known at compile time and is under a target specified threshold.
This expansion is implemented in CodeGenPrepare and expands into straight line
code. The target specifies a maximum load size and the expansion works by using
this size to load the two sources, compare, and exit early if a difference is
found. It also has a special case when the memcmp result is used in a compare
to zero equality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28637
llvm-svn: 304313
Summary:
In rL302576, DISubprograms gained the constraint that a !dbg attachments to functions must
have a 1:1 mapping to DISubprograms. As part of that change, the function cloning support
was adjusted to attempt to enforce this invariant during cloning. However, there
were several problems with the implementation. Part of these were fixed in rL304079.
However, there was a more fundamental problem with these changes, namely that it
bypasses the matadata value map, causing the cloned metadata to be a mix of metadata
pointing to the new suprogram (where manual code was added to fix those up) and the
old suprogram (where this was not the case). This mismatch could cause a number of
different assertion failures in the DWARF emitter. Some of these are given at
https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/22069, but some others have been observed
as well. Attempt to rectify this by partially reverting the manual DI metadata fixup,
and instead using the standard value map approach. To retain the desired semantics
of not duplicating the compilation unit and inlined subprograms, explicitly freeze
these in the value map.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, GorNishanov, echristo
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33655
llvm-svn: 304226
Summary:
I believe https://reviews.llvm.org/rL302576 introduced two bugs:
1) it produces duplicate distinct variables for every: dbg.value describing the same variable.
To fix the problme I switched form getDistinct() to get() in DebugLoc.cpp: auto reparentVar = [&](DILocalVariable *Var) {
return DILocalVariable::getDistinct(
2) It passes NewFunction plain name as a linkagename parameter to Subprogram constructor. Breaks assert in:
|| DeclLinkageName.empty()) || LinkageName == DeclLinkageName) && "decl has a linkage name and it is different"' failed.
#9 0x00007f5010261b75 llvm::DwarfUnit::applySubprogramDefinitionAttributes(llvm::DISubprogram const*, llvm::DIE&) /home/gor/llvm/lib/CodeGen/AsmPrinter/DwarfUnit.cpp:1173:3
#
(Edit: reproducer added)
Here how https://reviews.llvm.org/rL302576 broke coroutine debug info.
Coroutine body of the original function is split into several parts by cloning and removing unneeded code.
All parts describe the original function and variables present in the original function.
For a simple case, prior to Split, original function has these two blocks:
```
PostSpill: ; preds = %AllocaSpillBB
call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %x, i64 0, metadata !14, metadata !15), !dbg !13
store i32 %x, i32* %x.addr, align 4
...
and
sw.epilog: ; preds = %sw.bb
%x.addr.reload.addr = getelementptr inbounds %f.Frame, %f.Frame* %FramePtr, i32 0, i32 4, !dbg !20
%4 = load i32, i32* %x.addr.reload.addr, align 4, !dbg !20
call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %4, i64 0, metadata !14, metadata !15), !dbg !13!14 = !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !6, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
```
Note that in two blocks different expression represent the same original user variable X.
Before rL302576, for every cloned function there was exactly one cloned DILocalVariable(name: "x" as in:
```
define i8* @f(i32 %x) #0 !dbg !6 {
...
!6 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped,
...
!14 = !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !6, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
define internal fastcc void @f.resume(%f.Frame* %FramePtr) #0 !dbg !25 {
...
!25 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped, isOptimized: false, unit: !0, variables: !2)
!28 = !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !25, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
```
After rL302576, for every cloned function there were as many DILocalVariable(name: "x" as there were "call void @llvm.dbg.value" for that variable.
This was causing asserts in VerifyDebugInfo and AssemblyPrinter.
Example:
```
!27 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", linkageName: "f.resume", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55,
!29 = distinct !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !27, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
!39 = distinct !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !27, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
!41 = distinct !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !27, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
```
Second problem:
Prior to rL302576, all clones were described by DISubprogram referring to original function.
```
define i8* @f(i32 %x) #0 !dbg !6 {
...
!6 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped,
define internal fastcc void @f.resume(%f.Frame* %FramePtr) #0 !dbg !25 {
...
!25 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped,
```
After rL302576, DISubprogram for clones is of two minds, plain name refers to the original name, linkageName refers to plain name of the clone.
```
!27 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", linkageName: "f.resume", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55,
```
I think the assumption in AsmPrinter is that both name and linkageName should refer to the same entity. It asserts here when they are not:
```
|| DeclLinkageName.empty()) || LinkageName == DeclLinkageName) && "decl has a linkage name and it is different"' failed.
#9 0x00007f5010261b75 llvm::DwarfUnit::applySubprogramDefinitionAttributes(llvm::DISubprogram const*, llvm::DIE&) /home/gor/llvm/lib/CodeGen/AsmPrinter/DwarfUnit.cpp:1173:3
```
After this fix, behavior (with respect to coroutines) reverts to exactly as it was before and therefore making them debuggable again, or even more importantly, compilable, with "-g"
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo, aprantl
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33614
llvm-svn: 304079
This patch provides an initial prototype for a pass that sinks instructions based on GVN information, similar to GVNHoist. It is not yet ready for commiting but I've uploaded it to gather some initial thoughts.
This pass attempts to sink instructions into successors, reducing static
instruction count and enabling if-conversion.
We use a variant of global value numbering to decide what can be sunk.
Consider:
[ %a1 = add i32 %b, 1 ] [ %c1 = add i32 %d, 1 ]
[ %a2 = xor i32 %a1, 1 ] [ %c2 = xor i32 %c1, 1 ]
\ /
[ %e = phi i32 %a2, %c2 ]
[ add i32 %e, 4 ]
GVN would number %a1 and %c1 differently because they compute different
results - the VN of an instruction is a function of its opcode and the
transitive closure of its operands. This is the key property for hoisting
and CSE.
What we want when sinking however is for a numbering that is a function of
the *uses* of an instruction, which allows us to answer the question "if I
replace %a1 with %c1, will it contribute in an equivalent way to all
successive instructions?". The (new) PostValueTable class in GVN provides this
mapping.
This pass has some shown really impressive improvements especially for codesize already on internal benchmarks, so I have high hopes it can replace all the sinking logic in SimplifyCFG.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24805
llvm-svn: 303850
This continues the changes started when computeSignBit was replaced with this new version of computeKnowBits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33431
llvm-svn: 303773
Summary:
Before this change, AttributeLists stored a pair of index and
AttributeSet. This is memory efficient if most arguments do not have
attributes. However, it requires doing a search over the pairs to test
an argument or function attribute. Profiling shows that this loop was
0.76% of the time in 'opt -O2' of sqlite3.c, because LLVM constantly
tests values for nullability.
This was worth about 2.5% of mid-level optimization cycles on the
sqlite3 amalgamation. Here are the full perf results:
https://reviews.llvm.org/P7995
Here are just the before and after cycle counts:
```
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_before -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
13,274,181,184 cycles # 3.047 GHz ( +- 0.28% )
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_after -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
12,906,927,263 cycles # 3.043 GHz ( +- 0.51% )
```
This patch *does not* change the indices used to query attributes, as
requested by reviewers. Tracking whether an index is usable for array
indexing is a huge pain that affects many of the internal APIs, so it
would be good to come back later and do a cleanup to remove this
internal adjustment.
Reviewers: pete, chandlerc
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32819
llvm-svn: 303654
This patch builds over https://reviews.llvm.org/rL303349 and replaces
the use of the condition only if it is safe to do so.
We should not blindly RAUW the condition if experimental.guard or assume
is a use of that
condition. This is because LVI may have used the guard/assume to
identify the
value of the condition, and RUAWing will fold the guard/assume and uses
before the guards/assumes.
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames, trentxintong, mkazantsev
Reviewed by: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33257
llvm-svn: 303633
Summary:
With instrumentation profiling, when updating the VP metadata after
an inline, VP metadata on the inlined copy was inadvertantly having
all counts zeroed out. This was causing indirect calls from code inlined
during the call step to be marked as cold in the ThinLTO summaries and
not imported.
The CallerBFI needs to be passed down so that the CallSiteCount can be
computed from the profile summary info. With Sample PGO this was working
since the count is extracted from the branch weight metadata on the
call being inlined (even before we stopped looking at metadata for
non-sample PGO in r302844 this largely wasn't working for instrumentation
PGO since only promoted indirect calls would be getting inlined and have
the metadata).
Added an instrumentation PGO test and renamed the sample PGO test.
Reviewers: danielcdh, eraman
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33389
llvm-svn: 303574
Summary: This allows pthread_self to be pulled out of a loop by LICM.
Reviewers: hfinkel, arsenm, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: davide, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32782
llvm-svn: 303495
Refactor the strlen optimization code to work for both strlen and wcslen.
This especially helps with programs in the wild where people pass
L"string"s to const std::wstring& function parameters and the wstring
constructor gets inlined.
This also fixes a lingerind API problem/bug in getConstantStringInfo()
where zeroinitializers would always give you an empty string (without a
length) back regardless of the actual length of the initializer which
did not work well in the TrimAtNul==false causing the PR mentioned
below.
Note that the fixed getConstantStringInfo() needed fixes to SelectionDAG
memcpy lowering and may lead to some cases for out-of-bounds
zeroinitializer accesses not getting optimized anymore. So some code
with UB may produce out of bound memory reads now instead of just
producing zeros.
The refactoring "accidentally" fixes http://llvm.org/PR32124
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32839
llvm-svn: 303461
Summary:
Implements PR889
Removing the virtual table pointer from Value saves 1% of RSS when doing
LTO of llc on Linux. The impact on time was positive, but too noisy to
conclusively say that performance improved. Here is a link to the
spreadsheet with the original data:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1F4FHir0qYnV0MEp2sYYp_BuvnJgWlWPhWOwZ6LbW7W4/edit?usp=sharing
This change makes it invalid to directly delete a Value, User, or
Instruction pointer. Instead, such code can be rewritten to a null check
and a call Value::deleteValue(). Value objects tend to have their
lifetimes managed through iplist, so for the most part, this isn't a big
deal. However, there are some places where LLVM deletes values, and
those places had to be migrated to deleteValue. I have also created
llvm::unique_value, which has a custom deleter, so it can be used in
place of std::unique_ptr<Value>.
I had to add the "DerivedUser" Deleter escape hatch for MemorySSA, which
derives from User outside of lib/IR. Code in IR cannot include MemorySSA
headers or call the MemoryAccess object destructors without introducing
a circular dependency, so we need some level of indirection.
Unfortunately, no class derived from User may have any virtual methods,
because adding a virtual method would break User::getHungOffOperands(),
which assumes that it can find the use list immediately prior to the
User object. I've added a static_assert to the appropriate OperandTraits
templates to help people avoid this trap.
Reviewers: chandlerc, mehdi_amini, pete, dberlin, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: krytarowski, eraman, george.burgess.iv, mzolotukhin, Prazek, nlewycky, hans, inglorion, pcc, tejohnson, dberlin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31261
llvm-svn: 303362
There's no need (& a bit incorrect) to mask off the high bits of the
register reference when describing a simple bool value.
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31062
llvm-svn: 303117
This patch adds min/max population count, leading/trailing zero/one bit counting methods.
The min methods return answers based on bits that are known without considering unknown bits. The max methods give answers taking into account the largest count that unknown bits could give.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32931
llvm-svn: 302925
This pass uses a new target hook to decide whether or not to expand a particular
intrinsic to the shuffevector sequence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32245
llvm-svn: 302631
This change is required because the notion of count is different for
sample profiling and getProfileCount will need to determine the
underlying profile type.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33012
llvm-svn: 302597
Summary:
This fixes the immediate crash caused by introducing an incorrect inttoptr
before attempting the conversion. There may still be a legality
check missing somewhere earlier for non-integral pointers, but this change
seems necessary in any case.
Reviewers: sanjoy, dberlin
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32623
llvm-svn: 302587
As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
general-purpose utility in DILocation.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
<rdar://problem/31926379>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
This reapplies r302469 with a fix for a bot failure (reparentDebugInfo
now checks for the case the orig and new function are identical).
llvm-svn: 302576
Summary:
Since I will post patch with some changes to
replaceDominatedUsesWith, it would be good to avoid
duplicating code again.
Reviewers: davide, dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32798
llvm-svn: 302575
Use variadic templates instead of relying on <cstdarg> + sentinel.
This enforces better type checking and makes code more readable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32541
llvm-svn: 302571
This caused PR32977.
Original commit message:
> Make it illegal for two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram
>
> As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
> two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
> FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
> to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
> out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
> general-purpose utility in DILocation.
>
> [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
> <rdar://problem/31926379>
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
llvm-svn: 302533
- This change allows targets to opt-in to using them instead of the log2
shufflevector algorithm.
- The SLP and Loop vectorizers have the common code to do shuffle reductions
factored out into LoopUtils, and now have a unified interface for generating
reductions regardless of the preference of the target. LoopUtils now uses TTI
to determine what kind of reductions the target wants to handle.
- For CodeGen, basic legalization support is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30086
llvm-svn: 302514
As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
general-purpose utility in DILocation.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
<rdar://problem/31926379>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
llvm-svn: 302469
Previously SimplifyCFG used getSetSize which returns an APInt that is 1 bit wider than the ConstantRange's bit width. In the reasonably common case that the ConstantRange is 64-bits wide, this requires returning a 65-bit APInt. APInt's can only store 64-bits without a memory allocation so this is inefficient.
The new method takes the 8 as an input and tells if the range contains more than that many elements without requiring any wider math.
llvm-svn: 302385
wcslen is part of the C99 and C++98 standards.
- This introduces the function to TargetLibraryInfo.
- Also set attributes for wcslen in llvm::inferLibFuncAttributes().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32837
llvm-svn: 302278
Summary:
Do three things to help with that:
- Add AttributeList::FirstArgIndex, which is an enumerator currently set
to 1. It allows us to change the indexing scheme with fewer changes.
- Add addParamAttr/removeParamAttr. This just shortens addAttribute call
sites that would otherwise need to spell out FirstArgIndex.
- Remove some attribute-specific getters and setters from Function that
take attribute list indices. Most of these were only used from
BuildLibCalls, and doesNotAlias was only used to test or set if the
return value is malloc-like.
I'm happy to split the patch, but I think they are probably easier to
review when taken together.
This patch should be NFC, but it sets the stage to change the indexing
scheme to this, which is more convenient when indexing into an array:
0: func attrs
1: retattrs
2...: arg attrs
Reviewers: chandlerc, pete, javed.absar
Subscribers: david2050, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32811
llvm-svn: 302060
Summary:
Cloning basic blocks in the loop for runtime loop unroller depends on loop being
in rotated form (i.e. loop latch target is the exit block).
Assert that this is true, so that callers of runtime loop unroller pass in
canonical loops.
The single caller of this function has that check recently added:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL301239
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32801
llvm-svn: 302058
The method is called "get *Param* Alignment", and is only used for
return values exactly once, so it should take argument indices, not
attribute indices.
Avoids confusing code like:
IsSwiftError = CS->paramHasAttr(ArgIdx, Attribute::SwiftError);
Alignment = CS->getParamAlignment(ArgIdx + 1);
Add getRetAlignment to handle the one case in Value.cpp that wants the
return value alignment.
This is a potentially breaking change for out-of-tree backends that do
their own call lowering.
llvm-svn: 301682
This is a follow up to the fix in r298360 to improve the handling of debug
values when redundant LEAs are removed. The fix in r298360 effectively
discarded the debug values. This patch now attempts to preserve the debug
values by using the DWARF DW_OP_stack_value operation via prependDIExpr.
Moved functions appendOffset and prependDIExpr from Local.cpp to
DebugInfoMetadata.cpp and made them available as static member functions of
DIExpression.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31604
llvm-svn: 301630
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 second re-land of r298158. This time, this feature is
limited to -fdata-sections builds.
llvm-svn: 301587
This patch introduces a new KnownBits struct that wraps the two APInt used by computeKnownBits. This allows us to treat them as more of a unit.
Initially I've just altered the signatures of computeKnownBits and InstCombine's simplifyDemandedBits to pass a KnownBits reference instead of two separate APInt references. I'll do similar to the SelectionDAG version of computeKnownBits/simplifyDemandedBits as a separate patch.
I've added a constructor that allows initializing both APInts to the same bit width with a starting value of 0. This reduces the repeated pattern of initializing both APInts. Once place default constructed the APInts so I added a default constructor for those cases.
Going forward I would like to add more methods that will work on the pairs. For example trunc, zext, and sext occur on both APInts together in several places. We should probably add a clear method that can be used to clear both pieces. Maybe a method to check for conflicting information. A method to return (Zero|One) so we don't write it out everywhere. Maybe a method for (Zero|One).isAllOnesValue() to determine if all bits are known. I'm sure there are many other methods we can come up with.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32376
llvm-svn: 301432
Commits were:
"Use WeakVH instead of WeakTrackingVH in AliasSetTracker's UnkownInsts"
"Add a new WeakVH value handle; NFC"
"Rename WeakVH to WeakTrackingVH; NFC"
The changes assumed pointers are 8 byte aligned on all architectures.
llvm-svn: 301429
Summary:
I plan to use WeakVH to mean "nulls itself out on deletion, but does
not track RAUW" in a subsequent commit.
Reviewers: dblaikie, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: arsenm, mehdi_amini, mcrosier, mzolotukhin, jfb, llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32266
llvm-svn: 301424
This patch uses various APInt methods to reduce temporary APInt creation.
This should be all of the unrelated cleanups that got buried in D32376(creating a KnownBits struct) as well as some pointed out by Simon during the review of that. Plus a few improvements to use counting instead of masking.
I've left out any places where we do something like (KnownZero & KnownOne) != 0 as I plan to add a helper method to KnownBits to ask that question and didn't want to thrash that code an additional time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32495
llvm-svn: 301338
One of the fast-math optimizations is to replace calls to standard double
functions with their float equivalents, e.g. exp -> expf. However, this can
cause infinite loops for the following:
float expf(float val) { return (float) exp((double) val); }
A similar inline declaration exists in the MinGW-w64 math.h header file which
when compiled with -O2/3 and fast-math generates infinite loops.
So this fix checks that the calling function to the standard double function
that is being replaced does not match the float equivalent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31806
llvm-svn: 301304
The current Loop Unroll implementation works with loops having a
single latch that contains a conditional branch to a block outside
the loop (the other successor is, by defition of latch, the header).
If this precondition doesn't hold, avoid unrolling the loop as
the code is not ready to handle such circumstances.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32261
llvm-svn: 301239
When the location description of a source variable involves arithmetic
on the value itself, it needs to be marked with DW_OP_stack_value since it
is not describing the variable's location, but rather its value.
This is a follow-up to r297971 and fixes the source testcase quoted in
the comment in debuginfo-dce.ll.
rdar://problem/30725338
This reapplies r301093 without modifications.
llvm-svn: 301210
Summary:
Instead of keeping a variable indicating whether there are early exits
in the loop. We keep all the early exits. This improves LICM's ability to
move instructions out of the loop based on is-guaranteed-to-execute.
I am going to update compilation time as well soon.
Reviewers: hfinkel, sanjoy, efriedma, mkuper
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32433
llvm-svn: 301196
When the location description of a source variable involves arithmetic
on the value itself, it needs to be marked with DW_OP_stack_value since it
is not describing the variable's location, but rather its value.
This is a follow-up to r297971 and fixes the source testcase quoted in
the comment in debuginfo-dce.ll.
rdar://problem/30725338
llvm-svn: 301093
Currently we choose PostBB as the single successor of QFB, but its possible that QTB's single successor is QFB which would make QFB the correct choice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32323
llvm-svn: 300992
CodeExtractor looks up the dominator node corresponding to return blocks
when splitting them. If one of these blocks is unreachable, there's no
node in the Dom and CodeExtractor crashes because it doesn't check
for domtree node validity.
In theory, we could add just a check for skipping null DTNodes in
`splitReturnBlock` but the fix I propose here is slightly different. To the
best of my knowledge, unreachable blocks are irrelevant for the algorithm,
therefore we can just skip them when building the candidate set in the
constructor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32335
llvm-svn: 300946
getSignBit is a static function that creates an APInt with only the sign bit set. getSignMask seems like a better name to convey its functionality. In fact several places use it and then store in an APInt named SignMask.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32108
llvm-svn: 300856
Summary:
See http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#non-integral-pointer-type
The NewGVN test does not fail without these changes (perhaps it does
try to coerce pointers <-> integers to begin with?), but I added the
test case anyway.
Reviewers: dberlin
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits, Prazek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32208
llvm-svn: 300730
The DWARF specification knows 3 kinds of non-empty simple location
descriptions:
1. Register location descriptions
- describe a variable in a register
- consist of only a DW_OP_reg
2. Memory location descriptions
- describe the address of a variable
3. Implicit location descriptions
- describe the value of a variable
- end with DW_OP_stack_value & friends
The existing DwarfExpression code is pretty much ignorant of these
restrictions. This used to not matter because we only emitted very
short expressions that we happened to get right by accident. This
patch makes DwarfExpression aware of the rules defined by the DWARF
standard and now chooses the right kind of location description for
each expression being emitted.
This would have been an NFC commit (for the existing testsuite) if not
for the way that clang describes captured block variables. Based on
how the previous code in LLVM emitted locations, DW_OP_deref
operations that should have come at the end of the expression are put
at its beginning. Fixing this means changing the semantics of
DIExpression, so this patch bumps the version number of DIExpression
and implements a bitcode upgrade.
There are two major changes in this patch:
I had to fix the semantics of dbg.declare for describing function
arguments. After this patch a dbg.declare always takes the *address*
of a variable as the first argument, even if the argument is not an
alloca.
When lowering a DBG_VALUE, the decision of whether to emit a register
location description or a memory location description depends on the
MachineLocation — register machine locations may get promoted to
memory locations based on their DIExpression. (Future) optimization
passes that want to salvage implicit debug location for variables may
do so by appending a DW_OP_stack_value. For example:
DBG_VALUE, [RBP-8] --> DW_OP_fbreg -8
DBG_VALUE, RAX --> DW_OP_reg0 +0
DBG_VALUE, RAX, DIExpression(DW_OP_deref) --> DW_OP_reg0 +0
All testcases that were modified were regenerated from clang. I also
added source-based testcases for each of these to the debuginfo-tests
repository over the last week to make sure that no synchronized bugs
slip in. The debuginfo-tests compile from source and run the debugger.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32382
<rdar://problem/31205000>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31439
llvm-svn: 300522
The use list is a linked list so getNumUses requires a linear scan through the whole list. hasNUses will stop scanning at N and see if that is the end.
llvm-svn: 300505
This patch is a generalization of the improvement introduced in rL296898.
Previously, we were able to peel one iteration of a loop to get rid of a Phi that becomes
an invariant on the 2nd iteration. In more general case, if a Phi becomes invariant after
N iterations, we can peel N times and turn it into invariant.
In order to do this, we for every Phi in loop's header we define the Invariant Depth value
which is calculated as follows:
Given %x = phi <Inputs from above the loop>, ..., [%y, %back.edge].
If %y is a loop invariant, then Depth(%x) = 1.
If %y is a Phi from the loop header, Depth(%x) = Depth(%y) + 1.
Otherwise, Depth(%x) is infinite.
Notice that if we peel a loop, all Phis with Depth = 1 become invariants,
and all other Phis with finite depth decrease the depth by 1.
Thus, peeling N first iterations allows us to turn all Phis with Depth <= N
into invariants.
Reviewers: reames, apilipenko, mkuper, skatkov, anna, sanjoy
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31613
llvm-svn: 300446
When peeling loops basing on phis becoming invariants, we make a wrong loop size check.
UP.Threshold should be compared against the total numbers of instructions after the transformation,
which is equal to 2 * LoopSize in case of peeling one iteration.
We should also check that the maximum allowed number of peeled iterations is not zero.
Reviewers: sanjoy, anna, reames, mkuper
Reviewed By: mkuper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31753
llvm-svn: 300441
Add hasParamAttribute() and use it instead of hasAttribute(ArgNo+1,
Kind) everywhere.
The fact that the AttributeList index for an argument is ArgNo+1 should
be a hidden implementation detail.
NFC
llvm-svn: 300272
For LCSSA purposes, loop BBs not dominating any of the exits aren't
interesting, as none of the values defined in these blocks can be
used outside the loop.
The way the code computed this information was by comparing each
BB of the loop with each of the exit blocks and ask the dominator tree
about their dominance relation. This is slow.
A more efficient way, implemented here, is that of starting from the
exit blocks and walking the dom upwards until we hit an header. By
transitivity, all the blocks we encounter in our path dominate an exit.
For the testcase provided in PR31851, this reduces compile time on
`opt -O2` by ~25%, going from 1m47s to 1m22s.
Thanks to Dan/MichaelZ for discussions/suggesting the approach/review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31843
llvm-svn: 300255