These tests in particular try to use escaped square brackets as an
argument to grep, which is failing for me with native win32 python. It
appears the backslash is being lost near the CreateProcess*() call.
llvm-svn: 173506
(defined by the x32 ABI) mode, in which case its pointers are 32-bits
in size. This knowledge is also added to X86RegisterInfo that now
returns the appropriate registers in getPointerRegClass.
There are many outcomes to this change. In order to keep the patches
separate and manageable, we start by focusing on some simple testable
cases. The patch adds a test with passing a pointer to a function -
focusing on the difference between the two data models for x86-64.
Another test is added for handling of 'sret' arguments (and
functionality is added in X86ISelLowering to make it work).
A note on naming: the "x32 ABI" document refers to the AMD64
architecture (in LLVM it's distinguished by being is64Bits() in the
x86 subtarget) with two variations: the LP64 (default) data model, and
the ILP32 data model. This patch adds predicates to the subtarget
which are consistent with this naming scheme.
llvm-svn: 173503
The order in which operands appear in the encoded instruction is different
to order in which they appear in assembly. This changes the XCore backend to
use the instruction encoding order.
llvm-svn: 173493
politely report it instead of running into llvm_unreachable.
Also patch llvm-dwarfdump to actually check whether the file it's attempting to
dump is a valid object file.
llvm-svn: 173489
This warning fires on:
Operator::~Operator() {
llvm_unreachable("should never destroy an Operator");
}
That seems like a false positive. I don't see any good way to silence
the warning here, so I'm disabling it.
llvm-svn: 173455
Only for integers, pointers, and vectors of those. No floats.
Instrumentation seems very heavy, and may need to be replaced
with some approximation in the future.
llvm-svn: 173452
with an initial number of elements, instead of DenseMap, which has
zero initial elements, in order to avoid the copying of elements
when the size changes and to avoid allocating space every time
LegalizeTypes is run. This patch will not affect the memory footprint,
because DenseMap will increase the element size to 64
when the first element is added.
Patch by Wan Xiaofei.
llvm-svn: 173448
Maintain separate per-node and per-tree book-keeping.
Track all instructions above a DAG node including nested subtrees.
Seperately track instructions within a subtree.
Record subtree parents.
llvm-svn: 173426
loops over instructions in the basic block or the use-def list of the
value, neither of which are really efficient when repeatedly querying
about values in the same basic block.
What's more, we already know that the CondBB is small, and so we can do
a much more efficient test by counting the uses in CondBB, and seeing if
those account for all of the uses.
Finally, we shouldn't blanket fail on any such instruction, instead we
should conservatively assume that those instructions are part of the
cost.
Note that this actually fixes a bug in the pass because
isUsedInBasicBlock has a really terrible bug in it. I'll fix that in my
next commit, but the fix for it would make this code suddenly take the
compile time hit I thought it already was taking, so I wanted to go
ahead and migrate this code to a faster & better pattern.
The bug in isUsedInBasicBlock was also causing other tests to test the
wrong thing entirely: for example we weren't actually disabling
speculation for floating point operations as intended (and tested), but
the test passed because we failed to speculate them due to the
isUsedInBasicBlock failure.
llvm-svn: 173417
For sanity, create a root when NumDataSuccs >= 4. Splitting large
subtrees will no longer be detrimental after my next checkin to handle
nested tree. A magic number of 4 is fine because single subtrees
seldom rejoin more than this. It makes subtrees easier to visualize
and heuristics more sane.
llvm-svn: 173399
No functionality change intended.
This captures the first two cases GPR32/64. For the others, we need
an addition operator (if we have one, I've not yet found it).
Based on a suggestion made by Tom Stellard in the AArch64 review!
llvm-svn: 173366
Change messages to help identify which interpreter was actually selected (safe
vs testing).
Signed-off-by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
Reviewed-by: Chandler Carruth <chandlerc@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 173360
Set the message returned after the GCC runner has been constructed as otherwise
the message will be overwritten by the construction of the runner, resulting in
misleading messages.
Signed-off-by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
Reviewed-by: Chandler Carruth <chandlerc@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 173359
Original commit message:
Plug TTI into the speculation logic, giving it a real cost interface
that can be specialized by targets.
The goal here is not to be more aggressive, but to just be more accurate
with very obvious cases. There are instructions which are known to be
truly free and which were not being modeled as such in this code -- see
the regression test which is distilled from an inner loop of zlib.
Everywhere the TTI cost model is insufficiently conservative I've added
explicit checks with FIXME comments to go add proper modelling of these
cost factors.
If this causes regressions, the likely solution is to make TTI even more
conservative in its cost estimates, but test cases will help here.
llvm-svn: 173357
We use constant folding to see if an intrinsic evaluates to the same value as a
constant that we know. If we don't take the undefinedness into account we get a
value that doesn't match the actual implementation, and miscompiled code.
This was uncovered by Chandler's simplifycfg changes.
llvm-svn: 173356
that can be specialized by targets.
The goal here is not to be more aggressive, but to just be more accurate
with very obvious cases. There are instructions which are known to be
truly free and which were not being modeled as such in this code -- see
the regression test which is distilled from an inner loop of zlib.
Everywhere the TTI cost model is insufficiently conservative I've added
explicit checks with FIXME comments to go add proper modelling of these
cost factors.
If this causes regressions, the likely solution is to make TTI even more
conservative in its cost estimates, but test cases will help here.
llvm-svn: 173342
a cost fuction that seems both a bit ad-hoc and also poorly suited to
evaluating constant expressions.
Notably, it is missing any support for trivial expressions such as
'inttoptr'. I could fix this routine, but it isn't clear to me all of
the constraints its other users are operating under.
The core protection that seems relevant here is avoiding the formation
of a select instruction wich a further chain of select operations in
a constant expression operand. Just explicitly encode that constraint.
Also, update the comments and organization here to make it clear where
this needs to go -- this should be driven off of real cost measurements
which take into account the number of constants expressions and the
depth of the constant expression tree.
llvm-svn: 173340
terms of cost rather than hoisting a single instruction.
This does *not* change the cost model! We still set the cost threshold
at 1 here, it's just that we track it by accumulating cost rather than
by storing an instruction.
The primary advantage is that we no longer leave no-op intrinsics in the
basic block. For example, this will now move both debug info intrinsics
and a single instruction, instead of only moving the instruction and
leaving a basic block with nothing bug debug info intrinsics in it, and
those intrinsics now no longer ordered correctly with the hoisted value.
Instead, we now splice the entire conditional basic block's instruction
sequence.
This also places the code for checking the safety of hoisting next to
the code computing the cost.
Currently, the only observable side-effect of this change is that debug
info intrinsics are no longer abandoned. I'm not sure how to craft
a test case for this, and my real goal was the refactoring, but I'll
talk to Dave or Eric about how to add a test case for this.
llvm-svn: 173339
Previously, the code would scan the PHI nodes and build up a small
setvector of candidate value pairs in phi nodes to go and rewrite. Once
certain the rewrite could be performed, the code walks the set, and for
each one re-scans the entire PHI node list looking for nodes to rewrite
operands.
Instead, scan the PHI nodes once to check for hazards, and then scan it
a second time to rewrite the operands to selects. No set vector, and
a max of two scans.
The only downside is that we might form identical selects, but
instcombine or anything else should fold those easily, and it seems
unlikely to happen often.
llvm-svn: 173337
pretty in doxygen, adding some of the details actually present in
a classic example where this matters (a loop from gzip and many other
compression algorithms), and a cautionary note about the risks inherent
in the transform. This has come up on the mailing lists recently, and
I suspect folks reading this code could benefit from going and looking
at the MI pass that can really deal with these issues.
llvm-svn: 173329
Allow Mips16 routines to call Mips32 routines that have abi requirements
that either arguments or return values are passed in floating point
registers. This handles only the pic case. We have not done non pic
for Mips16 yet in any form.
The libm functions are Mips32, so with this addition we have a complete
Mips16 hard float implementation.
We still are not able to complete mix Mip16 and Mips32 with hard float.
That will be the next phase which will have several steps. For Mips32
to freely call Mips16 some stub functions must be created.
llvm-svn: 173320
This is a helper class for the AttributeSetImpl class. It holds a set of
attributes that apply to a single element: function, return type, or
parameter.
These are uniqued.
llvm-svn: 173310
This intrinsic is translated to ALLOC_EXPORT_WORD1_SWIZ, hence its
name. It is used to store vs/fs outputs
Patch by: Vincent Lejeune
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 173297
This is still an egregious hack since we don't have a nice interface for this
kind of thing but should help the valgrind leak check buildbot to become green.
llvm-svn: 173267
used uninitialized, since it fails to understand that Array is only used when
SingleValue is not, and outputs a warning. It also seems generally safer given
that the constructor is non-trivial and has plenty of early exits.
llvm-svn: 173242
The requirements of the strong heuristic are:
* A Protector is required for functions which contain an array, regardless of
type or length.
* A Protector is required for functions which contain a structure/union which
contains an array, regardless of type or length. Note, there is no limit to
the depth of nesting.
* A protector is required when the address of a local variable (i.e., stack
based variable) is exposed. (E.g., such as through a local whose address is
taken as part of the RHS of an assignment or a local whose address is taken as
part of a function argument.)
llvm-svn: 173231
SSPStrong applies a heuristic to insert stack protectors in these situations:
* A Protector is required for functions which contain an array, regardless of
type or length.
* A Protector is required for functions which contain a structure/union which
contains an array, regardless of type or length. Note, there is no limit to
the depth of nesting.
* A protector is required when the address of a local variable (i.e., stack
based variable) is exposed. (E.g., such as through a local whose address is
taken as part of the RHS of an assignment or a local whose address is taken as
part of a function argument.)
This patch implements the SSPString attribute to be equivalent to
SSPRequired. This will change in a subsequent patch.
llvm-svn: 173230
Collections of attributes are handled via the AttributeSet class now. This
finally frees us up to make significant changes to how attributes are structured.
llvm-svn: 173228
Remove Cxxx registers, add new special register - "ALU_CONST" and new
operand for each alu src - "sel". ALU_CONST is used to designate that the
new operand contains the value to override src.sel, src.kc_bank, src.chan
for constants in the driver.
Patch by: Vadim Girlin
Vincent Lejeune:
- Use pointers for constants
- Fold CONST_ADDRESS when possible
Tom Stellard:
- Give CONSTANT_BUFFER_0 its own address space
- Use integer types for constant loads
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 173222
ErrorOr<void> represents an operation that returns nothing, but can still fail.
It should be used in cases where you need the aditional user data that ErrorOr
provides over error_code.
llvm-svn: 173209
The method PerformCodePlacement was doing too much (i.e. 3x loops, lots of
different checking). This refactoring separates the analysis section of the
method into a separate function while leaving the actual code placement and
analysis preparation in PerformCodePlacement.
*NOTE* Really this part of ObjCARC should be refactored out of the main pass
class into its own seperate class/struct. But, it is not time to make that
change yet though (don't want to make such an invasive change without fixing all
of the bugs first).
llvm-svn: 173201
- Add list of physical registers clobbered in pseudo atomic insts
Physical registers are clobbered when pseudo atomic instructions are
expanded. Add them in clobber list to prevent DAG scheduler to
mis-schedule them after these insns are declared side-effect free.
- Add test case from Michael Kuperstein <michael.m.kuperstein@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 173200
the body does not use them and it appears the body has positional parameters.
This can cause unexpected results as in the added test case. As the darwin
version of gas(1) which only supported positional parameters, happened to
ignore the named parameters. Now that we want to support both styles of
macros we issue a warning in this specific case.
rdar://12861644
llvm-svn: 173199
Use the AttributeSet when we're talking about more than one attribute. Add a
function that adds a single attribute. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 173196
Add the x32 environment kind to the triple, and separate the concept of
pointer size and callee save stack slot size, since they're not equal
on x32.
llvm-svn: 173175
This is a follow-up to r171845, which fixes the same issue in the Support code.
Only targets with >256 relocations (principally AArch64) should be affected.
llvm-svn: 173151
generic function calls and intrinsics. This is somewhat overlapping with
an existing intrinsic cost method, but that one seems targetted at
vector intrinsics. I'll merge them or separate their names and use cases
in a separate commit.
This sinks the test of 'callIsSmall' down into TTI where targets can
control it. The whole thing feels very hack-ish to me though. I've left
a FIXME comment about the fundamental design problem this presents. It
isn't yet clear to me what the users of this function *really* care
about. I'll have to do more analysis to figure that out. Putting this
here at least provides it access to proper analysis pass tools and other
such. It also allows us to more cleanly implement the baseline cost
interfaces in TTI.
With this commit, it is now theoretically possible to simplify much of
the inline cost analysis's handling of calls by calling through to this
interface. That conversion will have to happen in subsequent commits as
it requires more extensive restructuring of the inline cost analysis.
The CodeMetrics class is now really only in the business of running over
a block of code and aggregating the metrics on that block of code, with
the actual cost evaluation done entirely in terms of TTI.
llvm-svn: 173148
Previously we tried to infer it from the bit width size, with an added
IsIEEE argument for the PPC/IEEE 128-bit case, which had a default
value. This default value allowed bugs to creep in, where it was
inappropriate.
llvm-svn: 173138
This is more code to isolate the use of the Attribute class to that of just
holding one attribute instead of a collection of attributes.
llvm-svn: 173094
This cuts in half the number of virtual methods called to refill that word when compiling on a 64-bit
host, and will make 64-bit read operations faster.
llvm-svn: 173072
BLOB (i.e., large, performance intensive data) in a bitcode file was switched to
invoking one virtual method call per byte read. Now we do one virtual call per
BLOB.
llvm-svn: 173065
A SparseMultiSet adds multiset behavior to SparseSet, while retaining SparseSet's desirable properties. Essentially, SparseMultiSet provides multiset behavior by storing its dense data in doubly linked lists that are inlined into the dense vector. This allows it to provide good data locality as well as vector-like constant-time clear() and fast constant time find(), insert(), and erase(). It also allows SparseMultiSet to have a builtin recycler rather than keeping SparseSet's behavior of always swapping upon removal, which allows it to preserve more iterators. It's often a better alternative to a SparseSet of a growable container or vector-of-vector.
llvm-svn: 173064
Patch by: Michel Dänzer
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 173053
Patch by: Michel Dänzer
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 173052
Patch by: Michel Dänzer
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Michel Dänzer <michel.daenzer@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 173051
is free. The whole CodeMetrics API should probably be reworked more, but
this is enough to allow deleting the duplicate code there for computing
whether an instruction is free.
All of the passes using this have been updated to pull in TTI and hand
it to the CodeMetrics stuff. Further, a dead CodeMetrics API
(analyzeFunction) is nuked for lack of users.
llvm-svn: 173036
analysis. How cute that it wasn't previously. ;]
Part of this confusion stems from the flattened header file tree. Thanks
to Benjamin for pointing out the goof on IRC, and we're considering
un-flattening the headers, so speak now if that would bug you.
llvm-svn: 173033
old CodeMetrics system. TTI has the specific advantage of being
extensible and customizable by targets to reflect target-specific cost
metrics.
llvm-svn: 173032
depend on and use other analyses (as long as they're either immutable
passes or CGSCC passes of course -- nothing in the pass manager has been
fixed here). Leverage this to thread TargetTransformInfo down through
the inline cost analysis.
No functionality changed here, this just threads things through.
llvm-svn: 173031
a dynamic analysis done on each call to the routine. However, now it can
use the standard pass infrastructure to reference other analyses,
instead of a silly setter method. This will become more interesting as
I teach it about more analysis passes.
This updates the two inliner passes to use the inline cost analysis.
Doing so highlights how utterly redundant these two passes are. Either
we should find a cheaper way to do always inlining, or we should merge
the two and just fiddle with the thresholds to get the desired behavior.
I'm leaning increasingly toward the latter as it would also remove the
Inliner sub-class split.
llvm-svn: 173030