Having an enum member named Default is quite confusing: Is it distinct
from the others?
This patch removes that member and instead uses Optional<Reloc> in
places where we have a user input that still hasn't been maped to the
default value, which is now clear has no be one of the remaining 3
options.
llvm-svn: 269988
When looking for an available spill slot, the register scavenger would stop
after finding the first one with no register assigned to it. That slot may
have size and alignment that do not meet the requirements of the register
that is to be spilled. Instead, find an available slot that is the closest
in size and alignment to one that is needed to spill a register from RC.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20295
llvm-svn: 269969
with an additional fix to make RegAllocFast ignore undef physreg uses. It would
previously get confused about the "push %eax" instruction's use of eax. That
method for adjusting the stack pointer is used in X86FrameLowering::emitSPUpdate
as well, but since that runs after register-allocation, we didn't run into the
RegAllocFast issue before.
llvm-svn: 269949
Don't expand divisions by constants if it would require multiple instructions.
The current assumption is that engines will perform the desired optimizations.
llvm-svn: 269930
Summary:
The ordering of registers in BinaryRRF instructions are wrong, and
affects the copysign instruction (CPSDR). This results in the wrong
magnitude and sign being set.
Author: zhanjunl
Reviewers: kbarton, uweigand
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20308
llvm-svn: 269922
Summary:
MONITORX/MWAITX instructions provide similar capability to the MONITOR/MWAIT
pair while adding a timer function, such that another termination of the MWAITX
instruction occurs when the timer expires. The presence of the MONITORX and
MWAITX instructions is indicated by CPUID 8000_0001, ECX, bit 29.
The MONITORX and MWAITX instructions are intercepted by the same bits that
intercept MONITOR and MWAIT. MONITORX instruction establishes a range to be
monitored. MWAITX instruction causes the processor to stop instruction execution
and enter an implementation-dependent optimized state until occurrence of a
class of events.
Opcode of MONITORX instruction is "0F 01 FA". Opcode of MWAITX instruction is
"0F 01 FB". These opcode information is used in adding tests for the
disassembler.
These instructions are enabled for AMD's bdver4 architecture.
Patch by Ganesh Gopalasubramanian!
Reviewers: echristo, craig.topper, RKSimon
Subscribers: RKSimon, joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19795
llvm-svn: 269911
Restrict the creation of compact branches so that they meet the ISA encoding
requirements. Notably do not permit $zero to be used as a operand for compact
branches and ensure that some other branches fulfil the requirement that
rs != rt.
Fixup cases where $rs > $rt for bnec and beqc.
Reviewers: dsanders, vkalintiris
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20284
llvm-svn: 269893
This change adds support for software floating point operations for Sparc targets.
This is the first in a set of patches to enable software floating point on Sparc. The next patch will enable the option to be used with Clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19265
llvm-svn: 269892
We currently don't represent get_local and set_local explicitly; they
are just implied by virtual register use and def. This avoids a lot of
clutter, but it does complicate stackifying: get_locals read their
operands at their position in the stack evaluation order, rather than
at their parent instruction. This patch adds code to walk the stack to
determine the precise ordering, when needed.
llvm-svn: 269854
This patch moves the expansion of WIN_ALLOCA pseudo-instructions
into a separate pass that walks the CFG and lowers the instructions
based on a conservative estimate of the offset between the stack
pointer and the lowest accessed stack address.
The goal is to reduce binary size and run-time costs by removing
calls to _chkstk. While it doesn't fix all the code quality problems
with inalloca calls, it's an incremental improvement for PR27076.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20263
llvm-svn: 269828
When processing inline asm that contains errors, make sure we can recover
gracefully by creating an UNDEF SDValue for the inline asm statement before
returning from SelectionDAGBuilder::visitInlineAsm. This is necessary for
consumers that don't exit on the first error that is emitted (e.g. clang)
and that would assert later on.
Fixes PR24071.
Patch by Diana Picus.
llvm-svn: 269811
Since r207518 they are printed exactly like non-hidden stubs on x86 and
since r207517 on ARM.
This means we can use a single set for all stubs in those platforms.
llvm-svn: 269776
This patch adds the commandline option -mips-compact-branches={never,optimal,always),
which controls how LLVM generates compact branches for MIPS targets. By
default, the compact branch policy is 'optimal' where LLVM will (hopefully)
pick the optimal branch for any situation. The 'never' policy will disable
the generation of compact branches and 'always' will generate compact branches
wherever possible.
Reviewers: dsanders
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20167
llvm-svn: 269753
MachineInstr::isSafeToMove is more conservative than is needed here;
use a more explicit check, and incorporate knowledge of some
WebAssembly-specific opcodes.
llvm-svn: 269736
This code currently relies on static methods in ProfileSummary to determine whether a function is hot or unlikley. I am refactoring the ProfileSummary code and these methods will be removed. As discussed offline, the right way to re-introduce this is to add a pass to annotate functions with unlikely/hot hints and use the hints to determine the prefix here.
llvm-svn: 269726
This was assuming it could use all memory before, which is
a bad decision because it restricts occupancy.
By default, only try to use enough space that could reduce
occupancy to 7, an arbitrarily chosen limit.
Based on the exist LDS usage, try to round up to the limit
in the current tier instead of further hurting occupancy.
This isn't ideal, because it doesn't accurately know how much
space is going to be used for alignment padding.
llvm-svn: 269708
In practice only a few well known appending linkage variables work.
Currently if codegen sees an unknown appending linkage variable it will
just print it as a regular global. That is wrong as the symbol in the
produced object file has different semantics as the one provided by the
appending linkage.
This just errors early instead of producing a broken .o.
llvm-svn: 269706
Allow two users of the condition if the other user
is also a min/max select. i.e.
%c = icmp slt i32 %x, %y
%min = select i1 %c, i32 %x, i32 %y
%max = select i1 %c, i32 %y, i32 %x
llvm-svn: 269699
Summary: On Linux, /usr/include/bits/byteswap-16.h defines __byteswap_16(x) as an inlined LRVH (Load Reversed Half-word) instruction. The SystemZ back-end did not support this opcode and the inlined assembly would cause a fatal error.
Reviewers: bryanpkc, uweigand
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18732
llvm-svn: 269688
The new X86 shuffle lowering can do just fine without transforming vselects
into vector_shuffles. It looks like the only thing this code does right now
is cause trouble - in particular, it can lead to combine/legalization infinite
loops.
Note that it's not completely NFC, since some of the shuffle masks get inverted,
which may cause slight differences further down the line. We may want to find
a way to invert those masks, but that's orthogonal to this commit.
This fixes the hang in PR27689.
llvm-svn: 269676
Without a diagnostic handler installed, llc's behaviour is to exit on the first
error that it encounters. This is very different from the behaviour of clang
and other front ends, which try to gather as many errors as possible before
exiting.
This commit adds a diagnostic handler to llc, allowing it to find and report
more than one error. The old behaviour is preserved under a flag (-exit-on-error).
Some of the tests fail with the new diagnostic handler, so they have to use the
new flag in order to run under the previous behaviour. Some of these are known
bugs, others need further investigation. Ideally, we should fix the tests and
remove the flag at some point in the future.
Reapplied after fixing the LLDB build that was broken due to the new
DiagnosticSeverity in LLVMContext.h, and fixed an UB in the new change.
Patch by Diana Picus.
llvm-svn: 269655
This patch uses PSHUFB to lower vector CTLZ and avoid (slower) scalarizations.
The leading zero count of each 4-bit nibble of the vector is determined by using a PSHUFB lookup. Pairs of results are then repeatedly combined up to the original element width.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20016
llvm-svn: 269646
Added constant index tests for all 256-bit integer vector types (touching lower / upper 128-bits)
Added variable index tests for all 256-bit integer vector types
Added out-of-range index tests for all 256-bit integer vector types
llvm-svn: 269600
It seems that cl will emit the export directives for Windows ARM targets. The
fact that it did this had originally been missed and this functionality was
never implemented. This makes it possible to rely solely on the source code for
indicating what the exported interfaces are and brings us more compatibility
with cl.
llvm-svn: 269574
Without a diagnostic handler installed, llc's behaviour is to exit on the first
error that it encounters. This is very different from the behaviour of clang
and other front ends, which try to gather as many errors as possible before
exiting.
This commit adds a diagnostic handler to llc, allowing it to find and report
more than one error. The old behaviour is preserved under a flag (-exit-on-error).
Some of the tests fail with the new diagnostic handler, so they have to use the
new flag in order to run under the previous behaviour. Some of these are known
bugs, others need further investigation. Ideally, we should fix the tests and
remove the flag at some point in the future.
Reapplied after fixing the LLDB build that was broken due to the new
DiagnosticSeverity in LLVMContext.h.
Patch by Diana Picus.
llvm-svn: 269563
Summary:
The MIPS IAS can now pass 'ninja check-all', recurse, build a bootable linux
kernel, and pass a variety of LNT testing.
Unfortunately we can't enable it by default for 64-bit targets yet since the N32
ABI is still very buggy and this also means we can't enable it for N64 either
because we can't distinguish between N32 and N64 in the relevant code.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18759
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18761
llvm-svn: 269560
compiler-rt/libgcc shift routines expect the shift count to be an i32, so
use i32 as the shift count for shifts that are legalized to libcalls. This
also reverts r268991, now that the signatures are correct.
llvm-svn: 269531
When setting the frame pointer, the offset from SP is calculated based on the
stack slot it gets allocated, but this slot is in turn based on the order of
the CSR list so that list should match the order we actually save the registers
in. Mostly it did, but in the edge-case of MachO AAPCS targets it was wrong.
llvm-svn: 269459
Recent changes to the instruction selection code exposed a problem where
a dead node was not removed on time. This node had both input and output
chains, which lead to an apparent cycle.
llvm-svn: 269458
- Insert one nop for each high level statement instead of two
- Do not insert nop before prologue
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20215
llvm-svn: 269452
Most immediates are printed in Aarch64InstPrinter using 'formatImm' macro,
but not all of them.
Implementation contains following rules:
- floating point immediates are always printed as decimal
- signed integer immediates are printed depends on flag settings
(for negative values 'formatImm' macro prints the value as i.e -0x01
which may be convenient when imm is an address or offset)
- logical immediates are always printed as hex
- the 64-bit immediate for advSIMD, encoded in "a🅱️c:d:e:f:g:h" is always printed as hex
- the 64-bit immedaite in exception generation instructions like:
brk, dcps1, dcps2, dcps3, hlt, hvc, smc, svc is always printed as hex
- the rest of immediates is printed depends on availability
of -print-imm-hex
Signed-off-by: Maciej Gabka <maciej.gabka@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Osmialowski <pawel.osmialowski@arm.com>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16929
llvm-svn: 269446
This reverts commit r269428, as it breaks the LLDB build. We need to
understand how to change LLDB in the same way as LLC before landing this
again.
llvm-svn: 269432
Without a diagnostic handler installed, llc's behaviour is to exit on the first
error that it encounters. This is very different from the behaviour of clang
and other front ends, which try to gather as many errors as possible before
exiting.
This commit adds a diagnostic handler to llc, allowing it to find and report
more than one error. The old behaviour is preserved under a flag (-exit-on-error).
Some of the tests fail with the new diagnostic handler, so they have to use the
new flag in order to run under the previous behaviour. Some of these are known
bugs, others need further investigation. Ideally, we should fix the tests and
remove the flag at some point in the future.
Patch by Diana Picus.
llvm-svn: 269428
We only really need this to be true for SIFixSGPRCopies.
I'm not sure there's any way this could happen before that point.
Fixes a case where MachineCSE could introduce a cross block
scc use.
llvm-svn: 269391
Alter instances in the test-suite that use immediates that can be represented
in the immediate field of a MOV. The reason for doing this is that when the
LDR rt,=imm transformation to MOV rt, imm the existing tests do not need to
be modified.
Required by the patch that fixes PR25722.
Patch by Peter Smith.
llvm-svn: 269353
For BITREVERSE, bit shifting/masking every bit in a vector element is a very lengthy procedure.
If the input vector type is a whole multiple of bytes wide then we can split this into a BSWAP shuffle stage (to reverse at the byte level) and then a BITREVERSE stage applied to each byte. Most vector capable targets can efficiently BSWAP using shuffles resulting in a considerable reduction in instructions.
With this patch targets would only need to implement a target specific vXi8 BITREVERSE implementation to efficiently reverse most legal vector types.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19978
llvm-svn: 269290
While promoting nodes in PPCTargetLowering::DAGCombineExtBoolTrunc, it is
possible for one of the nodes to be replaced by another. To make sure we do not
visit the deleted nodes, and to make sure we visit the replacement nodes, use a
list of HandleSDNodes to track the to-be-promoted nodes during the promotion
process.
The same fix has been applied to the analogous code in
PPCTargetLowering::DAGCombineTruncBoolExt.
Fixes PR26985.
llvm-svn: 269272
The promote alloca pass would attempt to promote an alloca with
a select, icmp, or phi user, even though the other operand was
from a non-promotable source, producing a select on two different
pointer types.
Only do this if we know that both operands derive from the same
alloca. In the future we should be able to relax this to an alloca
which will also be promoted.
llvm-svn: 269265
This new verifier rule lets us unambigously pick a calling convention
when creating a new declaration for
`@llvm.experimental.deoptimize.<ty>`. It is also congruent with our
lowering strategy -- since all calls to `@llvm.experimental.deoptimize`
are lowered to calls to `__llvm_deoptimize`, it is reasonable to enforce
a unique calling convention.
Some of the tests that were breaking this verifier rule have had to be
split up into different .ll files.
The inliner was violating this rule as well, and has been fixed to avoid
producing invalid IR.
llvm-svn: 269261
This is to fix the bug in https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27612.
When spill is hoisted to a BB with landingpad successor, and if the VNI
of the spill reg lives into the landingpad successor, the spill should be
inserted before the call which may throw exception. InsertPointAnalysis
is used to compute the safe insert point.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D20027 is a preparing patch for this patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19884.
llvm-svn: 269249
For narrow stores (e.g., strb, srth) we know the upper bits of the register are
unused/not useful. In some cases we can use this information to eliminate
unnecessary instructions.
For example, without this patch we generate (from the 2nd test case):
ldr w8, [x0]
and w8, w8, #0xfff0
bfxil w8, w2, #16, #4
strh w8, [x1]
and after the patch the 'and' is removed:
ldr w8, [x0]
bfxil w8, w2, #16, #4
strh w8, [x1]
ret
During the lowering of the bitfield insert instruction the 'and' is eliminated
because we know the upper 16-bits that are masked off are unused and the lower
4-bits that are masked off are overwritten by the insert itself. Therefore, the
'and' is unnecessary.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20175
llvm-svn: 269226
When generating .cfi_offset instructions, make sure that the offset is
calculated with respect to the register used to define the CFA (which is
currently always FP+8).
llvm-svn: 269191
Summary: When emitting comparison for fp16, in addition to promote the LHS and RHS to fp32, we need to change the VT as well.
Reviewers: t.p.northover
Subscribers: t.p.northover, aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19922
llvm-svn: 269151
Unlike xN/wN, the size of vN is genuinely ambiguous in the assembly, so we
should try to infer what was intended from the type. But only down to 64-bits
(vN can never represent sN, hN or bN).
llvm-svn: 269132
This fixes a bug introduced in r267623, where we got smarter and avoided to save
EAX before using it. However, we failed to check if any of the subregister of
EAX were alive and thus, missed cases where we have to save EAX before using it.
The problem may happen on every X86/i386/... platform.
This fixes llvm.org/PR27624
llvm-svn: 269115
I'm really not sure why we were in the first place, it's the linker's job to
convert between BL/BLX as necessary. Even worse, using BLX left Thumb calls
that could be locally resolved completely unencodable since all offsets to BLX
are multiples of 4.
rdar://26182344
llvm-svn: 269101
An oddity of the .ll syntax is that the "@var = " in
@var = global i32 42
is optional. Writing just
global i32 42
is equivalent to
@0 = global i32 42
This means that there is a pretty big First set at the top level. The
current implementation maintains it manually. I was trying to refactor
it, but then started wondering why keep it a all. I personally find the
above syntax confusing. It looks like something is missing.
This patch removes the feature and simplifies the parser.
llvm-svn: 269096
Summary:
While setting kill flags on instructions inside a BUNDLE, we bail out as soon
as we set kill flag on a register. But we are missing a check when all the
registers already have the correct kill flag set. We need to bail out in that
case as well.
This patch refactors the old code and simply makes use of the addRegisterKilled
function in MachineInstr.cpp in order to determine whether to set/remove kill
on an instruction.
Reviewers: apazos, t.p.northover, pete, MatzeB
Subscribers: MatzeB, davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17356
llvm-svn: 269092
An example from Hexagon where things went wrong:
%R0<def> = L2_loadrigp <ga:@fp04> ; load function address
J2_callr %R0<kill>, ..., %R0<imp-def> ; call *R0, return value in R0
ScheduleDAGInstrs::buildSchedGraph would visit all instructions going
backwards, and in each instruction it would visit all operands in their
order on the operand list. In the case of this call, it visited the use
of R0 first, then removed it from the set Uses after it visited the def.
This caused the DAG to be missing the data dependence edge on R0 between
the load and the call.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20102
llvm-svn: 269076
Currently, SelectionDAG assumes 8/16-bit cmpxchg returns either a sign
extended result, or a zero extended result. SystemZ takes a third
option by returning junk in the high bits (rotated contents of the other
bytes in the memory word). In that case, don't use Assert*ext, and
zero-extend the result ourselves if a comparison is needed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19800
llvm-svn: 269075
Added test to check LeonItineraries are being applied by code checked-in two weeks ago in r267121.
Phabricator Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19359
llvm-svn: 269032
SystemZ (and probably other targets as well) can fold a memory operand
by changing the opcode into a new instruction that as a side-effect
also clobbers the CC-reg.
In order to do this, liveness of that reg must first be checked. When
LIS is passed, getRegUnit() can be called on it and the right
LiveRange is computed on demand.
Reviewed by Matthias Braun.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D19861
llvm-svn: 269026
We now use LiveRangeCalc::extendToUses() instead of a specially designed
algorithm in constructMainRangeFromSubranges():
- The original motivation for constructMainRangeFromSubranges() were
differences between the main liverange and subranges because of hidden
dead definitions. This case however cannot happen anymore with the
DetectDeadLaneMasks pass in place.
- It simplifies the code.
- This fixes a longstanding bug where we did not properly create new SSA
values on merging control flow (the MachineVerifier missed most of
these cases).
- Move constructMainRangeFromSubranges() to LiveIntervalAnalysis and
LiveRangeCalc to better match the implementation/available helper
functions.
llvm-svn: 269016
Move the register stackification and coloring passes to run very late, after
PEI, tail duplication, and most other passes. This means that all code emitted
and expanded by those passes is now exposed to these passes. This also
eliminates the need for prologue/epilogue code to be manually stackified,
which significantly simplifies the code.
This does require running LiveIntervals a second time. It's useful to think
of these late passes not as late optimization passes, but as a domain-specific
compression algorithm based on knowledge of liveness information. It's used to
compress the code after all conventional optimizations are complete, which is
why it uses LiveIntervals at a phase when actual optimization passes don't
typically need it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20075
llvm-svn: 269012
We now construct a custom pass pipeline instead of injecting
start-before/stop-after into the default pipeline construction. This
allows to specify any pass known to the pass registry. Previously
specifying indirectly added analysis passes or passes not added to the
pipeline add all would not be added and we would silently do nothing.
This also restricts the -run-pass option to cases with .mir input.
llvm-svn: 269003
When loading or storing AVX512 registers we were not using the AVX512
variant of the load and store for VR128 and VR256 like registers.
Thus, we ended up with the wrong encoding and actually were dropping the
high bits of the instruction. The result was that we load or store the
wrong register. The effect is visible only when we emit the object file
directly and disassemble it. Then, the output of the disassembler does
not match the assembly input.
This is related to llvm.org/PR27481.
llvm-svn: 269001
We used to list registers that were not in the AVX space. In other
words, we were pushing registers that the ISA cannot encode
(YMM16-YMM31).
This is part of llvm.org/PR27481.
llvm-svn: 268983
This reapplies commit r268796, with a fix for the setting of the inline asm
constraints. I.e., "mark" LOW32_ADDR_ACCESS_RBP as a GR variant, so that the
regular processing of the GR operands (setting of the subregisters) happens.
Original commit log:
[X86] Add a new LOW32_ADDR_ACCESS_RBP register class.
ABIs like NaCl uses 32-bit addresses but have 64-bit frame.
The new register class reflects those constraints when choosing a
register class for a address access.
llvm-svn: 268955
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D19683
Simply adds the bits for being able to specify -mcpu=pwr9 to the back end.
llvm-svn: 268950
Summary:
Previously, it returned the GPR16MMRegClass for all instructions which was
incorrect for instructions like lwsp/lwgp and unnecesarily restricted the
permitted registers for instructions like lw32.
This fixes quite a few of the -verify-machineinstrs errors reported in PR27458.
I've only added -verify-machineinstrs to one test in this change since I
understand there is a plan to enable the verifier by default.
Reviewers: hvarga, zbuljan, zoran.jovanovic, sdardis
Subscribers: dsanders, llvm-commits, sdardis
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19873
llvm-svn: 268918
This patch fixes register alignment for long double type in
soft float mode. Before this patch alignment was 8 and this
patch changes it to 4.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18034
llvm-svn: 268909
Summary:
This implements the lowering of the X constraint on
AArch64.
The default behaviour of the X constraint lowering is to
restrict it to "f". This is a problem because the "f"
constraint is not implemented on AArch64 and would be too
restrictive anyway. Therefore, the AArch64 hook will
lower this to "w" (if the operand is a floating point or
vector) or "r" otherwise.
The implementation is similar with the one added for
ARM (r267411).
This is the AArch64 side of the fix for http://llvm.org/PR26493
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits, t.p.northover
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19967
llvm-svn: 268907
(re-apply r268810 as it exposed an uninitialized variable in ARM MFI.
Patch 268868 should fix that.)
Summary:
Currently, when checking if a stack is "BigStack" or not, it doesn't count into spills and arguments. Therefore, LLVM won't reserve spill slot for this actually "BigStack". This may cause scavenger failure.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: vitalybuka, aemerson, rengolin, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19896
llvm-svn: 268869
This re-applies r268760, reverted in r268794.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR27670
The original imp-defs assertion was way overzealous: forward all
implicit operands, except imp-defs of the new super-reg def (r268787
for GR64, but also possible for GR16->GR32), or imp-uses of the new
super-reg use.
While there, mark the source use as Undef, and add an imp-use of the
old source reg: that should cover any case of dead super-regs.
At the stage the pass runs, flags are unlikely to matter anyway;
still, let's be as correct as possible.
Also add MIR tests for the various interesting cases.
Original commit message:
Codesize is less (16) or equal (8), and we avoid partial
dependencies.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19999
llvm-svn: 268831
In case of COPY-like instruction we may be able to deduce that a certain
input is unused, based on the used lanes of the register defined by the
instruction.
This even works accross otherwise incompatible copies (no need to have
compatible lanemasks, completely unused operands are still completely
unused). It even makes sense to redo the analysis in this case since we
gained information for a case we previously stopped at because of the
incompatible masks.
llvm-svn: 268815
(this is resubmit of r268529 with minor refactoring. r268529 was reverted
at r268536 due a memory sanitizer failure. I have not been able to
reproduce that failure and I checked all the variable used in my change
but I could not spot an issue. I did some refactoring and see if it will
give a clearer hint)
Summary:
Currently, when checking if a stack is "BigStack" or not, it doesn't count into spills and arguments. Therefore, LLVM won't reserve spill slot for this actually "BigStack". This may cause scavenger failure.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: vitalybuka, aemerson, rengolin, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19896
llvm-svn: 268810
ABIs like NaCl uses 32-bit addresses but have 64-bit frame.
The new register class reflects those constraints when choosing a
register class for a address access.
llvm-svn: 268796
Added support for sendmsg(MSG[, OP[, STREAM_ID]]) syntax
in s_sendmsg and s_sendmsghalt instructions.
The syntax matches the SP3 assembler/disassembler rules.
That is why implicit inputs (like M0 and EXEC) are not printed
to disassembly output anymore.
sendmsg(...) allows only known message types and attributes,
even if literals are used instead of symbolic names.
However, raw literal (without "sendmsg") still can be used,
and that allows for any 16-bit value.
Tests updated/added.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19596
llvm-svn: 268762
Summary:
If a function needs to allocate both callee-save stack memory and local
stack memory, we currently decrement/increment the SP in two steps:
first for the callee-save area, and then for the local stack area. This
changes the code to allocate them both at once at the very beginning/end
of the function. This has two benefits:
1) there is one fewer sub/add micro-op in the prologue/epilogue
2) the stack adjustment instructions act as a scheduling barrier, so
moving them to the very beginning/end of the function increases post-RA
scheduler's ability to move instructions (that only depend on argument
registers) before any of the callee-save stores
This change can cause an increase in instructions if the original local
stack SP decrement could be folded into the first store to the stack.
This occurs when the first local stack store is to stack offset 0. In
this case we are trading off one more sub instruction for one fewer sub
micro-op (along with benefits (2) and (3) above).
Reviewers: t.p.northover
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18619
llvm-svn: 268746
Summary:
This stops it misidentifying unconditional branches as conditional branches
which fixes a -verify-machineinstrs error about exiting a function via fall through.
Reviewers: sdardis
Subscribers: dsanders, sdardis, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19864
llvm-svn: 268731
Summary:
Check calling convention in AMDGPUMachineFunction::isKernel
This will be used for AMDGPU_HSA_KERNEL symbol type in output ELF.
Also, in the future unused non-kernels may be optimized.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19917
llvm-svn: 268719
Summary:
This will be used for AMDGPU_HSA_KERNEL symbol type in output ELF.
Also, in the future unused non-kernels may be optimized.
For now, also accept SPIR_KERNEL for HCC frontend.
Also, add bitcode compatibility tests for missing calling conventions
except AVR_BUILTIN which doesn't have parse code.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, joker.eph, llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 268717
If we don't, values that aren't precisely representable in f16 could
be used as-is in a promoted f32 operation, which would produce
incorrect results.
AArch64 had the correct behavior; add a focused test.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR26871
llvm-svn: 268700
Given something like:
ldr r0, .LCPI0_0 (== pc-rel var)
add r0, pc
ldr r1, .LCPI0_1 (== pc-rel var)
add r1, pc
we cannot combine the 2 ldr instructions and litpools because they get added to
a different pc to form the correct address. I think the original logic came
from a time when we fused the LDRpci/PICADD instructions into one
pseudo-instruction so the PC was always immediately at-hand. That's no longer
the case.
Should fix general-dynamic TLS access on Linux, and quite possibly other -fPIC
code that relies on litpools (e.g. v6m and -Oz compilations) though trivial
tweaks of the .ll test didn't provoke anything.
llvm-svn: 268662
Summary:
Discovered by Dave Airlie, fixes an assertion in Khronos OpenGL CTS
GL43-CTS.shader_storage_buffer_object.advanced-matrix.
In this particular case, the buffer load intrinsic fed into a uniform
conditional branch, and led the brcond lowering down the wrong path.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19931
llvm-svn: 268650
Summary:
Version 2 is now the default. If you want to emit version 1, use
the amdgcn--amdhsa-amdcov1 triple.
Reviewers: arsenm, kzhuravl
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19283
llvm-svn: 268647
This backend was supposed to generate C++ code which will re-construct
the LLVM IR passed as input. This seems to me to have very marginal
usefulness in the first place.
However, the code has never been updated to use IRBuilder, which makes
its current value negative -- people who look at the output may be
steered to use the *wrong* C++ APIs to construct IR.
Furthermore, it's generated code that doesn't compile since at least
2013.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19942
llvm-svn: 268631
Both Linux and kFreeBSD use glibc, so follow similiar code paths.
Add isTargetGlibc to check for this, and use it instead of isTargetLinux
in a few places.
Fixes PR22248 for kFreeBSD.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19104
llvm-svn: 268624
The result type of setcc is dependent on whether or not AVX512 is
present.
We had an X86-specific DAG-combine which assumed that the result type
should be i8 when it could be i1.
This meant that we would generate illegal setccs which LowerSETCC did
not like.
Instead, use an appropriate type and zero extend to i8.
Also, there were some scenarios where the fold should have fired but
didn't because we were overly cautious about the types. This meant that
we generated:
shrl $31, %edi
andl $1, %edi
kmovw %edi, %k0
kxnorw %k0, %k0, %k1
kshiftrw $15, %k1, %k1
kxorw %k1, %k0, %k0
kmovw %k0, %eax
instead of:
testl %edi, %edi
setns %al
This fixes PR27638.
llvm-svn: 268609
This introduces a SystemZ-specific "backchain" attribute on function, which
enables writing the frame backchain link as specified by the ABI. This will
be used to implement -mbackchain option in clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19889
Fixed in this version: added RegState::Define and RegState::Kill on R1D
in prologue.
llvm-svn: 268581
This introduces a SystemZ-specific "backchain" attribute on function, which
enables writing the frame backchain link as specified by the ABI. This will
be used to implement -mbackchain option in clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19889
llvm-svn: 268571
The new register classes allow to tell the machine verifier that it is
fine to use RIP for address accesses in x32 mode. Prior to that patch,
we would complain that we are using a GR64 in place of GR32, whereas it
is actually fine to use GR64 for x32 as long as the 32 high bits are 0s.
RIP has this property and is used for RIP-relative addressing.
This partially fixes http://llvm.org/PR27481.
llvm-svn: 268567
Some vector bit operations are promoted instead of having custom lowering. This patch changes the isOperationLegalOrCustom tests for vector AND/OR operations to use a new TLI helper isOperationLegalOrCustomOrPromote instead, allowing the SSE implementations to stay on the simd unit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19805
llvm-svn: 268561
This patch adds support for estimating the square root, its reciprocal and
division or reciprocal using the combiner generic reciprocal machinery.
llvm-svn: 268539
Summary:
Currently, when checking if a stack is "BigStack" or not, it doesn't count into spills and arguments. Therefore, LLVM won't reserve spill slot for this actually "BigStack". This may cause scavenger failure.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19896
llvm-svn: 268529
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18592
It allows the PPC back end to generate the xxspltw instruction where we
previously only emitted vspltw.
llvm-svn: 268516
Vector bit operations are typically promoted instead of having custom lowering. This patch changes the isOperationLegalOrCustom tests for vector AND/OR operations to use isOperationLegalOrPromote instead, allowing the SSE implementations to stay on the simd unit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19805
llvm-svn: 268504
Modification of previously existing code (variable rename only), with unit test added.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19368
llvm-svn: 268493
This code implements builtin_setjmp and builtin_longjmp exception handling intrinsics for 32-bit Sparc back-ends.
The code started as a mash-up of the PowerPC and X86 versions, although there are sufficient differences to both that had to be made for Sparc handling.
Note: I have manual tests running. I'll work on a unit test and add that to the rest of this diff in the next day.
Also, this implementation is only for 32-bit Sparc. I haven't focussed on a 64-bit version, although I have left the code in a prepared state for implementing this, including detecting pointer size and comments indicating where I suspect there may be differences.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19798
llvm-svn: 268483
i1 is now a legal type for X86 with AVX512.
There were some paths in X86FastISel which were not quite ready to see
an i1 value: they were not quite sure how to deal with sign/zero extends
for call arguments.
DTRT by extending to i8 for zeroext and bailing out of FastISel for
signext.
This fixes PR27591.
llvm-svn: 268470