registers it defines then interfere with an existing preg live range.
For instance, if we had something like these machine instructions:
BB#0
... = imul ... EFLAGS<imp-def,dead>
test ..., EFLAGS<imp-def>
jcc BB#2 EFLAGS<imp-use>
BB#1
... ; fallthrough to BB#2
BB#2
... ; No code that defines EFLAGS
jcc ... EFLAGS<imp-use>
Machine sink will come along, see that imul implicitly defines EFLAGS, but
because it's "dead", it assumes that it can move imul into BB#2. But when it
does, imul's "dead" imp-def of EFLAGS is raised from the dead (a zombie) and
messes up the condition code for the jump (and pretty much anything else which
relies upon it being correct).
The solution is to know which pregs are live going into a basic block. However,
that information isn't calculated at this point. Nor does the LiveVariables pass
take into account non-allocatable physical registers. In lieu of this, we do a
*very* conservative pass through the basic block to determine if a preg is live
coming out of it.
llvm-svn: 105387
expansion is the same as that used by LegalizeDAG.
The resulting code sucks in terms of performance/codesize on x86-32 for a
64-bit operation; I haven't looked into whether different expansions might be
better in general.
llvm-svn: 105378
that are too large. This causes the freebsd bootloader to be too
large apparently.
It's unclear if this should be an -Os or -Oz thing. Thoughts welcome.
llvm-svn: 105228
optimization level.
This only really affects llc for now because both the llvm-gcc and clang front
ends override the default register allocator. I intend to remove that code later.
llvm-svn: 104904
Mon Ping provided; unfortunately bugpoint failed to
reduce it, but I think it's important to have a test for
this in the suite. 8023512.
llvm-svn: 104624
copying VFP subregs. This exposed a bunch of dead code in the *spill-q.ll
tests, so I tweaked those tests to keep that code from being optimized away.
Radar 7872877.
llvm-svn: 104415
so that it will continue to test what it was meant to test when I commit a
separate change for better support of BUILD_VECTOR and VECTOR_SHUFFLE for Neon.
Fix a DAG combiner crash exposed by this test change.
llvm-svn: 104380
pass after isel instead of being interlaced with it, we can
trust that all the code for a function has been isel'd before
it is run.
The practical impact of this is that we can scan for machine
instr phis instead of doing a fuzzy match on the LLVM BB for
phi nodes. Doing the fuzzy match required knowing when isel
would produce an fp reg stack phi which was gross. It was
also wrong in cases where select got lowered to a branch
tree because cmovs aren't available (PR6828).
Just do the scan on machine phis which is simpler, faster
and more correct. This fixes PR6828.
llvm-svn: 104333
definitions of the virtual register.
This happens when spilling the registers produced by REG_SEQUENCE:
%reg1047:5<def>, %reg1047:6<def>, %reg1047:7<def> = VLD3d8 %reg1033, 0, pred:14, pred:%reg0
The rewriter would spill the register multiple times, dead store elimination
tried to keep up, but ended up cutting the branch it was sitting on.
llvm-svn: 104321
operand on the left, the interesting operand is on the right. This
fixes a bug where LSR was failing to recognize ICmpZero uses,
which led it to be unable to reverse the induction variable in the
attached testcase.
Delete test/CodeGen/X86/stack-color-with-reg-2.ll, because its test
is extremely fragile and hard to meaningfully update.
llvm-svn: 104262
The trouble arises when the result of a vector cmp + sext is then and'ed with all ones. Instcombine will turn it into a vector cmp + zext, dag combiner will miss turning it into a vsetcc and hell breaks loose after that.
Teach dag combine to turn a vector cpm + zest into a vsetcc + and 1. This fixes rdar://7923010.
llvm-svn: 104094
While that approach works wonders for register pressure, it tends to break
everything.
This should unbreak the arm-linux builder and fix a number of miscompilations.
llvm-svn: 103946
<1xi64> -> i64 to work in MMX registers on hosts where -no-sse
is the default (not mine). The right thing is
to accept this and make i64->f64 conversions go through memory,
but I don't have time right now.
llvm-svn: 103914
replace the check with the appropriate predicate. Modify the testcase to reflect
the correct code. (It should be saving callee-saved registers on the stack
allocated by the calling fuction.)
llvm-svn: 103829
Sorry for the big change. The path leading up to this patch had some TableGen
changes that I didn't want to commit before I knew they were useful. They
weren't, and this version does not need them.
The fast register allocator now does no liveness calculations. Instead it relies
on kill flags provided by isel. (Currently those kill flags are also ignored due
to isel bugs). The allocation algorithm is supposed to work with any subset of
valid kill flags. More kill flags simply means fewer spills inserted.
Registers are allocated from a working set that contains no aliases. That means
most allocations can be done directly without expensive alias checks. When the
working set runs out of registers we do the full alias check to find new free
registers.
llvm-svn: 103488
LSRUse's Regs set after all pruning is done, rather than trying
to do it on the fly, which can produce an incomplete result.
This fixes a case where heuristic pruning was stripping all
formulae from a use, which led the solver to enter an infinite
loop.
Also, add a few asserts to diagnose this kind of situation.
llvm-svn: 103328
getConstantFP to accept the two supported long double
target types. This was not the original intent, but
there are other places that assume this works and it's
easy enough to do.
llvm-svn: 103299
Users can write broken code that emits the same label twice with asm renaming,
detect this and emit a fatal backend error instead of aborting.
llvm-svn: 103140
beneficial cases. See the changes in test/CodeGen/X86/tail-opts.ll and
test/CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt2.ll for details.
The fix is to change HashEndOfMBB to hash at most one instruction,
instead of trying to apply heuristics about when it will be profitable to
consider more than one instruction. The regular tail-merging heuristics
are already prepared to handle the same cases, and they're more precise.
Also, make test/CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt5.ll and
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-branch.ll slightly more complex so that they
continue to test what they're intended to test.
And, this eliminates the problem in
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/2009-10-15-ITBlockBranch.ll, the testcase from
PR5204. Update it accordingly.
llvm-svn: 102907
indexes could be of a different value type. Or not even using the same SDNode
for the constant (weird, I know). Compare the actual values instead of the
pointers.
llvm-svn: 102791
call that might throw. The landing pad assumes that all registers are in stack
slots.
We used to spill those dirty CSRs after the call, and the stack slots would be
wrong when arriving at the landing pad.
llvm-svn: 102770
of different register classes. e.g.
%reg1048:3<def> = EXTRACT_SUBREG %RAX<kill>, 3
Where %reg1048 is a GR32 register. This is not impossible to handle, but it is
pretty hard and very rare.
This should unbreak the dragonegg builder.
llvm-svn: 102672
otherwise labels get incorrectly merged. We handled this by emitting a
".byte 0", but this isn't correct on thumb/arm targets where the text segment
needs to be a multiple of 2/4 bytes. Handle this by emitting a noop. This
is more gross than it should be because arm/ppc are not fully mc'ized yet.
This fixes rdar://7908505
llvm-svn: 102400
doesn't dominate the header is needed, don't check whether the increment
expression has computable loop evolution. While the operands of an
addrec are required to be loop-invariant, they're not required to
dominate any part of the loop. This fixes PR6914.
llvm-svn: 102389
alignment of globals with a specified alignment, we fix
common variables to obey their alignment. Add a comment
explaining why this behavior is important.
llvm-svn: 102365
in other types. fix this by only bumping zero-byte globals
up to a single byte if the *entire global* is zero size,
fixing PR6340.
This also fixes empty arrays etc to be handled correctly,
and only does this on subsection-via-symbols targets (aka
darwin) which is the only place where this matters.
llvm-svn: 101879
the intrinsics. The reason for those i8* types is that the intrinsics are
overloaded on the vector type and we don't have a way to declare an intrinsic
where one argument is an overloaded vector type and another argument is a
pointer to the vector element type. The bitcasts added here will match what
the frontend will typically generate when these intrinsics are used.
llvm-svn: 101840