Commit Graph

35 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Braun 3d849f67cb MachineModuleInfo: Store more specific reference to LLVMTargetMachine; NFC
MachineModuleInfo can only be used in code using lib/CodeGen, hence we
can keep a more specific reference to LLVMTargetMachine rather than just
TargetMachine around.

llvm-svn: 346182
2018-11-05 23:49:13 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar 6d47a41520 [GISel]: Add legalization support for Widening UADDO/USUBO
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51384

Added code in LegalizerHelper to widen UADDO/USUBO along with unit
tests.

Reviewed by volkan.

llvm-svn: 340892
2018-08-29 03:17:08 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar c106183518 [GISel]: Add legalization support for widening bit counting operations
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51053

Added legalization for WidenScalar of various bitcounting opcodes.

Reviewed by arsenm.

llvm-svn: 340429
2018-08-22 17:59:18 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar c0333f7184 Revert "Revert rr340111 "[GISel]: Add Legalization/lowering code for bit counting operations""
This reverts commit d1341152d91398e9a882ba2ee924147ea2f9b589.

This patch originally made use of Nested MachineIRBuilder buildInstr
calls, and since order of argument processing is not well defined, the
instructions were built slightly in a different order (still correct).
I've removed the nested buildInstr calls to have a defined order now.

Patch was tested by Mikael.

llvm-svn: 340309
2018-08-21 17:30:31 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 918930adf9 Revert rr340111 "[GISel]: Add Legalization/lowering code for bit counting operations"
It causes LegalizerHelperTest.LowerBitCountingCTTZ1 to fail.

llvm-svn: 340186
2018-08-20 16:50:19 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar 59b2485ba2 [GISel]: Add Legalization/lowering code for bit counting operations
https://reviews.llvm.org/D48847#inline-448257

Ported legalization expansions for CTLZ/CTTZ from DAG to GISel.

Reviewed by rtereshin.

llvm-svn: 340111
2018-08-18 00:01:54 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar 2980b01995 [GISel]: Pattern matchers for GFSUB, GFNEG
https://reviews.llvm.org/D47547

Add matching templates for G_FSUB, and G_FNEG.

Reviewed by: aemerson.

llvm-svn: 333685
2018-05-31 19:30:01 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar b1c467dbe7 [GISel] Refactor MachineIRBuilder to allow transformations while
building.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D45067

This change attempts to do two things:
1) It separates out the state that is stored in the
MachineIRBuilder(InsertionPt, MF, MRI, InsertFunction etc) into a
separate object called MachineIRBuilderState.
2) Add the ability to constant fold operations while building instructions
(optionally). MachineIRBuilder is now refactored into a MachineIRBuilderBase
which contains lots of non foldable build methods and their implementation.
Instructions which can be constant folded/transformed are now in a class
called FoldableInstructionBuilder which uses CRTP to use the implementation
of the derived class for buildBinaryOps. Additionally buildInstr in the derived
class can be used to implement other kinds of transformations.

Also because of separation of state, given a MachineIRBuilder in an API,
if one wishes to use another MachineIRBuilder, a new one can be
constructed from the state locally. For eg,

void doFoo(MachineIRBuilder &B) {
  MyCustomBuilder CustomB(B.getState());
  // Use CustomB for building.
}

reviewed by : aemerson

llvm-svn: 329596
2018-04-09 17:30:56 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar b808e3ad8b [GISel]: Fix incorrect type used in Pattern Match for ICst
getConstantVRegVal() returns int64_t but we use uint64_t.

llvm-svn: 327461
2018-03-13 23:21:13 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar 91fc4e0949 [GISel]: Add helpers for easy building G_FCONSTANT along with matchers
Added helpers to build G_FCONSTANT, along with matching ConstantFP and
unit tests for the same.

Sample usage.

auto MIB = Builder.buildFConstant(s32, 0.5); // Build IEEESingle
For Matching the above

const ConstantFP* Tmp;
mi_match(DstReg, MRI, m_GFCst(Tmp));

https://reviews.llvm.org/D44128
reviewed by: volkan

llvm-svn: 327152
2018-03-09 17:31:51 +00:00
Volkan Keles 2bc42e90ed GlobalISel: IRTranslate llvm.fabs.* intrinsic
Summary:
Fabs is a common floating-point operation, especially for some expansions. This patch adds
a new generic opcode for llvm.fabs.* intrinsic in order to avoid building/matching this intrinsic.

Reviewers: qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar, dsanders, rovka

Reviewed By: aditya_nandakumar

Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43864

llvm-svn: 326749
2018-03-05 22:31:55 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar cf85f31172 [GISel]: Fix base case for m_any_of PatternMatcher.
The base case for any_of was incorrectly returning true. Also add test
case which uses m_any_of(preds...) where none of the predicates are
true.

llvm-svn: 325848
2018-02-23 01:01:59 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar bab2d3e2b9 [GISel]: Add pattern matchers for G_BITCAST/PTRTOINT/INTTOPTR
Adds pattern matchers for the above along with unit tests for the same.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43479

llvm-svn: 325542
2018-02-19 23:11:53 +00:00
Volkan Keles 02bb1747a3 GlobalISel: Add templated functions and pattern matcher support for some more opcodes
Summary:
This patch adds templated functions to MachineIRBuilder for some opcodes
and adds pattern matcher support for G_AND and G_OR.

Reviewers: aditya_nandakumar

Reviewed By: aditya_nandakumar

Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43309

llvm-svn: 325162
2018-02-14 19:58:36 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar 6250b18831 [GISel]: Add Pattern Matcher for G_FMUL.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43206

llvm-svn: 325044
2018-02-13 20:09:13 +00:00
Puyan Lotfi 43e94b15ea Followup on Proposal to move MIR physical register namespace to '$' sigil.
Discussed here:

http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120320.html

In preparation for adding support for named vregs we are changing the sigil for
physical registers in MIR to '$' from '%'. This will prevent name clashes of
named physical register with named vregs.

llvm-svn: 323922
2018-01-31 22:04:26 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 760e113a03 [globalisel][legalizer] Fix a fallthrough case in the unittests debug printing
llvm-svn: 323711
2018-01-29 23:47:41 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 79cb839fcd [globalisel][legalizer] Adapt LegalizerInfo to support inter-type dependencies and other things.
Summary:
As discussed in D42244, we have difficulty describing the legality of some
operations. We're not able to specify relationships between types.
For example, declaring the following
  setAction({..., 0, s32}, Legal)
  setAction({..., 0, s64}, Legal)
  setAction({..., 1, s32}, Legal)
  setAction({..., 1, s64}, Legal)
currently declares these type combinations as legal:
  {s32, s32}
  {s64, s32}
  {s32, s64}
  {s64, s64}
but we currently have no means to say that, for example, {s64, s32} is
not legal. Some operations such as G_INSERT/G_EXTRACT/G_MERGE_VALUES/
G_UNMERGE_VALUES have relationships between the types that are currently
described incorrectly.
    
Additionally, G_LOAD/G_STORE currently have no means to legalize non-atomics
differently to atomics. The necessary information is in the MMO but we have no
way to use this in the legalizer. Similarly, there is currently no way for the
register type and the memory type to differ so there is no way to cleanly
represent extending-load/truncating-store in a way that can't be broken by
optimizers (resulting in illegal MIR).

It's also difficult to control the legalization strategy. We've added support
for legalizing non-power of 2 types but there's still some hardcoded assumptions
about the strategy. The main one I've noticed is that type0 is always legalized
before type1 which is not a good strategy for `type0 = G_EXTRACT type1, ...` if
you need to widen the container. It will converge on the same result eventually
but it will take a much longer route when legalizing type0 than if you legalize
type1 first.

Lastly, the definition of legality and the legalization strategy is kept
separate which is not ideal. It's helpful to be able to look at a one piece of
code and see both what is legal and the method the legalizer will use to make
illegal MIR more legal.

This patch adds a layer onto the LegalizerInfo (to be removed when all targets
have been migrated) which resolves all these issues.

Here are the rules for shift and division:
  for (unsigned BinOp : {G_LSHR, G_ASHR, G_SDIV, G_UDIV})
    getActionDefinitions(BinOp)
        .legalFor({s32, s64})     // If type0 is s32/s64 then it's Legal
        .clampScalar(0, s32, s64) // If type0 is <s32 then WidenScalar to s32
                                  // If type0 is >s64 then NarrowScalar to s64
        .widenScalarToPow2(0)     // Round type0 scalars up to powers of 2
        .unsupported();           // Otherwise, it's unsupported
This describes everything needed to both define legality and describe how to
make illegal things legal.

Here's an example of a complex rule:
  getActionDefinitions(G_INSERT)
      .unsupportedIf([=](const LegalityQuery &Query) {
        // If type0 is smaller than type1 then it's unsupported
        return Query.Types[0].getSizeInBits() <= Query.Types[1].getSizeInBits();
      })
      .legalIf([=](const LegalityQuery &Query) {
        // If type0 is s32/s64/p0 and type1 is a power of 2 other than 2 or 4 then it's legal
        // We don't need to worry about large type1's because unsupportedIf caught that.
        const LLT &Ty0 = Query.Types[0];
        const LLT &Ty1 = Query.Types[1];
        if (Ty0 != s32 && Ty0 != s64 && Ty0 != p0)
          return false;
        return isPowerOf2_32(Ty1.getSizeInBits()) &&
               (Ty1.getSizeInBits() == 1 || Ty1.getSizeInBits() >= 8);
      })
      .clampScalar(0, s32, s64)
      .widenScalarToPow2(0)
      .maxScalarIf(typeInSet(0, {s32}), 1, s16) // If type0 is s32 and type1 is bigger than s16 then NarrowScalar type1 to s16
      .maxScalarIf(typeInSet(0, {s64}), 1, s32) // If type0 is s64 and type1 is bigger than s32 then NarrowScalar type1 to s32
      .widenScalarToPow2(1)                     // Round type1 scalars up to powers of 2
      .unsupported();
This uses a lambda to say that G_INSERT is unsupported when type0 is bigger than
type1 (in practice, this would be a default rule for G_INSERT). It also uses one
to describe the legal cases. This particular predicate is equivalent to:
  .legalFor({{s32, s1}, {s32, s8}, {s32, s16}, {s64, s1}, {s64, s8}, {s64, s16}, {s64, s32}})

In terms of performance, I saw a slight (~6%) performance improvement when
AArch64 was around 30% ported but it's pretty much break even right now.
I'm going to take a look at constexpr as a means to reduce the initialization
cost.

Future work:
* Make it possible for opcodes to share rulesets. There's no need for
  G_LSHR/G_ASHR/G_SDIV/G_UDIV to have separate rule and ruleset objects. There's
  no technical barrier to this, it just hasn't been done yet.
* Replace the type-index numbers with an enum to get .clampScalar(Type0, s32, s64)
* Better names for things like .maxScalarIf() (clampMaxScalar?) and the vector rules.
* Improve initialization cost using constexpr

Possible future work:
* It's possible to make these rulesets change the MIR directly instead of
  returning a description of how to change the MIR. This should remove a little
  overhead caused by parsing the description and routing to the right code, but
  the real motivation is that it removes the need for LegalizeAction::Custom.
  With Custom removed, there's no longer a requirement that Custom legalization
  change the opcode to something that's considered legal.

Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar, volkan, reames, bogner

Reviewed By: bogner

Subscribers: hintonda, bogner, aemerson, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42251

llvm-svn: 323681
2018-01-29 19:54:49 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 9ade5592d9 [globalisel] Make LegalizerInfo::LegalizeAction available outside of LegalizerInfo. NFC
Summary:
The improvements to the LegalizerInfo discussed in D42244 require that
LegalizerInfo::LegalizeAction be available for use in other classes. As such,
it needs to be moved out of LegalizerInfo. This has been done separately to the
next patch to minimize the noise in that patch.

llvm-svn: 323669
2018-01-29 17:37:29 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar 2036f44654 Add support for pattern matching MachineInsts.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D42439

Add Instcombine like matchers for MachineInstructions. There are only
globalISel matchers for now.

llvm-svn: 323400
2018-01-25 02:53:06 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 538921dc86 [globalisel] Fix long lines from r323342
They would be fixed in a later patch but they shouldn't have been introduced.

llvm-svn: 323372
2018-01-24 20:43:21 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 262ed0ecd7 [globalisel] Introduce LegalityQuery to better encapsulate the legalizer decisions. NFC.
Summary:
`getAction(const InstrAspect &) const` breaks encapsulation by exposing
the smaller components that are used to decide how to legalize an
instruction.

This is a problem because we need to change the implementation of
LegalizerInfo so that it's able to describe particular type combinations
rather than just cartesian products of types.

For example, declaring the following
  setAction({..., 0, s32}, Legal)
  setAction({..., 0, s64}, Legal)
  setAction({..., 1, s32}, Legal)
  setAction({..., 1, s64}, Legal)
currently declares these type combinations as legal:
  {s32, s32}
  {s64, s32}
  {s32, s64}
  {s64, s64}
but we currently have no means to say that, for example, {s64, s32} is
not legal. Some operations such as G_INSERT/G_EXTRACT/G_MERGE_VALUES/
G_UNMERGE_VALUES has relationships between the types that are currently
described incorrectly.

Additionally, G_LOAD/G_STORE currently have no means to legalize non-atomics
differently to atomics. The necessary information is in the MMO but we have no
way to use this in the legalizer. Similarly, there is currently no way for the
register type and the memory type to differ so there is no way to cleanly
represent extending-load/truncating-store in a way that can't be broken by
optimizers (resulting in illegal MIR).

This patch introduces LegalityQuery which provides all the information
needed by the legalizer to make a decision on whether something is legal
and how to legalize it.

Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar, volkan, reames, bogner

Reviewed By: bogner

Subscribers: bogner, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42244

llvm-svn: 323342
2018-01-24 17:17:46 +00:00
David Blaikie b3bde2ea50 Fix a bunch more layering of CodeGen headers that are in Target
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).

llvm-svn: 318490
2017-11-17 01:07:10 +00:00
Kristof Beyls d5b7a00fd5 Silence MSVC error C2398
Reported by http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win/builds/6000/steps/build-unified-tree/logs/stdio
The error messages were all similar to:
llvm\unittests\CodeGen\GlobalISel\LegalizerInfoTest.cpp(54): error C2398: Element '1': conversion from '' to 'unsigned int' requires a narrowing conversion

llvm-svn: 317578
2017-11-07 14:37:01 +00:00
Kristof Beyls af9814a1fc [GlobalISel] Enable legalizing non-power-of-2 sized types.
This changes the interface of how targets describe how to legalize, see
the below description.

1. Interface for targets to describe how to legalize.

In GlobalISel, the API in the LegalizerInfo class is the main interface
for targets to specify which types are legal for which operations, and
what to do to turn illegal type/operation combinations into legal ones.

For each operation the type sizes that can be legalized without having
to change the size of the type are specified with a call to setAction.
This isn't different to how GlobalISel worked before. For example, for a
target that supports 32 and 64 bit adds natively:

  for (auto Ty : {s32, s64})
    setAction({G_ADD, 0, s32}, Legal);

or for a target that needs a library call for a 32 bit division:

  setAction({G_SDIV, s32}, Libcall);

The main conceptual change to the LegalizerInfo API, is in specifying
how to legalize the type sizes for which a change of size is needed. For
example, in the above example, how to specify how all types from i1 to
i8388607 (apart from s32 and s64 which are legal) need to be legalized
and expressed in terms of operations on the available legal sizes
(again, i32 and i64 in this case). Before, the implementation only
allowed specifying power-of-2-sized types (e.g. setAction({G_ADD, 0,
s128}, NarrowScalar).  A worse limitation was that if you'd wanted to
specify how to legalize all the sized types as allowed by the LLVM-IR
LangRef, i1 to i8388607, you'd have to call setAction 8388607-3 times
and probably would need a lot of memory to store all of these
specifications.

Instead, the legalization actions that need to change the size of the
type are specified now using a "SizeChangeStrategy".  For example:

   setLegalizeScalarToDifferentSizeStrategy(
       G_ADD, 0, widenToLargerAndNarrowToLargest);

This example indicates that for type sizes for which there is a larger
size that can be legalized towards, do it by Widening the size.
For example, G_ADD on s17 will be legalized by first doing WidenScalar
to make it s32, after which it's legal.
The "NarrowToLargest" indicates what to do if there is no larger size
that can be legalized towards. E.g. G_ADD on s92 will be legalized by
doing NarrowScalar to s64.

Another example, taken from the ARM backend is:
   for (unsigned Op : {G_SDIV, G_UDIV}) {
     setLegalizeScalarToDifferentSizeStrategy(Op, 0,
         widenToLargerTypesUnsupportedOtherwise);
     if (ST.hasDivideInARMMode())
       setAction({Op, s32}, Legal);
     else
       setAction({Op, s32}, Libcall);
   }

For this example, G_SDIV on s8, on a target without a divide
instruction, would be legalized by first doing action (WidenScalar,
s32), followed by (Libcall, s32).

The same principle is also followed for when the number of vector lanes
on vector data types need to be changed, e.g.:

   setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(8, 8)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
   setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(16, 8)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
   setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(4, 16)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
   setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(8, 16)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
   setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(2, 32)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
   setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(4, 32)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
   setLegalizeVectorElementToDifferentSizeStrategy(
       G_ADD, 0, widenToLargerTypesUnsupportedOtherwise);

As currently implemented here, vector types are legalized by first
making the vector element size legal, followed by then making the number
of lanes legal. The strategy to follow in the first step is set by a
call to setLegalizeVectorElementToDifferentSizeStrategy, see example
above.  The strategy followed in the second step
"moreToWiderTypesAndLessToWidest" (see code for its definition),
indicating that vectors are widened to more elements so they map to
natively supported vector widths, or when there isn't a legal wider
vector, split the vector to map it to the widest vector supported.

Therefore, for the above specification, some example legalizations are:
  * getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(3, 3)})
    returns {WidenScalar, LLT::vector(3, 8)}
  * getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(3, 8)})
    then returns {MoreElements, LLT::vector(8, 8)}
  * getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(20, 8)})
    returns {FewerElements, LLT::vector(16, 8)}


2. Key implementation aspects.

How to legalize a specific (operation, type index, size) tuple is
represented by mapping intervals of integers representing a range of
size types to an action to take, e.g.:

       setScalarAction({G_ADD, LLT:scalar(1)},
                       {{1, WidenScalar},  // bit sizes [ 1, 31[
                        {32, Legal},       // bit sizes [32, 33[
                        {33, WidenScalar}, // bit sizes [33, 64[
                        {64, Legal},       // bit sizes [64, 65[
                        {65, NarrowScalar} // bit sizes [65, +inf[
                       });

Please note that most of the code to do the actual lowering of
non-power-of-2 sized types is currently missing, this is just trying to
make it possible for targets to specify what is legal, and how non-legal
types should be legalized.  Probably quite a bit of further work is
needed in the actual legalizing and the other passes in GlobalISel to
support non-power-of-2 sized types.

I hope the documentation in LegalizerInfo.h and the examples provided in the
various {Target}LegalizerInfo.cpp and LegalizerInfoTest.cpp explains well
enough how this is meant to be used.

This drops the need for LLT::{half,double}...Size().


Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30529

llvm-svn: 317560
2017-11-07 10:34:34 +00:00
Quentin Colombet 250e050a50 [GlobalISel] Make GlobalISel a non-optional library.
With this change, the GlobalISel library gets always built. In
particular, this is not possible to opt GlobalISel out of the build
using the LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL variable any more.

llvm-svn: 309990
2017-08-03 21:52:25 +00:00
Kristof Beyls b539ea5393 [GlobalISel] Make multi-step legalization work.
In r301116, a custom lowering needed to be introduced to be able to
legalize 8 and 16-bit divisions on ARM targets without a division
instruction, since 2-step legalization (WidenScalar from 8 bit to 32
bit, then Libcall the 32-bit division) doesn't work.

This fixes this and makes this kind of multi-step legalization, where
first the size of the type needs to be changed and then some action is
needed that doesn't require changing the size of the type,
straighforward to specify.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32529

llvm-svn: 306806
2017-06-30 08:26:20 +00:00
Tim Northover 69fa84a6e9 GlobalISel: rename legalizer components to match others.
The previous names were both misleading (the MachineLegalizer actually
contained the info tables) and inconsistent with the selector & translator (in
having a "Machine") prefix. This should make everything sensible again.

The only functional change is the name of a couple of command-line options.

llvm-svn: 284287
2016-10-14 22:18:18 +00:00
Diana Picus 68c7b04e8d [GlobalISel] Get the AArch64 tests to work on Linux
Mostly this just means changing the triple from aarch64-apple-ios to the generic
aarch64--. Only one test needs more significant changes, but GlobalISel already
does the right thing so it's ok to just change the checks.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25532

llvm-svn: 284223
2016-10-14 10:19:40 +00:00
Tim Northover fe6fec9f65 GlobalISel: fix misuse of using declaration in test.
Clang didn't diagnose it before. Oops.

llvm-svn: 283451
2016-10-06 13:57:31 +00:00
Tim Northover 5ae8350af6 GlobalISel: cache pointer sizes in LLT
Otherwise everything that needs to work out what size they are has to keep a
DataLayout handy, which is a bit silly and very annoying.

llvm-svn: 281597
2016-09-15 09:20:34 +00:00
Tim Northover f8bab1ce0c GlobalISel: use multi-dimensional arrays for legalize actions.
Instead of putting all possible requests into a single table, we can perform
the extremely dense lookup based on opcode and type-index in constant time
using multi-dimensional array-like things.

This roughly halves the time spent doing legalization, which was dominated by
queries against the Actions table.

llvm-svn: 280011
2016-08-29 21:00:00 +00:00
Tim Northover cecee56abb GlobalISel: legalize sdiv and srem operations.
llvm-svn: 279842
2016-08-26 17:46:13 +00:00
Tim Northover a01bece1dc GlobalISel: extend legalizer interface to handle multiple types.
Instructions like G_ICMP have multiple types that may need to be legalized (the
boolean output and nearly arbitrary inputs in this case). So the legalizer must
be capable of deciding what to do for each of them separately.

llvm-svn: 279554
2016-08-23 19:30:42 +00:00
Tim Northover 75ad077330 GlobalISel: implement Legalization querying framework.
This adds an (incomplete, inefficient) framework for deciding what to do with
some operation on a given type.

llvm-svn: 276184
2016-07-20 21:13:29 +00:00