Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Pilgrim 9cb018b6b6 [X86][SSE] Replace 128-bit SSE41 PMOVSX intrinsics with native IR
This patches removes the x86.sse41.pmovsx* intrinsics, provides a suitable upgrade path and updates relevant tests to sign extend a subvector instead.

LLVM counterpart to D12835

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13002

llvm-svn: 248368
2015-09-23 08:48:33 +00:00
Sanjay Patel af1846c097 [X86, AVX] replace vextractf128 intrinsics with generic shuffles
Now that we've replaced the vinsertf128 intrinsics, 
do the same for their extract twins.

This is very much like D8086 (checked in at r231794):
We want to replace as much custom x86 shuffling via intrinsics
as possible because pushing the code down the generic shuffle
optimization path allows for better codegen and less complexity
in LLVM.

This is also the LLVM sibling to the cfe D8275 patch.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8276

llvm-svn: 232045
2015-03-12 15:15:19 +00:00
Sanjay Patel f5b673dd50 add CHECK-LABELs for better reliability
llvm-svn: 231962
2015-03-11 20:12:07 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 19792fb270 [X86, AVX] replace vinsertf128 intrinsics with generic shuffles
We want to replace as much custom x86 shuffling via intrinsics
as possible because pushing the code down the generic shuffle
optimization path allows for better codegen and less complexity
in LLVM.

This is the sibling patch for the Clang half of this change:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8088

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8086

llvm-svn: 231794
2015-03-10 16:08:36 +00:00
Craig Topper 782d620657 [X86] Remove the blendpd/blendps/pblendw/pblendd intrinsics. They can represented by shuffle_vector instructions.
llvm-svn: 230860
2015-02-28 19:33:17 +00:00
Craig Topper b324e43aed [X86] Remove AVX2 and SSE2 pslldq and psrldq intrinsics. We can represent them in IR with vector shuffles now. All their uses have been removed from clang in favor of shuffles.
llvm-svn: 229640
2015-02-18 06:24:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 373b2b1728 [x86] Fix a pretty horrible bug and inconsistency in the x86 asm
parsing (and latent bug in the instruction definitions).

This is effectively a revert of r136287 which tried to address
a specific and narrow case of immediate operands failing to be accepted
by x86 instructions with a pretty heavy hammer: it introduced a new kind
of operand that behaved differently. All of that is removed with this
commit, but the test cases are both preserved and enhanced.

The core problem that r136287 and this commit are trying to handle is
that gas accepts both of the following instructions:

  insertps $192, %xmm0, %xmm1
  insertps $-64, %xmm0, %xmm1

These will encode to the same byte sequence, with the immediate
occupying an 8-bit entry. The first form was fixed by r136287 but that
broke the prior handling of the second form! =[ Ironically, we would
still emit the second form in some cases and then be unable to
re-assemble the output.

The reason why the first instruction failed to be handled is because
prior to r136287 the operands ere marked 'i32i8imm' which forces them to
be sign-extenable. Clearly, that won't work for 192 in a single byte.
However, making thim zero-extended or "unsigned" doesn't really address
the core issue either because it breaks negative immediates. The correct
fix is to make these operands 'i8imm' reflecting that they can be either
signed or unsigned but must be 8-bit immediates. This patch backs out
r136287 and then changes those places as well as some others to use
'i8imm' rather than one of the extended variants.

Naturally, this broke something else. The custom DAG nodes had to be
updated to have a much more accurate type constraint of an i8 node, and
a bunch of Pat immediates needed to be specified as i8 values.

The fallout didn't end there though. We also then ceased to be able to
match the instruction-specific intrinsics to the instructions so
modified. Digging, this is because they too used i32 rather than i8 in
their signature. So I've also switched those intrinsics to i8 arguments
in line with the instructions.

In order to make the intrinsic adjustments of course, I also had to add
auto upgrading for the intrinsics.

I suspect that the intrinsic argument types may have led everything down
this rabbit hole. Pretty happy with the result.

llvm-svn: 217310
2014-09-06 10:00:01 +00:00