In the coverage report, the line and count columns have been swapped to make it more readable.
A follow-up commit in compiler-rt is needed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23281
llvm-svn: 278152
A UD2 might make its way into the program via a call to @llvm.trap.
Obviously, calls are not terminators. However, we modeled the X86
instruction, UD2, as a terminator. Later on, this confuses the epilogue
insertion machinery which results in the epilogue getting inserted
before the UD2. For some platforms, like x64, the result is a
violation of the ABI.
Instead, model UD2/UD2B as a side effecting instruction which may
observe memory.
llvm-svn: 278144
As detailed on D22726, much of the shift combining code assume constant values will fit into a uint64_t value and calls ConstantSDNode::getZExtValue where it probably shouldn't (leading to asserts). Using APInt directly avoids this problem but we encounter other assertions if we attempt to compare/operate on 2 APInt of different bitwidths.
This patch adds a helper function to ensure that 2 APInt values are zero extended as required so that they can be safely used together. I've only added an initial example use for this to the '(SHIFT (SHIFT x, c1), c2) --> (SHIFT x, (ADD c1, c2))' combines. Further cases can easily be added as required.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23007
llvm-svn: 278141
Summary:
We teach alias analysis that invariant.start is readonly.
This helps with GVN and memcopy optimizations that currently treat.
invariant.start as a clobber.
We need to treat this as readonly, so that DSE does not incorrectly
remove stores prior to the invariant.start
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames, majnemer, dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23214
llvm-svn: 278138
no prof data for func warning is turned off by default
due to its high verbosity and minimal usefulness.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23295
llvm-svn: 278127
This makes a trivial change in the emission of the per-function XRay
tables, and makes sure that the xray_instr_map section does show up in
the object file.
llvm-svn: 278113
We only had partial memory folding support for the intrinsic definitions, and (as noted on PR27481) was causing FR32/FR64/VR128 mismatch errors with the machine verifier.
This patch adds missing memory folding support for both intrinsics and the ffloor/fnearbyint/fceil/frint/ftrunc patterns and in doing so fixes the failing machine verifier stack folding tests from PR27481.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23276
llvm-svn: 278106
Previously SSE1 had a pattern that looked for integer types without bitcasts, but the type wasn't legal with only SSE1 and SSE2 add an identical pattern for the integer instructions.
llvm-svn: 278089
* Delete extra '_' prefixes from JS library function names. fixImports()
function in JS glue code deals with this for wasm.
* Change command-line option names in order to be consistent with
asm.js.
* Add missing lowering code for llvm.eh.typeid.for intrinsics
* Delete commas in mangled function names
* Fix a function argument attributes bug. Because we add the pointer to
the original callee as the first argument of invoke wrapper, all
argument attribute indices have to be incremented by one.
Patch by Heejin Ahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23258
llvm-svn: 278081
Besides a general consistently benefit, the extra layer of indirection
allows the mechanical part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23256 that
requires touching every transformation and analysis to be factored out
cleanly.
Thanks to David for the suggestion.
llvm-svn: 278080
One exception here is LoopInfo which must forward-declare it (because
the typedef is in LoopPassManager.h which depends on LoopInfo).
Also, some includes for LoopPassManager.h were needed since that file
provides the typedef.
Besides a general consistently benefit, the extra layer of indirection
allows the mechanical part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23256 that
requires touching every transformation and analysis to be factored out
cleanly.
Thanks to David for the suggestion.
llvm-svn: 278079
Besides a general consistently benefit, the extra layer of indirection
allows the mechanical part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23256 that
requires touching every transformation and analysis to be factored out
cleanly.
Thanks to David for the suggestion.
llvm-svn: 278078
Besides a general consistently benefit, the extra layer of indirection
allows the mechanical part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23256 that
requires touching every transformation and analysis to be factored out
cleanly.
Thanks to David for the suggestion.
llvm-svn: 278077
The DebugDirectory contains a pointer to the CodeView info structure which is a
derivative of the OMF debug directory. The structure has evolved a bit over
time, and PDB 2.0 used a slightly different definition from PDB 7.0. Both of
these are specific to CodeView and not COFF. Reflect this by moving the
structure definitions into the DebugInfo/CodeView headers. Define a generic
DebugInfo union type that can be used to pass around a reference to the
DebugInfo irrespective of the versioning. NFC.
llvm-svn: 278075
Attribute SizeOfOptionalHeader is ignored if no PE header is present
in the file. This attribute should be ignored according to standard,
however there are uses of this field even though it should not be used.
This change does not conform to PE/COFF standard, but there are several
COFF files without PE header, where you had to add up SizeOfOptionalHeader
in order to get proper section headers. Other tools and their own parsers
do take this into account.
Patch by Marek Milkovič!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D22750
llvm-svn: 278066
This patch causes RuntimeDyld to check for existing definitions when it
encounters weak symbols. If a definition already exists then the new weak
definition is discarded. All symbol lookups within a "logical dylib" should now
agree on the address of any given weak symbol. This allows the JIT to better
match the behavior of the static linker for C++ code.
This support is only partial, as it does not allow strong definitions that
occur after the first weak definition (in JIT symbol lookup order) to override
the previous weak definitions. Support for this will be added in a future
patch.
llvm-svn: 278065
This reverts commit r278048. Something changed between the last time I
built this--it takes awhile on my ridiculously slow and ancient
computer--and now that broke this.
llvm-svn: 278053
Summary:
Based on two patches by Michael Mueller.
This is a target attribute that causes a function marked with it to be
emitted as "hotpatchable". This particular mechanism was originally
devised by Microsoft for patching their binaries (which they are
constantly updating to stay ahead of crackers, script kiddies, and other
ne'er-do-wells on the Internet), but is now commonly abused by Windows
programs to hook API functions.
This mechanism is target-specific. For x86, a two-byte no-op instruction
is emitted at the function's entry point; the entry point must be
immediately preceded by 64 (32-bit) or 128 (64-bit) bytes of padding.
This padding is where the patch code is written. The two byte no-op is
then overwritten with a short jump into this code. The no-op is usually
a `movl %edi, %edi` instruction; this is used as a magic value
indicating that this is a hotpatchable function.
Reviewers: majnemer, sanjoy, rnk
Subscribers: dberris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19908
llvm-svn: 278048
Moves of a value to a segment register from a 16-bit register is
equivalent to one from it's corresponding 32-bit register. Match gas's
behavior and rewrite instructions to the shorter of equivalent forms.
Reviewers: rnk, ab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23166
llvm-svn: 278031
Summary:
Ensure that the MemorySSA object never changes address when using the
new pass manager since the walkers contained by MemorySSA cache pointers
to it at construction time. This is achieved by wrapping the
MemorySSAAnalysis result in a unique_ptr. Also add some asserts that
check for this bug.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv, dberlin
Subscribers: mcrosier, hfinkel, chandlerc, silvas, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23171
llvm-svn: 278028
This patch adds support for some new relocation models to the ARM
backend:
* Read-only position independence (ROPI): Code and read-only data is accessed
PC-relative. The offsets between all code and RO data sections are known at
static link time. This does not affect read-write data.
* Read-write position independence (RWPI): Read-write data is accessed relative
to the static base register (r9). The offsets between all writeable data
sections are known at static link time. This does not affect read-only data.
These two modes are independent (they specify how different objects
should be addressed), so they can be used individually or together. They
are otherwise the same as the "static" relocation model, and are not
compatible with SysV-style PIC using a global offset table.
These modes are normally used by bare-metal systems or systems with
small real-time operating systems. They are designed to avoid the need
for a dynamic linker, the only initialisation required is setting r9 to
an appropriate value for RWPI code.
I have only added support to SelectionDAG, not FastISel, because
FastISel is currently disabled for bare-metal targets where these modes
would be used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23195
llvm-svn: 278015
Summary:
Add support for the .insn directive.
.insn is an s390 specific directive that allows encoding of an instruction
instead of using a mnemonic. The motivating case is some code in node.js that
requires support for the .insn directive.
Reviewers: koriakin, uweigand
Subscribers: koriakin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21809
llvm-svn: 278012
For some reason, MSVC2013's cl.exe crashes with
fatal error C1001: An internal error has occurred in the compiler
with this when compiling e.g. LoopDistribute.cpp.
llvm-svn: 278011
Gathering constantins from a condition on the false path ask makeAllowedICmpRegion about inverse predicate instead of inversing the resulting range.
This change was separated from the review "[LVI] Make LVI smarter about comparisons with non-constants" (https://reviews.llvm.org/D23205#inline-198361)
llvm-svn: 278009
Summary:
The DAG combine transformation that was generating the
aarch64_neon_vcvtfp2fxs node was assuming that all
inputs where legal and wasn't accounting that the input
could be a v4f64 if we're trying to do the transformation
before legalization. We now bail out in this case.
All illegal types besides v4f64 were already rejected.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28877.
Reviewers: jmolloy
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23261
llvm-svn: 278002
Summary:
They are now lexed as a single token on targets where
MCAsmInfo::HasMipsExpressions is true and then parsed in a similar way to
the '~' operator as part of MCExpr::parseExpression.
As a result:
* expressions and immediates no longer have different parsing rules. The
difference is now solely down to whether evaluateAsAbsolute() succeeds.
* %hi(%neg(%gp_rel(x))) are no longer parsed as a single operator and
decomposed into the three MipsMCExpr nodes. They are parsed directly as
three MipsMCExpr nodes.
* parseMemOperand no longer needs to eat all the surrounding parenthesis
to get at the outermost operator to make this work
* %hi(%neg(%gp_rel(x))) and %lo(%neg(%gp_rel(x))) are no longer the only
3-in-1 relocs that parse for N64. They're still the only combinations that
are permitted in relocatable expressions though. Fixing that should be a
later patch.
* We no longer need to list all the tokens that can occur as the first token of
an expression or immediate.
test/MC/Mips/expr1.s:
This change also prevents the incorrect lowering of %lo(2*4)+foo to
%lo(8+foo) which is not an equivalent expression (the difference is
whether foo is truncated to 16-bit or not) and the test has been
updated to account for the macro expansion the correct expression requires.
Reviewers: sdardis
Subscribers: dsanders, sdardis, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23110
llvm-svn: 277988
Summary:
In the use optimizer, we need to keep of whether the lower bound still
dominates us or else we may decide a lower bound is still valid when it
is not due to intervening pushes/pops. Fixes PR28880 (and probably a
bunch of other things).
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: MatzeB, llvm-commits, sebpop
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23237
llvm-svn: 277978
Summary:
The correctness fix here is that when we CSE a load with another load,
we need to combine the metadata on the two loads. This matches the
behavior of other passes, like instcombine and GVN.
There's also a minor optimization improvement here: for load PRE, the
aliasing metadata on the inserted load should be the same as the
metadata on the original load. Not sure why the old code was throwing
it away.
Issue found by inspection.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21460
llvm-svn: 277977
Optimized lowering of BITCAST node. The BITCAST node can be replaced with COPY_TO_REG instead of KMOV.
It allows to suppress two opposite BITCAST operations and avoid redundant "movs".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23247
llvm-svn: 277958
This is a new test that should explore a current suboptimal sequence in passing values between cmp and kor intrinsics.
The code will be optimized in an upcoming patch.
Submitted bug here:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28839
llvm-svn: 277954
Summary:
CoroSplit pass processes the coroutine twice. First, it lets it go through
complete IPO optimization pipeline as a single function. It forces restart
of the pipeline by inserting an indirect call to an empty function "coro.devirt.trigger"
which is devirtualized by CoroElide pass that triggers a restart of the pipeline by CGPassManager.
(In later patches, when CoroSplit pass sees the same coroutine the second time, it splits it up,
adds coroutine subfunctions to the SCC to be processed by IPO pipeline.)
Documentation and overview is here: http://llvm.org/docs/Coroutines.html.
Upstreaming sequence (rough plan)
1.Add documentation. (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22603)
2.Add coroutine intrinsics. (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22659)
3.Add empty coroutine passes. (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22847)
4.Add coroutine devirtualization + tests.
ab) Lower coro.resume and coro.destroy (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22998)
c) Do devirtualization (https://reviews.llvm.org/D23229)
5.Add CGSCC restart trigger + tests. <= we are here
6.Add coroutine heap elision + tests.
7.Add the rest of the logic (split into more patches)
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23234
llvm-svn: 277936
Assuming SSE2 is available then we can safely commute between these, removing some unnecessary register moves and improving memory folding opportunities.
VEX encoded versions don't benefit so I haven't added support to them.
llvm-svn: 277930
The current approach isn't a long-term viable pattern. Given the set of
architectures A, vendors V, operating systems O, and environments E, it
does |A| * |V| * |O| * |E| * 4! tests. As LLVM grows, this test keeps
getting slower, despite my working very hard to make it get some
"optimizations" even in -O0 builds in order to lower the constant
factors. Fundamentally, we're doing an unreasonable amount of work.i
Looking at the specific thing being tested -- the goal seems very
clearly to be testing the *permutations*, not the *combinations*. The
combinations are driving up the complexity much more than anything else.
Instead, test every possible value for a given triple entry in every
permutation of *some* triple. This really seems to cover the core goal
of the test. Every single possible triple component is tested in every
position. But because we keep the rest of the triple constant, it does
so in a dramatically more scalable amount of time. With this model we do
(|A| + |V| + |O| + |E|) * 4! tests.
For me on a debug build, this goes from running for 19 seconds to 19
milliseconds, or a 1000x improvement. This makes a world of difference
for the critical path of 'ninja check-llvm' and other extremely common
workflows.
Thanks to Renato, Dean, and David for the helpful review comments and
helping me refine the explanation of the change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23156
llvm-svn: 277912
GVN-Hoist appears to miscompile llvm-testsuite
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/fbench.c at the moment.
I filed http://llvm.org/PR28880
This reverts commit r277786.
llvm-svn: 277909
Summary:
This is the 4c patch of the coroutine series. CoroElide pass now checks if PostSplit coro.begin
is referenced by coro.subfn.addr intrinsics. If so replace coro.subfn.addrs with an appropriate coroutine
subfunction associated with that coro.begin.
Documentation and overview is here: http://llvm.org/docs/Coroutines.html.
Upstreaming sequence (rough plan)
1.Add documentation. (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22603)
2.Add coroutine intrinsics. (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22659)
3.Add empty coroutine passes. (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22847)
4.Add coroutine devirtualization + tests.
ab) Lower coro.resume and coro.destroy (https://reviews.llvm.org/D22998)
c) Do devirtualization <= we are here
5.Add CGSCC restart trigger + tests.
6.Add coroutine heap elision + tests.
7.Add the rest of the logic (split into more patches)
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23229
llvm-svn: 277908
It breaks ExecutionEngine/OrcLazy/weak-function.ll on most bots.
Script:
--
...
--
Exit Code: 1
Command Output (stderr):
--
Could not find main function.
llvm-svn: 277907
ScanInstructions is now 2 functions:
AnalyzeBranches and ScanInstructions. ScanInstructions also now takes a
pair of arguments delimiting the instructions to be scanned. This will
be used for forked diamond support to re-scan only a portion of the
block.
llvm-svn: 277904
This adds partial support for weak functions to the CompileOnDemandLayer by
modifying the addLogicalModule method to check for existing stub definitions
before building a new stub for a weak function. This scheme is sufficient to
support ODR definitions, but fails for general weak definitions if strong
definition is encountered after the first weak definition. (A more extensive
refactor will be required to fully support weak symbols).
This patch does *not* add weak symbol support to RuntimeDyld: I hope to add
that in the near future.
llvm-svn: 277896
Fixes PR28764. Right now there is no way to test this, but (as
mentioned on the PR) with Michael Zolotukhin's yet to be checked in
LoopSimplify verfier, 8 of the llvm-lit tests for IRCE crash.
llvm-svn: 277891
This resubmits a3770391c5fb64108d565e12f61dd77ce71b5b4f,
which was reverted due to breakages on non-Windows machines.
Due to differences in template instantiation rules on Microsoft
and non-Microsoft platforms, a member access restriction was
triggering on non-Microsoft compilers. Previously, a friend
declaration for std::vector<> had been introduced into the
DebugMap class to make the member access restriction pass,
but the introduction of support for SmallVector<> meant that
an additional friend declaration would need to be added.
This didn't really make a lot of sense since the user of the
macro is probably only using one type (SmallVector<>, vector<>,
etc) and we could in theory add support for even more types
to this macro in the future (e.g. std::deque), so rather than
add another friend declaration, I just made the type being
referenced a public nested typedef instead of a private nested
typedef.
llvm-svn: 277888
Note that this fold really belongs in InstSimplify.
Refactoring here anyway as an intermediate step because
there's a planned addition to this function in D23134.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23223
llvm-svn: 277883
Summary:
Originally the plan was to use the custom worklist to do some block popping,
and because we don't actually need a visited set. The custom one we have
here is slightly broken, and it's not worth fixing vs using depth_first_iterator since we aren't going to go the route we originally
were.
Fixes PR28874
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: llvm-commits, gberry
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23187
llvm-svn: 277880
This fixes PR28825. The problem was that we only checked if a value from
a created inner loop is used in the outer loop, and fixed LCSSA for
them. But we missed to fixup LCSSA for values used in exits of the outer
loop.
llvm-svn: 277877
Until now, our use case for the visitor has been to take a stream of bytes
representing a type stream, deserialize the records in sequence, and do
something with them, where "something" is determined by how the user
implements a particular set of callbacks on an abstract class.
For actually writing PDBs, however, we want to do the reverse. We have
some kind of description of the list of records in their in-memory format,
and we want to process each one. Perhaps by serializing them to a byte
stream, or perhaps by converting them from one description format (Yaml)
to another (in-memory representation).
This was difficult in the current model because deserialization and
invoking the callbacks were tightly coupled.
With this patch we change this so that TypeDeserializer is itself an
implementation of the particular set of callbacks. This decouples
deserialization from the iteration over a list of records and invocation
of the callbacks. TypeDeserializer is initialized with another
implementation of the callback interface, so that upon deserialization it
can pass the deserialized record through to the next set of callbacks. In
a sense this is like an implementation of the Decorator design pattern,
where the Deserializer is a decorator.
This will be useful for writing Pdbs from yaml, where we have a
description of the type records in Yaml format. In this case, the visitor
implementation would have each visitation callback method implemented in
such a way as to extract the proper set of fields from the Yaml, and it
could maintain state that builds up a list of these records. Finally at
the end we can pass this information through to another set of callbacks
which serializes them into a byte stream.
Reviewed By: majnemer, ruiu, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23177
llvm-svn: 277871
Currently YAML sequences require std::vectors. All of the methods that the
YAML parser accesses though are present in SmallVector, so there's no
reason we can't support SmallVector inherently. This patch does that.
Reviewed By: majnemer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23213
llvm-svn: 277870
Summary:
This is the setting of the Vulkan closed source driver.
It decreases the max wave count from 10 to 8.
26010 shaders in 14650 tests
Totals:
VGPRS: 829593 -> 808440 (-2.55 %)
Spilled SGPRs: 81878 -> 42226 (-48.43 %)
Spilled VGPRs: 367 -> 358 (-2.45 %)
Scratch VGPRs: 1764 -> 1748 (-0.91 %) dwords per thread
Code Size: 36677864 -> 35923932 (-2.06 %) bytes
There is a massive decrease in SGPR spilling in general and -7.4% spilled
VGPRs for DiRT Showdown (= SGPRs spilled to scratch?)
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD, nhaehnle
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits, kzhuravl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23034
llvm-svn: 277867
Summary: Thumb2 supports encoding immediates with specific patterns into mov.w by splatting the low 8 bits into other bytes.
I'm resubmitting this patch. The test case in the original commit
r277610 does not specify triple, so builds with differnt default triple
will have different output.
This patch fixed trile as thumb-darwin-apple.
Reviewers: john.brawn, jmolloy, bruno
Subscribers: jmolloy, aemerson, rengolin, samparker, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23090
llvm-svn: 277865
Summary: Hot callsites should have higher threshold than inline hints. This patch uses separate threshold parameter for hot callsites.
Reviewers: davidxl, eraman
Subscribers: Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22368
llvm-svn: 277860
The analysis manager was made not optional and turned into a
reference instead of a pointer in r272978. Some comments were
still refering to the previous behavior.
llvm-svn: 277857
Summary:
Chrome on Linux uses WholeProgramDevirt for speed ups, and it's
important to detect regressions on both sides: the toolchain,
if fewer methods get devirtualized after an update, and Chrome,
if an innocently looking change caused many hot methods become
virtual again.
The need to track devirtualized methods is not Chrome-specific,
but it's probably the only user of the pass at this time.
Reviewers: kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23219
llvm-svn: 277856
Summary:
This is another refactoring to break up the one function into three logical components functions.
Another non-functional change before we start added in features.
Reviewers: nadav, mehdi_amini, majnemer
Subscribers: twoh, freik, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23102
llvm-svn: 277855
Summary:
If a profile has no samples for a function, then the function "entry count" is set to the value 0. Several places in the code test that if the Function::getEntryCount is defined at all. Here we change to treat a 0 entry count the same as undefined.
In particular, this fixes a problem in getLayoutSuccessorProbThreshold in MachineBlockPlacement.cpp where we use a different and inferior heuristic for laying out basic blocks.
Reviewers: danielcdh, dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23082
llvm-svn: 277849
This prevents handles from being invalidated (through iterator invalidation)
when new modules are added.
No test-case yet: This bug was uncovered during work on an upcoming patch for
weak symbol support and the testcase for that feature will implicitly test for
correct behavior here.
llvm-svn: 277847
This is where an LC_SEGMENT load command has a fileoff field that
extends past the end of the file.
Also fix llvm-nm and llvm-size to remove the errorToErrorCode() call so error messages are printed.
And needed to update a few test cases now that they do print the error messages just a
bit differently.
llvm-svn: 277845
Summary: We do not care about intrinsic calls when assigning discriminators.
Reviewers: davidxl, dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23212
llvm-svn: 277843
String pooling is not guaranteed by the standard, so if
you're comparing two different string literals for equality,
you have to use strcmp.
llvm-svn: 277831
Summary:
Having -O0 in opt allows testing that -O0 optimization
pipeline is built correctly.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23208
llvm-svn: 277829
There were two locations where fast-isel would generate a LFD instruction
with a target register class VSFRC instead of F8RC when VSX was enabled.
This can ccause invalid registers to be used in certain cases, like:
lfd 36, ...
instead of using a VSX load instruction. The wrong register number gets
silently truncated, causing invalid code to be generated.
The first place is PPCFastISel::PPCEmitLoad, which had multiple problems:
1.) The IsVSSRC and IsVSFRC flags are not initialized correctly, since they
are computed from resultReg, which is still zero at this point in many cases.
Fixed by changing the helper routines to operate on a register class instead
of a register and passing in UseRC.
2.) Even with this fixed, Is64VSXLoad is still wrong due to a typo:
bool Is32VSXLoad = IsVSSRC && Opc == PPC::LFS;
bool Is64VSXLoad = IsVSSRC && Opc == PPC::LFD;
The second line needs to use isVSFRC (like PPCEmitStore does).
3.) Once both the above are fixed, we're now generating a VSX instruction --
but an incorrect one, since generation of an indexed instruction with null
index is wrong. Fixed by copying the code handling the same issue in
PPCEmitStore.
The second place is PPCFastISel::PPCMaterializeFP, where we would emit an
LFD to load a constant from the literal pool, and use the wrong result
register class. Fixed by hardcoding a F8RC class even on systems
supporting VSX.
Fixes: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28630
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22632
llvm-svn: 277823
Summary:
Add instruction formats E, RSI, SSd, SSE, and SSF.
Added BRXH, BRXLE, PR, MVCK, STRAG, and ECTG instructions to test out
those formats.
Reviewers: uweigand
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23179
llvm-svn: 277822
This generated IR based on the order of evaluation, which is different
between GCC and Clang. With that in mind you get bootstrap miscompares
if you compare a Clang built with GCC-built Clang vs. Clang built with
Clang-built Clang. Diagnosing that made my head hurt.
This also reverts commit r277337, which "fixed" the test case.
llvm-svn: 277820
We should not use double (or float) in the LLVM, unless it is really needed. x87 FP register doesn't preserve SNaN to move the value.
FIXME: APFloat() may have the constructor by raw bit.
llvm-svn: 277813
This differs from the previous version by being more careful about template
instantiation/specialization in order to prevent errors when building with
clang -Werror. Specifically:
* begin is not defined in the template and is instead instantiated when Head
is. I think the warning when we don't do that is wrong (PR28815) but for now
at least do it this way to avoid the warning.
* Instead of performing template specializations in LLVM_INSTANTIATE_REGISTRY
instead provide a template definition then do explicit instantiation. No
compiler I've tried has problems with doing it the other way, but strictly
speaking it's not permitted by the C++ standard so better safe than sorry.
Original commit message:
Currently the Registry class contains the vestiges of a previous attempt to
allow plugins to be used on Windows without using BUILD_SHARED_LIBS, where a
plugin would have its own copy of a registry and export it to be imported by
the tool that's loading the plugin. This only works if the plugin is entirely
self-contained with the only interface between the plugin and tool being the
registry, and in particular this conflicts with how IR pass plugins work.
This patch changes things so that instead the add_node function of the registry
is exported by the tool and then imported by the plugin, which solves this
problem and also means that instead of every plugin having to export every
registry they use instead LLVM only has to export the add_node functions. This
allows plugins that use a registry to work on Windows if
LLVM_EXPORT_SYMBOLS_FOR_PLUGINS is used.
llvm-svn: 277806
This patch fixes passing long double type arguments to function in
soft float mode. If there is less than 4 argument registers free
(long double type is mapped in 4 gpr registers in soft float mode)
long double type argument must be passed through stack.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20114.
llvm-svn: 277804
Summary:
Turn (select C, (sext A), B) into (sext (select C, A, B')) when A is i1 and
B is a compatible constant, also for zext instead of sext. This will then be
further folded into logical operations.
The transformation would be valid for non-i1 types as well, but other parts of
InstCombine prefer to have sext from non-i1 as an operand of select.
Motivated by the shader compiler frontend in Mesa for AMDGPU, which emits i32
for boolean operations. With this change, the boolean logic is fully
recovered.
Reviewers: majnemer, spatel, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22747
llvm-svn: 277801
Followup from r277778, after Mehdi's comments.
Expand %ld64 to perform the necessary preload instead, that way new
tests do not need to worry about setting up DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
themselves.
rdar://problem/24300926
llvm-svn: 277788
The patch splits a complex && if condition into easier to read and understand
logic. That wrong early exit condition was letting some instructions with not
all operands available pass through when HoistingGeps was true.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23174
llvm-svn: 277785
Add a generalized IRBuilderCallbackInserter, which is just given a
callback to execute after insertion. This can be used to get rid of
the custom inserter in InstCombine, which will in turn allow me to add
target specific InstCombineCalls API for intrinsics without horrible
layering violations.
llvm-svn: 277784
Shifts with a uniform but non-constant count were considered very expensive to
vectorize, because the splat of the uniform count and the shift would tend to
appear in different blocks. That made the splat invisible to ISel, and we'd
scalarize the shift at codegen time.
Since r201655, CodeGenPrepare sinks those splats to be next to their use, and we
are able to select the appropriate vector shifts. This updates the cost model to
to take this into account by making shifts by a uniform cheap again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23049
llvm-svn: 277782
Green Dragon's darwin stage2 asan bot fails on some checks:
http://lab.llvm.org:8080/green/job/clang-stage2-cmake-RgSan_check
test/tools/lto/hide-linkonce-odr.ll
test/tools/lto/opt-level.ll
ERROR: Interceptors are not working. This may be because
AddressSanitizer is loaded too late (e.g. via dlopen)
To fix this, %ld64 needs to load 'libclang_rt.asan_osx_dynamic.dylib'
before libLTO.dylib, via DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES. This won't work by
updating config.environment, since some shim binary in the way scrubs
the env vars. Instead, provide the path to this lib through %asanrtlib,
which can then be used by tests directly with DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES.
rdar://problem/24300926
llvm-svn: 277778
when we are pointed at real data.
David Blaikie pointed out some odd logic in the case the Err value was a nullptr and
Lang Hames suggested it could be cleaned it up with an assert to know that Err is
not a nullptr when we are pointed at real data. As only in the case of constructing
the sentinel value by pointing it at null data is Err is permitted to be a nullptr,
since no error could occur in that case.
With this change the testing for “if (Err)” is removed from the constructor’s logic
and *Err is used directly without any check after the assert().
llvm-svn: 277776
These are the operations that are trivially identical. Division is omitted for
now because you need to use the correct sign/zero extension.
llvm-svn: 277775