AVX-512: Implemented GETEXP instruction for KNL and SKX
Added rounding mode modifier for SQRTPS/PD
Added tests for encoding and intrinsics.
CR:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9991
llvm-svn: 238923
This patch removes the old X86ISD::FSRL op - which allowed float vectors to use the byte right shift operations (causing a domain switch....).
Since the refactoring of the shuffle lowering code this no longer has any use.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10169
llvm-svn: 238906
This is important because of different addressing modes
depending on the address space for GPU targets.
This only adds the argument, and does not update
any of the uses to provide the correct address space.
llvm-svn: 238723
in-register LUT technique.
Summary:
A description of this technique can be found here:
http://wm.ite.pl/articles/sse-popcount.html
The core of the idea is to use an in-register lookup table and the
PSHUFB instruction to compute the population count for the low and high
nibbles of each byte, and then to use horizontal sums to aggregate these
into vector population counts with wider element types.
On x86 there is an instruction that will directly compute the horizontal
sum for the low 8 and high 8 bytes, giving vNi64 popcount very easily.
Various tricks are used to get vNi32 and vNi16 from the vNi8 that the
LUT computes.
The base implemantion of this, and most of the work, was done by Bruno
in a follow up to D6531. See Bruno's detailed post there for lots of
timing information about these changes.
I have extended Bruno's patch in the following ways:
0) I committed the new tests with baseline sequences so this shows
a diff, and regenerated the tests using the update scripts.
1) Bruno had noticed and mentioned in IRC a redundant mask that
I removed.
2) I introduced a particular optimization for the i32 vector cases where
we use PSHL + PSADBW to compute the the low i32 popcounts, and PSHUFD
+ PSADBW to compute doubled high i32 popcounts. This takes advantage
of the fact that to line up the high i32 popcounts we have to shift
them anyways, and we can shift them by one fewer bit to effectively
divide the count by two. While the PSHUFD based horizontal add is no
faster, it doesn't require registers or load traffic the way a mask
would, and provides more ILP as it happens on different ports with
high throughput.
3) I did some code cleanups throughout to simplify the implementation
logic.
4) I refactored it to continue to use the parallel bitmath lowering when
SSSE3 is not available to preserve the performance of that version on
SSE2 targets where it is still much better than scalarizing as we'll
still do a bitmath implementation of popcount even in scalar code
there.
With #1 and #2 above, I analyzed the result in IACA for sandybridge,
ivybridge, and haswell. In every case I measured, the throughput is the
same or better using the LUT lowering, even v2i64 and v4i64, and even
compared with using the native popcnt instruction! The latency of the
LUT lowering is often higher than the latency of the scalarized popcnt
instruction sequence, but I think those latency measurements are deeply
misleading. Keeping the operation fully in the vector unit and having
many chances for increased throughput seems much more likely to win.
With this, we can lower every integer vector popcount implementation
using the LUT strategy if we have SSSE3 or better (and thus have
PSHUFB). I've updated the operation lowering to reflect this. This also
fixes an issue where we were scalarizing horribly some AVX lowerings.
Finally, there are some remaining cleanups. There is duplication between
the two techniques in how they perform the horizontal sum once the byte
population count is computed. I'm going to factor and merge those two in
a separate follow-up commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10084
llvm-svn: 238636
Summary:
But still handle them the same way since I don't know how they differ on
this target.
Of these, 'o' and 'v' are not tested but were already implemented.
I'm not sure why 'i' is required for X86 since it's supposed to be an
immediate constraint rather than a memory constraint. A test asserts
without it so I've included it for now.
No functional change intended.
Reviewers: nadav
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8254
llvm-svn: 237517
to use the information in the module rather than TargetOptions.
We've had and clang has used the use-soft-float attribute for some
time now so have the backends set a subtarget feature based on
a particular function now that subtargets are created based on
functions and function attributes.
For the one middle end soft float check go ahead and create
an overloadable TargetLowering::useSoftFloat function that
just checks the TargetSubtargetInfo in all cases.
Also remove the command line option that hard codes whether or
not soft-float is set by using the attribute for all of the
target specific test cases - for the generic just go ahead and
add the attribute in the one case that showed up.
llvm-svn: 237079
This changes the shape of the statepoint intrinsic from:
@llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint(anyptr target, i32 # call args, i32 unused, ...call args, i32 # deopt args, ...deopt args, ...gc args)
to:
@llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint(anyptr target, i32 # call args, i32 flags, ...call args, i32 # transition args, ...transition args, i32 # deopt args, ...deopt args, ...gc args)
This extension offers the backend the opportunity to insert (somewhat) arbitrary code to manage the transition from GC-aware code to code that is not GC-aware and back.
In order to support the injection of transition code, this extension wraps the STATEPOINT ISD node generated by the usual lowering lowering with two additional nodes: GC_TRANSITION_START and GC_TRANSITION_END. The transition arguments that were passed passed to the intrinsic (if any) are lowered and provided as operands to these nodes and may be used by the backend during code generation.
Eventually, the lowering of the GC_TRANSITION_{START,END} nodes should be informed by the GC strategy in use for the function containing the intrinsic call; for now, these nodes are instead replaced with no-ops.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9501
llvm-svn: 236888
Added intrinsics for the instructions. CC parameter of the intrinsics was changed from i8 to i32 according to the spec.
By Igor Breger (igor.breger@intel.com)
llvm-svn: 236714
Set the transform bar at 2 divisions because the fastest current
x86 FP divider circuit is in SandyBridge / Haswell at 10 cycle
latency (best case) relative to a 5 cycle multiplier.
So that's the worst case for this transform (no latency win),
but multiplies are obviously pipelined while divisions are not,
so there's still a big throughput win which we would expect to
show up in typical FP code.
These are the sequences I'm comparing:
divss %xmm2, %xmm0
mulss %xmm1, %xmm0
divss %xmm2, %xmm0
Becomes:
movss LCPI0_0(%rip), %xmm3 ## xmm3 = mem[0],zero,zero,zero
divss %xmm2, %xmm3
mulss %xmm3, %xmm0
mulss %xmm1, %xmm0
mulss %xmm3, %xmm0
[Ignore for the moment that we don't optimize the chain of 3 multiplies
into 2 independent fmuls followed by 1 dependent fmul...this is the DAG
version of: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21768 ...if we fix that,
then the transform becomes even more profitable on all targets.]
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8941
llvm-svn: 235012
Summary:
This is instead of doing this in target independent code and is the last
non-functional change before targets begin to distinguish between
different memory constraints when selecting code for the ISD::INLINEASM
node.
Next, each target will individually move away from the idea that all
memory constraints behave like 'm'.
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8173
llvm-svn: 232373
Summary:
In PNaCl, most atomic instructions have their own @llvm.nacl.atomic.* function, each one, with a few exceptions, represents a consistent behaviour across all NaCl-supported targets. Unfortunately, the atomic RMW operations nand, [u]min, and [u]max aren't directly represented by any such @llvm.nacl.atomic.* function. This patch refines shouldExpandAtomicRMWInIR in TargetLowering so that a future `Le32TargetLowering` class can selectively inform the caller how the target desires the atomic RMW instruction to be expanded (ie via load-linked/store-conditional for ARM/AArch64, via cmpxchg for X86/others?, or not at all for Mips) if at all.
This does not represent a behavioural change and as such no tests were added.
Patch by: Richard Diamond.
Reviewers: jfb
Reviewed By: jfb
Subscribers: jfb, aemerson, t.p.northover, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7713
llvm-svn: 231250
a lookup, pass that in rather than use a naked call to getSubtargetImpl.
This involved passing down and around either a TargetMachine or
TargetRegisterInfo. Update all callers/definitions around the targets
and SelectionDAG.
llvm-svn: 230699
This required plumbing a TargetRegisterInfo through computeRegisterProperties
and into findRepresentativeClass which uses it for register class
iteration. This required passing a subtarget into a few target specific
initializations of TargetLowering.
llvm-svn: 230583
The combine that forms extloads used to be disabled on vector types,
because "None of the supported targets knows how to perform load and
sign extend on vectors in one instruction."
That's not entirely true, since at least SSE4.1 X86 knows how to do
those sextloads/zextloads (with PMOVS/ZX).
But there are several aspects to getting this right.
First, vector extloads are controlled by a profitability callback.
For instance, on ARM, several instructions have folded extload forms,
so it's not always beneficial to create an extload node (and trying to
match extloads is a whole 'nother can of worms).
The interesting optimization enables folding of s/zextloads to illegal
(splittable) vector types, expanding them into smaller legal extloads.
It's not ideal (it introduces some legalization-like behavior in the
combine) but it's better than the obvious alternative: form illegal
extloads, and later try to split them up. If you do that, you might
generate extloads that can't be split up, but have a valid ext+load
expansion. At vector-op legalization time, it's too late to generate
this kind of code, so you end up forced to scalarize. It's better to
just avoid creating egregiously illegal nodes.
This optimization is enabled unconditionally on X86.
Note that the splitting combine is happy with "custom" extloads. As
is, this bypasses the actual custom lowering, and just unrolls the
extload. But from what I've seen, this is still much better than the
current custom lowering, which does some kind of unrolling at the end
anyway (see for instance load_sext_4i8_to_4i64 on SSE2, and the added
FIXME).
Also note that the existing combine that forms extloads is now also
enabled on legal vectors. This doesn't have a big effect on X86
(because sext+load is usually combined to sext_inreg+aextload).
On ARM it fires on some rare occasions; that's for a separate commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6904
llvm-svn: 228325
Implement a BITCAST dag combine to transform i32->mmx conversion patterns
into a X86 specific node (MMX_MOVW2D) and guarantee that moves between
i32 and x86mmx are better handled, i.e., don't use store-load to do the
conversion..
llvm-svn: 228293
By Asaf Badouh and Elena Demikhovsky
Added special nodes for rounding: FMADD_RND, FMSUB_RND..
It will prevent merge between nodes with rounding and other standard nodes.
llvm-svn: 227303
"ELF Handling for Thread-Local Storage" specifies that R_X86_64_GOTTPOFF
relocation target a movq or addq instruction.
Prohibit the truncation of such loads to movl or addl.
This fixes PR22083.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6839
llvm-svn: 225250
If the control flow is modelling an if-statement where the only instruction in
the 'then' basic block (excluding the terminator) is a call to cttz/ctlz,
CodeGenPrepare can try to speculate the cttz/ctlz call and simplify the control
flow graph.
Example:
\code
entry:
%cmp = icmp eq i64 %val, 0
br i1 %cmp, label %end.bb, label %then.bb
then.bb:
%c = tail call i64 @llvm.cttz.i64(i64 %val, i1 true)
br label %end.bb
end.bb:
%cond = phi i64 [ %c, %then.bb ], [ 64, %entry]
\code
In this example, basic block %then.bb is taken if value %val is not zero.
Also, the phi node in %end.bb would propagate the size-of in bits of %val
only if %val is equal to zero.
With this patch, CodeGenPrepare will try to hoist the call to cttz from %then.bb
into basic block %entry only if cttz is cheap to speculate for the target.
Added two new hooks in TargetLowering.h to let targets customize the behavior
(i.e. decide whether it is cheap or not to speculate calls to cttz/ctlz). The
two new methods are 'isCheapToSpeculateCtlz' and 'isCheapToSpeculateCttz'.
By default, both methods return 'false'.
On X86, method 'isCheapToSpeculateCtlz' returns true only if the target has
LZCNT. Method 'isCheapToSpeculateCttz' only returns true if the target has BMI.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6728
llvm-svn: 224899
This handles the case of a BUILD_VECTOR being constructed out of elements extracted from a vector twice the size of the result vector. Previously this was always scalarized. Now, we try to construct a shuffle node that feeds on extract_subvectors.
This fixes PR15872 and provides a partial fix for PR21711.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6678
llvm-svn: 224429
This is a first step for generating SSE rcp instructions for reciprocal
calcs when fast-math allows it. This is very similar to the rsqrt optimization
enabled in D5658 ( http://reviews.llvm.org/rL220570 ).
For now, be conservative and only enable this for AMD btver2 where performance
improves significantly both in terms of latency and throughput.
We may never enable this codegen for Intel Core* chips because the divider circuits
are just too fast. On SandyBridge, divss can be as fast as 10 cycles versus the 21
cycle critical path for the rcp + mul + sub + mul + add estimate.
Follow-on patches may allow configuration of the number of Newton-Raphson refinement
steps, add AVX512 support, and enable the optimization for more chips.
More background here: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21385
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6175
llvm-svn: 221706
condition to match a blend.
This prevents optimizations that work on VSELECT to perform invalid
transformations. Indeed, the optimized condition does not match the vector
boolean content that is expected and bad things may happen.
This patch yields the exact same code on the whole test-suite + specs (-O3 and
-O3 -march=core-avx2), it improves one test case (vector-blend.ll) and fixes a
bug reduced in vselect-avx.ll.
<rdar://problem/18819506>
llvm-svn: 221429
For 8-bit divrems where the remainder is used, we used to generate:
divb %sil
shrw $8, %ax
movzbl %al, %eax
That was to avoid an H-reg access, which is problematic mainly because
it isn't possible in REX-prefixed instructions.
This patch optimizes that to:
divb %sil
movzbl %ah, %eax
To do that, we explicitly extend AH, and extract the L-subreg in the
resulting register. The extension is done using the NOREX variants of
MOVZX. To support signed operations, MOVSX_NOREX is also added.
Further, this introduces a new SDNode type, [us]divrem_ext_hreg, which is
then lowered to a sequence containing a single zext (rather than 2).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6064
llvm-svn: 221176
This is a first step for generating SSE rsqrt instructions for
reciprocal square root calcs when fast-math is allowed.
For now, be conservative and only enable this for AMD btver2
where performance improves significantly - for example, 29%
on llvm/projects/test-suite/SingleSource/Benchmarks/BenchmarkGame/n-body.c
(if we convert the data type to single-precision float).
This patch adds a two constant version of the Newton-Raphson
refinement algorithm to DAGCombiner that can be selected by any target
via a parameter returned by getRsqrtEstimate()..
See PR20900 for more details:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20900
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5658
llvm-svn: 220570
Currently, @llvm.smul.with.overflow.i8 expands to 9 instructions, where
3 are really needed.
This adds X86ISD::UMUL8/SMUL8 SD nodes, and custom lowers them to
MUL8/IMUL8 + SETO.
i8 is a special case because there is no two/three operand variants of
(I)MUL8, so the first operand and return value need to go in AL/AX.
Also, we can't write patterns for these instructions: TableGen refuses
patterns where output operands don't match SDNode results. In this case,
instructions where the output operand is an implicitly defined register.
A related special case (and FIXME) exists for MUL8 (X86InstrArith.td):
// FIXME: Used for 8-bit mul, ignore result upper 8 bits.
// This probably ought to be moved to a def : Pat<> if the
// syntax can be accepted.
[(set AL, (mul AL, GR8:$src)), (implicit EFLAGS)]
Ideally, these go away with UMUL8, but we still need to improve TableGen
support of implicit operands in patterns.
Before this change:
movsbl %sil, %eax
movsbl %dil, %ecx
imull %eax, %ecx
movb %cl, %al
sarb $7, %al
movzbl %al, %eax
movzbl %ch, %esi
cmpl %eax, %esi
setne %al
After:
movb %dil, %al
imulb %sil
seto %al
Also, remove a made-redundant testcase for PR19858, and enable more FastISel
ALU-overflow tests for SelectionDAG too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5809
llvm-svn: 220516
Summary:
I originally tried doing this specifically for X86 in the backend in D5091,
but it was rather brittle and generally running too late to be general.
Furthermore, other targets may want to implement similar optimizations.
So I reimplemented it at the IR-level, fitting it into AtomicExpandPass
as it interacts with that pass (which could not be cleanly done before
at the backend level).
This optimization relies on a new target hook, which is only used by X86
for now, as the correctness of the optimization on other targets remains
an open question. If it is found correct on other targets, it should be
trivial to enable for them.
Details of the optimization are discussed in D5091.
Test Plan: make check-all + a new test
Reviewers: jfb
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5422
llvm-svn: 218455
for this now.
Should prevent folks from running afoul of this and not knowing why
their code won't instruction select the way I just did...
llvm-svn: 218436
trick that I missed.
VPERMILPS has a non-immediate memory operand mode that allows it to do
asymetric shuffles in the two 128-bit lanes. Use this rather than two
shuffles and a blend.
However, it turns out the variable shuffle path to VPERMILPS (and
VPERMILPD, although that one offers no functional differenc from the
immediate operand other than variability) wasn't even plumbed through
codegen. Do such plumbing so that we can reasonably emit
a variable-masked VPERMILP instruction. Also plumb basic comment parsing
and printing through so that the tests are reasonable.
There are still a few tests which don't show the shuffle pattern. These
are tests with undef lanes. I'll teach the shuffle decoding and printing
to handle undef mask entries in a follow-up. I've looked at the masks
and they seem reasonable.
llvm-svn: 218300
td pattern). Currently we only model the immediate operand variation of
VPERMILPS and VPERMILPD, we should make that clear in the pseudos used.
Will be adding support for the variable mask variant in my next commit.
llvm-svn: 218282
Summary:
Update segmented-stacks*.ll tests with x32 target case and make
corresponding changes to make them pass.
Test Plan: tests updated with x32 target
Reviewers: nadav, rafael, dschuff
Subscribers: llvm-commits, zinovy.nis
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5245
llvm-svn: 218247
This required a new hook called hasLoadLinkedStoreConditional to know whether
to expand atomics to LL/SC (ARM, AArch64, in a future patch Power) or to
CmpXchg (X86).
Apart from that, the new code in AtomicExpandPass is mostly moved from
X86AtomicExpandPass. The main result of this patch is to get rid of that
pass, which had lots of code duplicated with AtomicExpandPass.
llvm-svn: 217928
introducing a synthetic X86 ISD node representing this generic
operation.
The relevant patterns for mapping these nodes into the concrete
instructions are also added, and a gnarly bit of C++ code in the
target-specific DAG combiner is replaced with simple code emitting this
primitive.
The next step is to generically combine blends of adds and subs into
this node so that we can drop the reliance on an SSE4.1 ISD node
(BLENDI) when matching an SSE3 feature (ADDSUB).
llvm-svn: 217819
No functional change. This will be used by the new FMA intrinsic lowering
code.
We can probably add NO_EXC here as well, I am just not too familiar with this
part of AVX512 yet. We can add that later.
llvm-svn: 215662
Add header guards to files that were missing guards. Remove #endif comments
as they don't seem common in LLVM (we can easily add them back if we decide
they're useful)
Changes made by clang-tidy with minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 215558
They have different semantics (valign is interlane while palingr is intralane)
and palingr is still needed even in the AVX512 context. According to the
latest spec AVX512BW provides these.
llvm-svn: 214887
Rename to allowsMisalignedMemoryAccess.
On R600, 8 and 16 byte accesses are mostly OK with 4-byte alignment,
and don't need to be split into multiple accesses. Vector loads with
an alignment of the element type are not uncommon in OpenCL code.
llvm-svn: 214055
address of the stack guard was being spilled to the stack.
Previously the address of the stack guard would get spilled to the stack if it
was impossible to keep it in a register. This patch introduces a new target
independent node and pseudo instruction which gets expanded post-RA to a
sequence of instructions that load the stack guard value. Register allocator
can now just remat the value when it can't keep it in a register.
<rdar://problem/12475629>
llvm-svn: 213967
Finkel, Eric Christopher, and a bunch of other people I'm probably
forgetting (sorry), add an option to the x86 backend to widen vectors
during type legalization rather than promote them.
This still would promote vNi1 vectors to get the masks right, but would
widen other vectors. A lot of experiments are piling up right now
showing that widening should probably be the default legalization
strategy outside of vNi1 cases, but it is very hard to test the
rammifications of that and fix bugs in widening-based legalization
without an option that enables it. I'll be checking in tests shortly
that use this option to exercise cases where widening doesn't work well
and hopefully we'll be able to switch fully to this soon.
llvm-svn: 212249
The logic for expanding atomics that aren't natively supported in
terms of cmpxchg loops is much simpler to express at the IR level. It
also allows the normal optimisations and CodeGen improvements to help
out with atomics, instead of using a limited set of possible
instructions..
rdar://problem/13496295
llvm-svn: 212119
This patch adds support for a new builtin instruction called
__builtin_ia32_rdpmc.
Builtin '__builtin_ia32_rdpmc' is defined as a 'GCC builtin'; on X86, it can
be used to read performance monitoring counters. It takes as input the index
of the performance counter to read, and returns the value of the specified
performance counter as a 64-bit number.
Calls to this new builtin will map to instruction RDPMC.
The index in input to the builtin call is moved to register %ECX. The result
of the builtin call is the value of the specified performance counter (RDPMC
would return that quantity in registers RDX:RAX).
This patch:
- Adds builtin int_x86_rdpmc as a GCCBuiltin;
- Adds a new x86 DAG node called 'RDPMC_DAG';
- Teaches how to lower this new builtin;
- Adds an ISel pattern to select instruction RDPMC;
- Fixes the definition of instruction RDPMC adding %RAX and %RDX as
implicit definitions, and adding %ECX as implicit use;
- Adds a LLVM test to verify that the new builtin is correctly selected.
llvm-svn: 212049
instructions available as synthetic SDNodes PACKSS and PACKUS that will
select to the correct instruction variants based on the return type.
This allows us to use these rather important instructions when lowering
vector shuffles.
Also moves the relevant instruction definitions to be split out from
the fully generic multiclasses to allow them to match these new SDNodes
in the same way that the UNPCK instructions do.
No functionality should actually be changed here.
llvm-svn: 211332
The C++ and C semantics of the compare_and_swap operations actually
require us to return a boolean "success" value. In LLVM terms this
means a second comparison of the output of "cmpxchg" against the input
desired value.
However, x86's "cmpxchg" instruction sets all flags for the comparison
formed, so we can skip any secondary comparison. (N.b. this isn't true
for cmpxchg8b/16b, which only set ZF).
rdar://problem/13201607
llvm-svn: 210523
No functionality change intended. The types that previously were set to
lower as Expand or Legal are doing the same thing with this lowering
function.
llvm-svn: 209042
We must validate the value type in TLI::getRegisterByName, because if we
don't and the wrong type was used with the IR intrinsic, then we'll assert
(because we won't be able to find a valid register class with which to
construct the requested copy operation). For PPC64, additionally, the type
information is necessary to decide between the 64-bit register and the 32-bit
subregister.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 208508
This patch implements the infrastructure to use named register constructs in
programs that need access to specific registers (bare metal, kernels, etc).
So far, only the stack pointer is supported as a technology preview, but as it
is, the intrinsic can already support all non-allocatable registers from any
architecture.
llvm-svn: 208104
The Win64 docs are very clear that anything larger than 8 bytes is
passed by reference, and GCC MinGW64 honors that for __modti3 and
friends.
Patch by Jameson Nash!
llvm-svn: 208029
Scaling factors are not free on X86 because every "complex" addressing mode
breaks the related instruction into 2 allocations instead of 1.
<rdar://problem/16730541>
llvm-svn: 207301
This patch:
- Adds two new X86 builtin intrinsics ('int_x86_rdtsc' and
'int_x86_rdtscp') as GCCBuiltin intrinsics;
- Teaches the backend how to lower the two new builtins;
- Introduces a common function to lower READCYCLECOUNTER dag nodes
and the two new rdtsc/rdtscp intrinsics;
- Improves (and extends) the existing x86 test 'rdtsc.ll'; now test 'rdtsc.ll'
correctly verifies that both READCYCLECOUNTER and the two new intrinsics
work fine for both 64bit and 32bit Subtargets.
llvm-svn: 207127
I found this from a particular GDB test suite case of inlining
(something similar is provided as a test case) but came across a few
other related cases (other callers of the same functions, and one other
instance of the same coding mistake in a separate function).
I'm not sure what the best way to test this is (let alone to cover the
other cases I discovered), so hopefully this sufficies - open to ideas.
llvm-svn: 206130
Implementing the LLVM part of the call to __builtin___clear_cache
which translates into an intrinsic @llvm.clear_cache and is lowered
by each target, either to a call to __clear_cache or nothing at all
incase the caches are unified.
Updating LangRef and adding some tests for the implemented architectures.
Other archs will have to implement the method in case this builtin
has to be compiled for it, since the default behaviour is to bail
unimplemented.
A Clang patch is required for the builtin to be lowered into the
llvm intrinsic. This will be done next.
llvm-svn: 204802
On x86, shifting a vector by a scalar is significantly cheaper than shifting a
vector by another fully general vector. Unfortunately, because SelectionDAG
operates on just one basic block at a time, the shufflevector instruction that
reveals whether the right-hand side of a shift *is* really a scalar is often
not visible to CodeGen when it's needed.
This adds another handler to CodeGenPrepare, to sink any useful shufflevector
instructions down to the basic block where they're used, predicated on a target
hook (since on other architectures, doing so will often just introduce extra
real work).
rdar://problem/16063505
llvm-svn: 201655
I believe VZEXT_MOVL means "zero all vector elements except the first" (and
should have identical input & output types) whereas VZEXT means "zero extend
each element of a vector (discarding higher elements if necessary)".
For example:
(v4i32 (vzext (v16i8 ...)))
should zero extend the low 4 bytes of the incoming vector to 32-bits,
discarding higher bytes.
However, somewhere in the past, these two concepts had become confused, even
leading to a nonsensical VSEXT_MOVL.
This re-merges the nodes where appropriate (all VSEXT_MOVL -> VSEXT, VZEXT_MOVL
-> VZEXT when it's an actual extension).
rdar://problem/15981990
llvm-svn: 200918
Before this patch we used getIntImmCost from TargetTransformInfo to determine if
a load of a constant should be converted to just a constant, but the threshold
for this was set to an arbitrary value. This value works well for the two
targets (X86 and ARM) that implement this target-hook, but it isn't
target-independent at all.
Now targets have the possibility to decide directly if this optimization should
be performed. The default value is set to false to preserve the current
behavior. The target hook has been moved to TargetLowering, which removed the
last use and need of TargetTransformInfo in SelectionDAG.
llvm-svn: 200271
Added scalar compare VCMPSS, VCMPSD.
Implemented LowerSELECT for scalar FP operations.
I replaced FSETCCss, FSETCCsd with one node type FSETCCs.
Node extract_vector_elt(v16i1/v8i1, idx) returns an element of type i1.
llvm-svn: 197384
target independent.
Most of the x86 specific stackmap/patchpoint handling was necessitated by the
use of the native address-mode format for frame index operands. PEI has now
been modified to treat stackmap/patchpoint similarly to DEBUG_INFO, allowing
us to use a simple, platform independent register/offset pair for frame
indexes on stackmap/patchpoints.
Notes:
- Folding is now platform independent and automatically supported.
- Emiting patchpoints with direct memory references now just involves calling
the TargetLoweringBase::emitPatchPoint utility method from the target's
XXXTargetLowering::EmitInstrWithCustomInserter method. (See
X86TargetLowering for an example).
- No more ugly platform-specific operand parsers.
This patch shouldn't change the generated output for X86.
llvm-svn: 195944
A Direct stack map location records the address of frame index. This
address is itself the value that the runtime requested. This differs
from IndirectMemRefOp locations, which refer to a stack locations from
which the requested values must be loaded. Direct locations can
directly communicate the address if an alloca, while IndirectMemRefOp
handle register spills.
For example:
entry:
%a = alloca i64...
llvm.experimental.stackmap(i32 <ID>, i32 <shadowBytes>, i64* %a)
Since both the alloca and stackmap intrinsic are in the entry block,
and the intrinsic takes the address of the alloca, the runtime can
assume that LLVM will not substitute alloca with any intervening
value. This must be verified by the runtime by checking that the stack
map's location is a Direct location type. The runtime can then
determine the alloca's relative location on the stack immediately after
compilation, or at any time thereafter. This differs from Register and
Indirect locations, because the runtime can only read the values in
those locations when execution reaches the instruction address of the
stack map.
llvm-svn: 195712
This patch moves the jump address materialization inside the noop slide. This
enables patching of the materialization itself or its complete removal. This
patch also adds the ability to define scratch registers that can be used safely
by the code called from the patchpoint intrinsic. At least one scratch register
is required, because that one is used for the materialization of the jump
address. This patch depends on D2009.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2074
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 194306
This change came about primarily because of two issues in the existing code.
Niether of:
define i64 @test1(i64 %val) {
%in = trunc i64 %val to i32
tail call i32 @ret32(i32 returned %in)
ret i64 %val
}
define i64 @test2(i64 %val) {
tail call i32 @ret32(i32 returned undef)
ret i32 42
}
should be tail calls, and the function sameNoopInput is responsible. The main
problem is that it is completely symmetric in the "tail call" and "ret" value,
but in reality different things are allowed on each side.
For these cases:
1. Any truncation should lead to a larger value being generated by "tail call"
than needed by "ret".
2. Undef should only be allowed as a source for ret, not as a result of the
call.
Along the way I noticed that a mismatch between what this function treats as a
valid truncation and what the backends see can lead to invalid calls as well
(see x86-32 test case).
This patch refactors the code so that instead of being based primarily on
values which it recurses into when necessary, it starts by inspecting the type
and considers each fundamental slot that the backend will see in turn. For
example, given a pathological function that returned {{}, {{}, i32, {}}, i32}
we would consider each "real" i32 in turn, and ask if it passes through
unchanged. This is much closer to what the backend sees as a result of
ComputeValueVTs.
Aside from the bug fixes, this eliminates the recursion that's going on and, I
believe, makes the bulk of the code significantly easier to understand. The
trade-off is the nasty iterators needed to find the real types inside a
returned value.
llvm-svn: 187787
All insertf*/extractf* functions replaced with insert/extract since we have insertf and inserti forms.
Added lowering for INSERT_VECTOR_ELT / EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT for 512-bit vectors.
Added lowering for EXTRACT/INSERT subvector for 512-bit vectors.
Added a test.
llvm-svn: 187491
in-tree implementations of TargetLoweringBase::isFMAFasterThanMulAndAdd in
order to resolve the following issues with fmuladd (i.e. optional FMA)
intrinsics:
1. On X86(-64) targets, ISD::FMA nodes are formed when lowering fmuladd
intrinsics even if the subtarget does not support FMA instructions, leading
to laughably bad code generation in some situations.
2. On AArch64 targets, ISD::FMA nodes are formed for operations on fp128,
resulting in a call to a software fp128 FMA implementation.
3. On PowerPC targets, FMAs are not generated from fmuladd intrinsics on types
like v2f32, v8f32, v4f64, etc., even though they promote, split, scalarize,
etc. to types that support hardware FMAs.
The function has also been slightly renamed for consistency and to force a
merge/build conflict for any out-of-tree target implementing it. To resolve,
see comments and fixed in-tree examples.
llvm-svn: 185956
During LTO, the target options on functions within the same Module may
change. This would necessitate resetting some of the back-end. Do this for X86,
because it's a Friday afternoon.
llvm-svn: 178917
- ISD::SHL/SRL/SRA must have either both scalar or both vector operands
but TLI.getShiftAmountTy() so far only return scalar type. As a
result, backend logic assuming that breaks.
- Rename the original TLI.getShiftAmountTy() to
TLI.getScalarShiftAmountTy() and re-define TLI.getShiftAmountTy() to
return target-specificed scalar type or the same vector type as the
1st operand.
- Fix most TICG logic assuming TLI.getShiftAmountTy() a simple scalar
type.
llvm-svn: 176364
conditions are met:
1. They share the same operand and are in the same BB.
2. Both outputs are used.
3. The target has a native instruction that maps to ISD::FSINCOS node or
the target provides a sincos library call.
Implemented the generic optimization in sdisel and enabled it for
Mac OSX. Also added an additional optimization for x86_64 Mac OSX by
using an alternative entry point __sincos_stret which returns the two
results in xmm0 / xmm1.
rdar://13087969
PR13204
llvm-svn: 173755
PR 14848. The lowered sequence is based on the existing sequence the target-independent
DAG Combiner creates for the scalar case.
Patch by Zvi Rackover.
llvm-svn: 171953
a TargetMachine to construct (and thus isn't always available), to an
analysis group that supports layered implementations much like
AliasAnalysis does. This is a pretty massive change, with a few parts
that I was unable to easily separate (sorry), so I'll walk through it.
The first step of this conversion was to make TargetTransformInfo an
analysis group, and to sink the nonce implementations in
ScalarTargetTransformInfo and VectorTargetTranformInfo into
a NoTargetTransformInfo pass. This allows other passes to add a hard
requirement on TTI, and assume they will always get at least on
implementation.
The TargetTransformInfo analysis group leverages the delegation chaining
trick that AliasAnalysis uses, where the base class for the analysis
group delegates to the previous analysis *pass*, allowing all but tho
NoFoo analysis passes to only implement the parts of the interfaces they
support. It also introduces a new trick where each pass in the group
retains a pointer to the top-most pass that has been initialized. This
allows passes to implement one API in terms of another API and benefit
when some other pass above them in the stack has more precise results
for the second API.
The second step of this conversion is to create a pass that implements
the TargetTransformInfo analysis using the target-independent
abstractions in the code generator. This replaces the
ScalarTargetTransformImpl and VectorTargetTransformImpl classes in
lib/Target with a single pass in lib/CodeGen called
BasicTargetTransformInfo. This class actually provides most of the TTI
functionality, basing it upon the TargetLowering abstraction and other
information in the target independent code generator.
The third step of the conversion adds support to all TargetMachines to
register custom analysis passes. This allows building those passes with
access to TargetLowering or other target-specific classes, and it also
allows each target to customize the set of analysis passes desired in
the pass manager. The baseline LLVMTargetMachine implements this
interface to add the BasicTTI pass to the pass manager, and all of the
tools that want to support target-aware TTI passes call this routine on
whatever target machine they end up with to add the appropriate passes.
The fourth step of the conversion created target-specific TTI analysis
passes for the X86 and ARM backends. These passes contain the custom
logic that was previously in their extensions of the
ScalarTargetTransformInfo and VectorTargetTransformInfo interfaces.
I separated them into their own file, as now all of the interface bits
are private and they just expose a function to create the pass itself.
Then I extended these target machines to set up a custom set of analysis
passes, first adding BasicTTI as a fallback, and then adding their
customized TTI implementations.
The fourth step required logic that was shared between the target
independent layer and the specific targets to move to a different
interface, as they no longer derive from each other. As a consequence,
a helper functions were added to TargetLowering representing the common
logic needed both in the target implementation and the codegen
implementation of the TTI pass. While technically this is the only
change that could have been committed separately, it would have been
a nightmare to extract.
The final step of the conversion was just to delete all the old
boilerplate. This got rid of the ScalarTargetTransformInfo and
VectorTargetTransformInfo classes, all of the support in all of the
targets for producing instances of them, and all of the support in the
tools for manually constructing a pass based around them.
Now that TTI is a relatively normal analysis group, two things become
straightforward. First, we can sink it into lib/Analysis which is a more
natural layer for it to live. Second, clients of this interface can
depend on it *always* being available which will simplify their code and
behavior. These (and other) simplifications will follow in subsequent
commits, this one is clearly big enough.
Finally, I'm very aware that much of the comments and documentation
needs to be updated. As soon as I had this working, and plausibly well
commented, I wanted to get it committed and in front of the build bots.
I'll be doing a few passes over documentation later if it sticks.
Commits to update DragonEgg and Clang will be made presently.
llvm-svn: 171681
1. Add code to estimate register pressure.
2. Add code to select the unroll factor based on register pressure.
3. Add bits to TargetTransformInfo to provide the number of registers.
llvm-svn: 171469
In order to cost subvector insertion and extraction, we need to know
the type of the subvector being extracted.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 171453