Commit Graph

584 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Francis Visoiu Mistrih a8a83d150f [CodeGen] Use MachineOperand::print in the MIRPrinter for MO_Register.
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by refactoring the
interfaces.

For MachineOperand::print, keep a simple version that can be easily called
from `dump()`, and a more complex one which will be called from both the
MIRPrinter and MachineInstr::print.

Add extra checks inside MachineOperand for detached operands (operands
with getParent() == nullptr).

https://reviews.llvm.org/D40836

* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/kill: ([^ ]+) ([^ ]+)<def> ([^ ]+)/kill: \1 def \2 \3/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/kill: ([^ ]+) ([^ ]+) ([^ ]+)<def>/kill: \1 \2 def \3/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/kill: def ([^ ]+) ([^ ]+) ([^ ]+)<def>/kill: def \1 \2 def \3/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/<def>//g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<kill>/killed \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<imp-use,kill>/implicit killed \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<dead>/dead \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<def[ ]*,[ ]*dead>/dead \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<imp-def[ ]*,[ ]*dead>/implicit-def dead \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<imp-def>/implicit-def \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<imp-use>/implicit \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<internal>/internal \1/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.s" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/([^ ]+)<undef>/undef \1/g'

llvm-svn: 320022
2017-12-07 10:40:31 +00:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih 25528d6de7 [CodeGen] Unify MBB reference format in both MIR and debug output
As part of the unification of the debug format and the MIR format, print
MBB references as '%bb.5'.

The MIR printer prints the IR name of a MBB only for block definitions.

* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/BB#" << ([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)->getNumber\(\)/" << printMBBReference(*\1)/g'
* find . \( -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/BB#" << ([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)\.getNumber\(\)/" << printMBBReference(\1)/g'
* find . \( -name "*.txt" -o -name "*.s" -o -name "*.mir" -o -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h" -o -name "*.ll" \) -type f -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i '' -E 's/BB#([0-9]+)/%bb.\1/g'
* grep -nr 'BB#' and fix

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40422

llvm-svn: 319665
2017-12-04 17:18:51 +00:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih c71cced0aa [CodeGen] Always use `printReg` to print registers in both MIR and debug
output

As part of the unification of the debug format and the MIR format,
always use `printReg` to print all kinds of registers.

Updated the tests using '_' instead of '%noreg' until we decide which
one we want to be the default one.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40421

llvm-svn: 319445
2017-11-30 16:12:24 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 76d5ac4906 [arm] Fix Unnecessary reloads from GOT.
Summary:
This fixes PR35221.
Use pseudo-instructions to let MachineCSE hoist global address computation.

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

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39871

llvm-svn: 318081
2017-11-13 20:45:38 +00:00
Eli Friedman d5dfb62de7 [ARM] Honor -mfloat-abi for libcall calling convention
As far as I can tell, this matches gcc: -mfloat-abi determines the
calling convention for all functions except those explicitly defined as
soft-float in the ARM RTABI.

This change only affects cases where the user specifies -mfloat-abi to
override the default calling convention derived from the target triple.

Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=34530.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38299

llvm-svn: 316708
2017-10-26 21:42:32 +00:00
Sam Parker ccb209bb97 [ARM] Swap cmp operands for automatic shifts
Swap the compare operands if the lhs is a shift and the rhs isn't,
as in arm and T2 the shift can be performed by the compare for its
second operand.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39004

llvm-svn: 316562
2017-10-25 08:33:06 +00:00
Renato Golin f63d701669 [ARM] Call setBooleanContents(ZeroOrOneBooleanContent)
The ARM backend should call setBooleanContents so that it can
use known bits to make some optimizations.

Review: D35821

Patch by Joel Galenson <jgalenson@google.com>

llvm-svn: 311446
2017-08-22 11:02:37 +00:00
Jakub Kuderski 638c085d07 [Dominators] Include infinite loops in PostDominatorTree
Summary:
This patch teaches PostDominatorTree about infinite loops. It is built on top of D29705 by @dberlin which includes a very detailed motivation for this change.

What's new is that the patch also teaches the incremental updater how to deal with reverse-unreachable regions and how to properly maintain and verify tree roots. Before that, the incremental algorithm sometimes ended up preserving reverse-unreachable regions after updates that wouldn't appear in the tree if it was constructed from scratch on the same CFG.

This patch makes the following assumptions:
- A sequence of updates should produce the same tree as a recalculating it.
- Any sequence of the same updates should lead to the same tree.
- Siblings and roots are unordered.

The last two properties are essential to efficiently perform batch updates in the future.
When it comes to the first one, we can decide later that the consistency between freshly built tree and an updated one doesn't matter match, as there are many correct ways to pick roots in infinite loops, and to relax this assumption. That should enable us to recalculate postdominators less frequently.

This patch is pretty conservative when it comes to incremental updates on reverse-unreachable regions and ends up recalculating the whole tree in many cases. It should be possible to improve the performance in many cases, if we decide that it's important enough.
That being said, my experiments showed that reverse-unreachable are very rare in the IR emitted by clang when bootstrapping  clang. Here are the statistics I collected by analyzing IR between passes and after each removePredecessor call:

```
# functions:  52283
# samples:  337609
# reverse unreachable BBs:  216022
# BBs:  247840796
Percent reverse-unreachable:  0.08716159869015269 %
Max(PercRevUnreachable) in a function:  87.58620689655172 %
# > 25 % samples:  471 ( 0.1395104988314885 % samples )
... in 145 ( 0.27733680163724345 % functions )
```

Most of the reverse-unreachable regions come from invalid IR where it wouldn't be possible to construct a PostDomTree anyway.

I would like to commit this patch in the next week in order to be able to complete the work that depends on it before the end of my internship, so please don't wait long to voice your concerns :).

Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, grosser, brzycki, davide, chandlerc, hfinkel

Reviewed By: dberlin

Subscribers: nhaehnle, javed.absar, kparzysz, uabelho, jlebar, hiraditya, llvm-commits, dberlin, david2050

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35851

llvm-svn: 310940
2017-08-15 18:14:57 +00:00
Matthias Braun 7c91336efe ARM: Do not use llc -march in tests.
`llc -march` is problematic because it only switches the target
architecture, but leaves the operating system unchanged. This
occasionally leads to indeterministic tests because the OS from
LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE is used.

However we can simply always use `llc -mtriple` instead. This changes
all the tests to do this to avoid people using -march when they copy and
paste parts of tests.

See also the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D35287

llvm-svn: 309755
2017-08-01 22:20:49 +00:00
John Brawn 97cc283117 [ARM] Adjust ifcvt heuristic for the diamond ifcvt case
When we have a diamond ifcvt the fallthough block will have a branch at the end
of it that disappears when predicated, so discount it from the predication cost.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34952

llvm-svn: 307788
2017-07-12 13:23:10 +00:00
John Brawn 75d76e5e95 [ARM] Improve if-conversion for M-class CPUs without branch predictors
The current heuristic in isProfitableToIfCvt assumes we have a branch predictor,
and so gives the wrong answer in some cases when we don't. This patch adds a
subtarget feature to indicate that a subtarget has no branch predictor, and
changes the heuristic in isProfitableToiIfCvt when it's present. This gives a
slight overall improvement in a set of embedded benchmarks on Cortex-M4 and
Cortex-M33.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34398

llvm-svn: 306547
2017-06-28 14:11:15 +00:00
Kristof Beyls eecb353d0e [ARM] Make -mcpu=generic schedule for an in-order core (Cortex-A8).
The benchmarking summarized in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/113525.html showed
this is beneficial for a wide range of cores.

As is to be expected, quite a few small adaptations are needed to the
regressions tests, as the difference in scheduling results in:
- Quite a few small instruction schedule differences.
- A few changes in register allocation decisions caused by different
 instruction schedules.
- A few changes in IfConversion decisions, due to a difference in
 instruction schedule and/or the estimated cost of a branch mispredict.

llvm-svn: 306514
2017-06-28 07:07:03 +00:00
Kristof Beyls 9665249fd8 Don't conditionalize Neon instructions, even in IT blocks.
This has been deprecated since ARMARM v7-AR, release C.b, published back
in 2012.

This also removes test/CodeGen/Thumb2/ifcvt-neon.ll that originally was
introduced to check that conditionalization of Neon instructions did
happen when generating Thumb2. However, the test had evolved and was no
longer testing that. Rather than trying to adapt that test, this commit
introduces test/CodeGen/Thumb2/ifcvt-neon-deprecated.mir, since we can
now use the MIR framework to write nicer/more maintainable tests.

llvm-svn: 305998
2017-06-22 12:11:38 +00:00
Tim Northover fb26d9a286 MIR: remove explicit "noVRegs" property.
We can infer this from the incoming MIR, so there's no reason to
represent it with a special flag.

llvm-svn: 304246
2017-05-30 21:28:57 +00:00
Nirav Dave da8f221273 Elide stores which are overwritten without being observed.
Summary:
In SelectionDAG, when a store is immediately chained to another store
to the same address, elide the first store as it has no observable
effects. This is causes small improvements dealing with intrinsics
lowered to stores.

Test notes:

* Many testcases overwrite store addresses multiple times and needed
  minor changes, mainly making stores volatile to prevent the
  optimization from optimizing the test away.

* Many X86 test cases optimized out instructions associated with
  associated with va_start.

* Note that test_splat in CodeGen/AArch64/misched-stp.ll no longer has
  dependencies to check and can probably be removed and potentially
  replaced with another test.

Reviewers: rnk, john.brawn

Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, qcolombet, jyknight, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33206

llvm-svn: 303198
2017-05-16 19:43:56 +00:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih ebbc7159e9 [ShrinkWrapping] Handle restores on no-return paths
Shrink-wrapping uses post-dominators to find a restore point that
post-dominates all the uses of CSR / stack.

The way dominator trees are modeled in LLVM today is that unreachable
blocks are not present in a generic dominator tree, so, an unreachable node is
dominated by anything: include/llvm/Support/GenericDomTree.h:467.

Since for post-dominators, a no-return block is considered
"unreachable", calling findNearestCommonDominator on an unreachable node
A and a non-unreachable node B, will return B, which can be false. If we
find such node, we bail out since there is no good restore point
available.

rdar://problem/30186931

llvm-svn: 303130
2017-05-15 23:13:35 +00:00
Matt Arsenault f10061ec70 Add address space mangling to lifetime intrinsics
In preparation for allowing allocas to have non-0 addrspace.

llvm-svn: 299876
2017-04-10 20:18:21 +00:00
David Green 1b4b59a415 [ARM] Remove a dead ADD during the creation of TBBs
During the optimisation of jump tables in the constant island pass,
an extra ADD could be left over, now dead but not removed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31389

llvm-svn: 299634
2017-04-06 08:32:47 +00:00
Sam Parker b308b48d69 [ARM] Remove t2xtpk feature from tests
I previously removed the T2XtPk feature from the ARM backend, but it
looks like I missed some of the tests that were using the feature.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30778

llvm-svn: 297386
2017-03-09 15:14:32 +00:00
Sam Parker 58af0c55d2 [ARM] Replace HasT2ExtractPack with HasDSP
Removed the HasT2ExtractPack feature and replaced its references
with HasDSP. This then allows the Thumb2 extend instructions to be
selected for ARMv8M +dsp. These instruction descriptions have also
been refactored and more target tests have been added for their isel.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29623

llvm-svn: 295452
2017-02-17 15:42:44 +00:00
James Molloy d508789668 [ARM] Use VCMP, not VCMPE, for floating point equality comparisons
When generating a floating point comparison we currently unconditionally
generate VCMPE. This has the sideeffect of setting the cumulative Invalid
bit in FPSCR if any of the operands are QNaN.

It is expected that use of a relational predicate on a QNaN value should
raise Invalid. Quoting from the C standard:

  The relational and equality operators support the usual mathematical
  relationships between numeric values. For any ordered pair of numeric
  values exactly one of relationships the less, greater, equal and is true.
  Relational operators may raise the floating-point exception when argument
  values are NaNs.

The standard doesn't explicitly state the expectation for equality operators,
but the implication and obvious expectation is that equality operators
should not raise Invalid on a QNaN input, as those predicates are wholly
defined on unordered inputs (to return not equal).

Therefore, add a new operand to ARMISD::FPCMP and FPCMPZ indicating if
QNaN should raise Invalid, and pipe that through to TableGen.

llvm-svn: 294945
2017-02-13 12:32:47 +00:00
Kyle Butt b15c06677c CodeGen: Allow small copyable blocks to "break" the CFG.
When choosing the best successor for a block, ordinarily we would have preferred
a block that preserves the CFG unless there is a strong probability the other
direction. For small blocks that can be duplicated we now skip that requirement
as well, subject to some simple frequency calculations.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28583

llvm-svn: 293716
2017-01-31 23:48:32 +00:00
Sam Parker 9bf658d5fe [ARM] Avoid using ARM instructions in Thumb mode
The Requires class overrides the target requirements of an instruction,
rather than adding to them, so all ARM instructions need to include the
IsARM predicate when they have overwitten requirements.

This caused the swp and swpb instructions to be allowed in thumb mode
assembly, and the ARM encoding of CDP to be selected in codegen (which
is different for conditional instructions).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29283

llvm-svn: 293634
2017-01-31 14:35:01 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 6ef45916c6 ARM: match GCC's behaviour for builtins
GCC changes the CC between the user-code and the builtins based on the
value of `-target` rather than `-mfloat-abi`.  When a HF target is used,
the VFP variant of the AAPCS CC is used.  Otherwise, the AAPCS variant
is used.  In all cases, the AEABI functions use the AAPCS CC.  Adjust
the calling convention based on the target.

Resolves PR30543!

llvm-svn: 291909
2017-01-13 16:25:33 +00:00
Kyle Butt efe56fed12 Revert "CodeGen: Allow small copyable blocks to "break" the CFG."
This reverts commit ada6595a526d71df04988eb0a4b4fe84df398ded.

This needs a simple probability check because there are some cases where it is
not profitable.

llvm-svn: 291695
2017-01-11 19:55:19 +00:00
Kyle Butt df27aa8c89 CodeGen: Allow small copyable blocks to "break" the CFG.
When choosing the best successor for a block, ordinarily we would have preferred
a block that preserves the CFG unless there is a strong probability the other
direction. For small blocks that can be duplicated we now skip that requirement
as well.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27742

llvm-svn: 291609
2017-01-10 23:04:30 +00:00
Zijiao Ma bf6007bd1b Make the canonicalisation on shifts benifit to more case.
1.Fix pessimized case in FIXME.
2.Add tests for it.
3.The canonicalisation on shifts results in different sequence for
  tests of machine-licm.Correct some check lines.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27916

llvm-svn: 290410
2016-12-23 02:56:07 +00:00
Sjoerd Meijer 96e10b5a9e [Thumb] Teach ISel how to lower compares of AND bitmasks efficiently
This is essentially a recommit of r285893, but with a correctness fix. The
problem of the original commit was that this:

bic r5, r7, #31
cbz r5, .LBB2_10

got rewritten into:

lsrs  r5, r7, #5
beq .LBB2_10

The result in destination register r5 is not the same and this is incorrect
when r5 is not dead. So this fix includes checking the uses of the AND
destination register. And also, compared to the original commit, some regression
tests didn't need changing anymore because of this extra check.

For completeness, this was the original commit message:

For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more
efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of
set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).

1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and
set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and
set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit
into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to
MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and
branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower
zero bits of the mask.

1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two
16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a
complex immediate, so is also a win.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27761

llvm-svn: 289794
2016-12-15 09:38:59 +00:00
James Molloy e7d97368f2 Revert "[Thumb] Teach ISel how to lower compares of AND bitmasks efficiently"
This reverts commit r285893. It caused (probably) http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-thumbv7-a15-full-sh/builds/83 .

llvm-svn: 285912
2016-11-03 14:08:01 +00:00
James Molloy b60d8b1987 [Thumb] Teach ISel how to lower compares of AND bitmasks efficiently
This recommits r281323, which was backed out for two reasons. One, a selfhost failure, and two, it apparently caused Chromium failures. Actually, the latter was a red herring. The log has expired from the former, but I suspect that was a red herring too (actually caused by another problematic patch of mine). Therefore reapplying, and will watch the bots like a hawk.

For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).

1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.

1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.

llvm-svn: 285893
2016-11-03 10:18:20 +00:00
James Molloy 70a3d6df52 [Thumb-1] Synthesize TBB/TBH instructions to make use of compressed jump tables
[Reapplying r284580 and r285917 with fix and testing to ensure emitted jump tables for Thumb-1 have 4-byte alignment]

The TBB and TBH instructions in Thumb-2 allow jump tables to be compressed into sequences of bytes or shorts respectively. These instructions do not exist in Thumb-1, however it is possible to synthesize them out of a sequence of other instructions.

It turns out this sequence is so short that it's almost never a lose for performance and is ALWAYS a significant win for code size.

TBB example:
Before: lsls r0, r0, #2    After: add  r0, pc
        adr  r1, .LJTI0_0         ldrb r0, [r0, #6]
        ldr  r0, [r0, r1]         lsls r0, r0, #1
        mov  pc, r0               add  pc, r0
  => No change in prologue code size or dynamic instruction count. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 4.

The only case that can increase dynamic instruction count is the TBH case:

Before: lsls r0, r4, #2    After: lsls r4, r4, #1
        adr  r1, .LJTI0_0         add  r4, pc
        ldr  r0, [r0, r1]         ldrh r4, [r4, #6]
        mov  pc, r0               lsls r4, r4, #1
                                  add  pc, r4
  => 1 more instruction in prologue. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 2.

So there is an argument that this should be disabled when optimizing for performance (and a TBH needs to be generated). I'm not so sure about that in practice, because on small cores with Thumb-1 performance is often tied to code size. But I'm willing to turn it off when optimizing for performance if people want (also note that TBHs are fairly rare in practice!)

llvm-svn: 285690
2016-11-01 13:37:41 +00:00
Eli Friedman b37864b58d Revert r284580+r284917. ("Synthesize TBB/TBH instructions")
The optimization has correctness issues, so reverting for now to fix tests
on thumb1 targets.

llvm-svn: 284993
2016-10-24 17:20:50 +00:00
James Molloy fbfd173447 [Thumb-1] Synthesize TBB/TBH instructions to make use of compressed jump tables
The TBB and TBH instructions in Thumb-2 allow jump tables to be compressed into sequences of bytes or shorts respectively. These instructions do not exist in Thumb-1, however it is possible to synthesize them out of a sequence of other instructions.

It turns out this sequence is so short that it's almost never a lose for performance and is ALWAYS a significant win for code size.

TBB example:
Before: lsls r0, r0, #2    After: add  r0, pc
        adr  r1, .LJTI0_0         ldrb r0, [r0, #6]
        ldr  r0, [r0, r1]         lsls r0, r0, #1
        mov  pc, r0               add  pc, r0
  => No change in prologue code size or dynamic instruction count. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 4.

The only case that can increase dynamic instruction count is the TBH case:

Before: lsls r0, r4, #2    After: lsls r4, r4, #1
        adr  r1, .LJTI0_0         add  r4, pc
        ldr  r0, [r0, r1]         ldrh r4, [r4, #6]
        mov  pc, r0               lsls r4, r4, #1
                                  add  pc, r4
  => 1 more instruction in prologue. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 2.

So there is an argument that this should be disabled when optimizing for performance (and a TBH needs to be generated). I'm not so sure about that in practice, because on small cores with Thumb-1 performance is often tied to code size. But I'm willing to turn it off when optimizing for performance if people want (also note that TBHs are fairly rare in practice!)

llvm-svn: 284580
2016-10-19 12:06:49 +00:00
Reid Kleckner bdfc05ff93 Re-land "[Thumb] Save/restore high registers in Thumb1 pro/epilogues"
Reverts r283938 to reinstate r283867 with a fix.

The original change had an ArrayRef referring to a destroyed temporary
initializer list. Use plain C arrays instead.

llvm-svn: 283942
2016-10-11 21:14:03 +00:00
Reid Kleckner f4876beb2b Revert "[Thumb] Save/restore high registers in Thumb1 pro/epilogues"
This reverts r283867.

This appears to be an infinite loop:

    while (HiRegToSave != AllHighRegs.end() && CopyReg != AllCopyRegs.end()) {
      if (HiRegsToSave.count(*HiRegToSave)) {
        ...

        CopyReg = findNextOrderedReg(++CopyReg, CopyRegs, AllCopyRegs.end());
        HiRegToSave =
            findNextOrderedReg(++HiRegToSave, HiRegsToSave, AllHighRegs.end());
      }
    }

llvm-svn: 283938
2016-10-11 20:54:41 +00:00
Oliver Stannard d2083fb356 [Thumb] Save/restore high registers in Thumb1 pro/epilogues
The high registers are not allocatable in Thumb1 functions, but they
could still be used by inline assembly, so we need to save and restore
the callee-saved high registers (r8-r11) in the prologue and epilogue.

This is complicated by the fact that the Thumb1 push and pop
instructions cannot access these registers. Therefore, we have to move
them down into low registers before pushing, and move them back after
popping into low registers.

In most functions, we will have low registers that are also being
pushed/popped, which we can use as the temporary registers for
saving/restoring the high registers. However, this is not guaranteed, so
we may need to push some extra low registers to ensure that the high
registers can be saved/restored. For correctness, it would be sufficient
to use just one low register, but if we have enough low registers
available then we only need one push/pop instruction, rather than one
per high register.

We can also use the argument/return registers when they are not live,
and the link register when saving (but not restoring), reducing the
number of extra registers we need to push.

There are still a few extreme edge cases where we need two push/pop
instructions, because not enough low registers can be made live in the
prologue or epilogue.

In addition to the regression tests included here, I've also tested this
using a script to generate functions which clobber different
combinations of registers, have different numbers of argument and return
registers (including variadic arguments), allocate different fixed sized
objects on the stack, and do or don't use variable sized allocas and the
__builtin_return_address intrinsic (all of which affect the available
registers in the prologue and epilogue). I ran these functions in a test
harness which verifies that all of the callee-saved registers are
correctly preserved.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24228

llvm-svn: 283867
2016-10-11 10:12:25 +00:00
James Molloy 9790d8f81d Revert "[Thumb] Teach ISel how to lower compares of AND bitmasks efficiently"
This reverts commit r281323. It caused chromium test failures and a selfhost failure.

llvm-svn: 281451
2016-09-14 09:45:28 +00:00
James Molloy d246c598de [Thumb] Teach ISel how to lower compares of AND bitmasks efficiently
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).

1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.

1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.

llvm-svn: 281323
2016-09-13 12:12:32 +00:00
Nico Weber 7c31d0ebc0 Revert r281215, it caused PR30358.
llvm-svn: 281263
2016-09-12 21:40:50 +00:00
James Molloy 1e1b56bd48 [Thumb] Teach ISel how to lower compares of AND bitmasks efficiently
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).

1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.

1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.

llvm-svn: 281215
2016-09-12 14:30:48 +00:00
James Molloy 4d86bed0bb [Thumb] Select (CMPZ X, -C) -> (CMPZ (ADDS X, C), 0)
The CMPZ #0 disappears during peepholing, leaving just a tADDi3, tADDi8 or t2ADDri. This avoids having to materialize the expensive negative constant in Thumb-1, and allows a shrinking from a 32-bit CMN to a 16-bit ADDS in Thumb-2.

llvm-svn: 281040
2016-09-09 12:52:24 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 02d9851c1c CodeGen: ensure that libcalls are always AAPCS CC
The original commit was too aggressive about marking LibCalls as AAPCS.  The
libcalls contain libc/libm/libunwind calls which are not AAPCS, but C.

llvm-svn: 280833
2016-09-07 17:56:09 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool a7ade33d16 Revert "CodeGen: ensure that libcalls are always AAPCS CC"
This reverts SVN r280683.  Revert until I figure out why this is breaking lli
tests.

llvm-svn: 280778
2016-09-07 03:17:19 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool a6519b1d54 CodeGen: ensure that libcalls are always AAPCS CC
All of the builtins are designed to be invoked with ARM AAPCS CC even on ARM
AAPCS VFP CC hosts.  Tweak the default initialisation to ARM AAPCS CC rather
than C CC for ARM/thumb targets.

The changes to the tests are necessary to ensure that the calling convention for
the lowered library calls are honoured.  Furthermore, these adjustments cause
certain branch invocations to change to branch-and-link since the returned value
needs to be moved across registers (d0 -> r0, r1).

llvm-svn: 280683
2016-09-06 00:28:43 +00:00
Kyle Butt 8699921c4b IfConversion: Fix bug introduced by rescanning diamonds.
Passing the wrong values for predicate-clobbering. Simple to miss.
Added an assert to make this easier to catch in the future.

llvm-svn: 280517
2016-09-02 18:29:26 +00:00
Kyle Butt a8c7371d16 CodeGen: If Convert blocks that would form a diamond when tail-merged.
The following function currently relies on tail-merging for if
conversion to succeed. The common tail of cond_true and cond_false is
extracted, and this then forms a diamond pattern that can be
successfully if converted.

If this block does not get extracted, either because tail-merging is
disabled or the threshold is higher, we should still recognize this
pattern and if-convert it.

Fixed a regression in the original commit. Need to un-reverse branches after
reversing them, or other conversions go awry.

define i32 @t2(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind {
entry:
        %tmp1434 = icmp eq i32 %a, %b           ; <i1> [#uses=1]
        br i1 %tmp1434, label %bb17, label %bb.outer

bb.outer:               ; preds = %cond_false, %entry
        %b_addr.021.0.ph = phi i32 [ %b, %entry ], [ %tmp10, %cond_false ]
        %a_addr.026.0.ph = phi i32 [ %a, %entry ], [ %a_addr.026.0, %cond_false ]
        br label %bb

bb:             ; preds = %cond_true, %bb.outer
        %indvar = phi i32 [ 0, %bb.outer ], [ %indvar.next, %cond_true ]
        %tmp. = sub i32 0, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        %tmp.40 = mul i32 %indvar, %tmp.
        %a_addr.026.0 = add i32 %tmp.40, %a_addr.026.0.ph
        %tmp3 = icmp sgt i32 %a_addr.026.0, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        br i1 %tmp3, label %cond_true, label %cond_false

cond_true:              ; preds = %bb
        %tmp7 = sub i32 %a_addr.026.0, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        %tmp1437 = icmp eq i32 %tmp7, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        %indvar.next = add i32 %indvar, 1
        br i1 %tmp1437, label %bb17, label %bb

cond_false:             ; preds = %bb
        %tmp10 = sub i32 %b_addr.021.0.ph, %a_addr.026.0
        %tmp14 = icmp eq i32 %a_addr.026.0, %tmp10
        br i1 %tmp14, label %bb17, label %bb.outer

bb17:           ; preds = %cond_false, %cond_true, %entry
        %a_addr.026.1 = phi i32 [ %a, %entry ], [ %tmp7, %cond_true ], [ %a_addr.026.0, %cond_false ]
        ret i32 %a_addr.026.1
}

Without tail-merging or diamond-tail if conversion:
LBB1_1:                                 @ %bb
                                        @ =>This Inner Loop Header: Depth=1
        cmp     r0, r1
        ble     LBB1_3
@ BB#2:                                 @ %cond_true
                                        @   in Loop: Header=BB1_1 Depth=1
        subs    r0, r0, r1
        cmp     r1, r0
        it      ne
        cmpne   r0, r1
        bgt     LBB1_4
LBB1_3:                                 @ %cond_false
                                        @   in Loop: Header=BB1_1 Depth=1
        subs    r1, r1, r0
        cmp     r1, r0
        bne     LBB1_1
LBB1_4:                                 @ %bb17
        bx      lr

With diamond-tail if conversion, but without tail-merging:
@ BB#0:                                 @ %entry
        cmp     r0, r1
        it      eq
        bxeq    lr
LBB1_1:                                 @ %bb
                                        @ =>This Inner Loop Header: Depth=1
        cmp     r0, r1
        ite     le
        suble   r1, r1, r0
        subgt   r0, r0, r1
        cmp     r1, r0
        bne     LBB1_1
@ BB#2:                                 @ %bb17
        bx      lr

llvm-svn: 279671
2016-08-24 21:34:27 +00:00
Kyle Butt 6262ca3448 IfConversion: Rescan diamonds.
The cost of predicating a diamond is only the instructions that are not shared
between the two branches. Additionally If a predicate clobbering instruction
occurs in the shared portion of the branches (e.g. a cond move), it may still
be possible to if convert the sub-cfg. This change handles these two facts by
rescanning the non-shared portion of a diamond sub-cfg to recalculate both the
predication cost and whether both blocks are pred-clobbering.

Fixed 2 bugs before recommitting. Branch instructions must be compared and found
identical before diamond conversion. Also, predicate-clobbering instructions in
the shared prefix disqualifies a potential diamond conversion. Includes tests
for both.

llvm-svn: 279670
2016-08-24 21:34:24 +00:00
Oliver Stannard 9aa6f010a4 [ARM] Generate consistent frame records for Thumb2
There is not an official documented ABI for frame pointers in Thumb2,
but we should try to emit something which is useful.

We use r7 as the frame pointer for Thumb code, which currently means
that if a function needs to save a high register (r8-r11), it will get
pushed to the stack between the frame pointer (r7) and link register
(r14). This means that while a stack unwinder can follow the chain of
frame pointers up the stack, it cannot know the offset to lr, so does
not know which functions correspond to the stack frames.

To fix this, we need to push the callee-saved registers in two batches,
with the first push saving the low registers, fp and lr, and the second
push saving the high registers. This is already implemented, but
previously only used for iOS. This patch turns it on for all Thumb2
targets when frame pointers are required by the ABI, and the frame
pointer is r7 (Windows uses r11, so this isn't a problem there). If
frame pointer elimination is enabled we still emit a single push/pop
even if we need a frame pointer for other reasons, to avoid increasing
code size.

We must also ensure that lr is pushed to the stack when using a frame
pointer, so that we end up with a complete frame record. Situations that
could cause this were rare, because we already push lr in most
situations so that we can return using the pop instruction.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23516

llvm-svn: 279506
2016-08-23 09:19:22 +00:00
Kyle Butt ce0196de3f Revert "CodeGen: If Convert blocks that would form a diamond when tail-merged."
This reverts commit 0fda93481c4231c06b838ef476c0c404c51ff875.

llvm-svn: 279288
2016-08-19 18:17:04 +00:00
Kyle Butt 780b517d6b CodeGen: If Convert blocks that would form a diamond when tail-merged.
The following function currently relies on tail-merging for if
conversion to succeed. The common tail of cond_true and cond_false is
extracted, and this then forms a diamond pattern that can be
successfully if converted.

If this block does not get extracted, either because tail-merging is
disabled or the threshold is higher, we should still recognize this
pattern and if-convert it.

Fixed a regression in the original commit. Need to un-reverse branches after
reversing them, or other conversions go awry.

Regression on self-hosting bots with no obvious explanation. Tidied up range
handling to be more obviously correct, but there was no smoking gun.

define i32 @t2(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind {
entry:
        %tmp1434 = icmp eq i32 %a, %b           ; <i1> [#uses=1]
        br i1 %tmp1434, label %bb17, label %bb.outer

bb.outer:               ; preds = %cond_false, %entry
        %b_addr.021.0.ph = phi i32 [ %b, %entry ], [ %tmp10, %cond_false ]
        %a_addr.026.0.ph = phi i32 [ %a, %entry ], [ %a_addr.026.0, %cond_false ]
        br label %bb

bb:             ; preds = %cond_true, %bb.outer
        %indvar = phi i32 [ 0, %bb.outer ], [ %indvar.next, %cond_true ]
        %tmp. = sub i32 0, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        %tmp.40 = mul i32 %indvar, %tmp.
        %a_addr.026.0 = add i32 %tmp.40, %a_addr.026.0.ph
        %tmp3 = icmp sgt i32 %a_addr.026.0, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        br i1 %tmp3, label %cond_true, label %cond_false

cond_true:              ; preds = %bb
        %tmp7 = sub i32 %a_addr.026.0, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        %tmp1437 = icmp eq i32 %tmp7, %b_addr.021.0.ph
        %indvar.next = add i32 %indvar, 1
        br i1 %tmp1437, label %bb17, label %bb

cond_false:             ; preds = %bb
        %tmp10 = sub i32 %b_addr.021.0.ph, %a_addr.026.0
        %tmp14 = icmp eq i32 %a_addr.026.0, %tmp10
        br i1 %tmp14, label %bb17, label %bb.outer

bb17:           ; preds = %cond_false, %cond_true, %entry
        %a_addr.026.1 = phi i32 [ %a, %entry ], [ %tmp7, %cond_true ], [ %a_addr.026.0, %cond_false ]
        ret i32 %a_addr.026.1
}

Without tail-merging or diamond-tail if conversion:
LBB1_1:                                 @ %bb
                                        @ =>This Inner Loop Header: Depth=1
        cmp     r0, r1
        ble     LBB1_3
@ BB#2:                                 @ %cond_true
                                        @   in Loop: Header=BB1_1 Depth=1
        subs    r0, r0, r1
        cmp     r1, r0
        it      ne
        cmpne   r0, r1
        bgt     LBB1_4
LBB1_3:                                 @ %cond_false
                                        @   in Loop: Header=BB1_1 Depth=1
        subs    r1, r1, r0
        cmp     r1, r0
        bne     LBB1_1
LBB1_4:                                 @ %bb17
        bx      lr

With diamond-tail if conversion, but without tail-merging:
@ BB#0:                                 @ %entry
        cmp     r0, r1
        it      eq
        bxeq    lr
LBB1_1:                                 @ %bb
                                        @ =>This Inner Loop Header: Depth=1
        cmp     r0, r1
        ite     le
        suble   r1, r1, r0
        subgt   r0, r0, r1
        cmp     r1, r0
        bne     LBB1_1
@ BB#2:                                 @ %bb17
        bx      lr

llvm-svn: 279168
2016-08-18 22:09:27 +00:00