The DAG behavior allows matchching input patterns with a single result
to the first result of an output instruction that defines multiple
results. The remaining defs are implicitly dead.
This starts to fix using manual selection for AMDGPU add/sub (although
it's still needed, mostly because it's also still needed for
G_PTR_ADD).
This gives a nice error if you accidentally try to use an empty list for
the RegTypes of a RegisterClass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78285
Currently custom code predicates can only really be used for
contextless checks tied to a single instruction (e.g. check the def
for hasOneUse). If you do want to inspect the input instructions in
the source pattern, you cannot without re-verifying the opcode and
type checks implied by the patterns, since this check was emitted
before any operand constraints. Really, these are pattern level
predicates that implicitly depend on the instruction and operand
checks.
Introduce a filtering function so the custom predicate is emitted
last. I'm not sure this is the most elegant solution. It seems like
this is really a different thing from the InstructionMatcher/IPM_
predicate kinds. I initially tried keeping this in a separate
predicate list, but that also seemed awkward.
This only half fixes the problem I'm trying to solve. The AMDGPU
pattern I'm attempting to port also uses the PredicateCodeUsesOperands
feature to allow checks on the source operands when the input pattern
is commuted. Really the emitter should reject the pattern since it
doesn't handle this case, but at this point it would be more
productive to just implement this.
This was emitting the raw value for the reg class ID with a comment
for the actual class name. Switch to emitting the qualified enum name
instead, which obviates the need for the comment and also helps keep
the lit tests on the emitter output more stable.
Summary:
This patch is enabling the generation of clauses enum sets for semantics check in Flang through
tablegen. Enum sets and directive - sets map is generated by the new tablegen infrsatructure for OpenMP
and other directive languages.
The semantic checks for OpenMP are modified to use this newly generated map.
Reviewers: DavidTruby, sscalpone, kiranchandramohan, ichoyjx, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: DavidTruby, ichoyjx
Subscribers: mgorny, yaxunl, hiraditya, guansong, sstefan1, aaron.ballman, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83326
Summary:
Diff D83176 moved the last piece of code from OMPConstants.cpp and now this file was only
useful to include the tablegen generated file. This patch replace OMPConstants.cpp with OMP.cpp
generated by tablegen.
Reviewers: sstefan1, jdoerfert, jdenny
Reviewed By: sstefan1
Subscribers: mgorny, yaxunl, hiraditya, guansong, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83583
Summary:
Change the test in isAllowedClauseForDirective from if with multiple conditions
to a main switch on directive and then switches on clause for each directive. Version
check is still done with a condition in the return statment.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, jdenny
Reviewed By: jdenny
Subscribers: yaxunl, guansong, sstefan1, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83363
Summary:
Generate the isAllowedClauseForDirective function from tablegen. This patch introduce
the VersionedClause in the tablegen file so that clause can be encapsulated in this class to
specify a range of validity on a directive.
VersionedClause has default minVersion, maxVersion so it can be used without them or
minVersion.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, jdenny
Reviewed By: jdenny
Subscribers: yaxunl, hiraditya, guansong, jfb, sstefan1, aaron.ballman, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82982
Summary:
Follow up to D81736. Move getOpenMPDirectiveKind, getOpenMPClauseKind, getOpenMPDirectiveName and
getOpenMPClauseName to the new tablegen code generation. The code is generated in a new file named OMP.cpp.inc
Reviewers: jdoerfert, jdenny, thakis
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, jdenny
Subscribers: mgorny, yaxunl, hiraditya, guansong, sstefan1, llvm-commits, thakis
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82405
Summary:
As discussed previously when landing patch for OpenMP in Flang, the idea is
to share common part of the OpenMP declaration between the different Frontend.
While doing this it was thought that moving to tablegen instead of Macros will also
give a cleaner and more powerful way of generating these declaration.
This first part of a future series of patches is setting up the base .td file for
DirectiveLanguage as well as the OpenMP version of it. The base file is meant to
be used by other directive language such as OpenACC.
In this first patch, the Directive and Clause enums are generated with tablegen
instead of the macros on OMPConstants.h. The next pacth will extend this
to other enum and move the Flang frontend to use it.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, DavidTruby, fghanim, ABataev, jdenny, hfinkel, jhuber6, kiranchandramohan, kiranktp
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, jdenny
Subscribers: arphaman, martong, cfe-commits, mgorny, yaxunl, hiraditya, guansong, jfb, sstefan1, aaron.ballman, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #openmp, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81736
Summary:
As discussed previously when landing patch for OpenMP in Flang, the idea is
to share common part of the OpenMP declaration between the different Frontend.
While doing this it was thought that moving to tablegen instead of Macros will also
give a cleaner and more powerful way of generating these declaration.
This first part of a future series of patches is setting up the base .td file for
DirectiveLanguage as well as the OpenMP version of it. The base file is meant to
be used by other directive language such as OpenACC.
In this first patch, the Directive and Clause enums are generated with tablegen
instead of the macros on OMPConstants.h. The next pacth will extend this
to other enum and move the Flang frontend to use it.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, DavidTruby, fghanim, ABataev, jdenny, hfinkel, jhuber6, kiranchandramohan, kiranktp
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, jdenny
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mgorny, yaxunl, hiraditya, guansong, jfb, sstefan1, aaron.ballman, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #openmp, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81736
Summary:
TableGen interprets braces ('{}') in the asm string of instruction aliases as
variants but when defining aliases with literal braces they have to be escaped
to prevent them being removed.
Braces are escaped with '\\', for example:
def FooBraces : InstAlias<"foo \\{$imm\\}", (foo IntOperand:$imm)>;
Although when TableGen is emitting the assembly writer (-gen-asm-writer)
the AsmString that gets emitted is:
AsmString = "foo \{$\x01\}";
In c/c++ braces don't need to be escaped which causes compilation
warnings:
warning: use of non-standard escape character '\{' [-Wpedantic]
This patch fixes the issue by unescaping the flattened alias asm string
in the asm writer, by replacing '\{\}' with '{}'.
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79991
- Argument attribute needs specifiying through `ArgIndex<n>`
(corresponding to `FirstArgIndex`) to distinguish explicitly from the
index number from the overloaded type list.
- In addition, `RetIndex` (corresponding to `ReturnIndex`) and
`FuncIndex` (corresponding to `FunctionIndex`) are introduced for us
to associate attributes on the return value and potentially function
itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80422
Summary:
In TableGen's instruction selection table generator, references to
register classes were handled by generating a matcher table entry in the
form of "EmitStringInteger, MVT::i32, 'RegisterClassID'". This ID is in
fact the enum integer value corresponding to the register class.
However, both the table generator and the table consumer
(SelectionDAGISel) assume that this ID is less than or equal to 127,
i.e. at most 7 bits. Values greater than this threshold cause completely
wrong behaviours in the instruction selection process.
This patch adds a check to determine if the enum integer value is
greater than the limit of 127. In finding so, the generator emits an
"EmitInteger" instead, which properly supports values with arbitrary
sizes.
Commit f8d044bbcf fixed the very same bug
for register subindices. The present patch now extends this cover to
register classes.
Reviewers: rampitec
Reviewed By: rampitec
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79705
This was hitting the default instruction constraint code which uses
the register classes in the instruction def, which REG_SEQUENCE does
not have.
Fixes not constraining the register class for AMDGPU fneg/fabs
patterns, which would fail when the use was another generic,
unconstrained instruction.
Another oddity I noticed is that the temporary registers are created
with an unnecessary, but incorrect 16-bit LLT but this shouldn't
matter.
I'm also still unclear why root and sub-instructions have to be
handled differently.
For context, the proposed RISC-V bit manipulation extension has a subset
of instructions which require one of two SubtargetFeatures to be
enabled, 'zbb' or 'zbp', and there is no defined feature which both of
these can imply to use as a constraint either (see comments in D65649).
AssemblerPredicates allow multiple SubtargetFeatures to be declared in
the "AssemblerCondString" field, separated by commas, and this means
that the two features must both be enabled. There is no equivalent to
say that _either_ feature X or feature Y must be enabled, short of
creating a dummy SubtargetFeature for this purpose and having features X
and Y imply the new feature.
To solve the case where X or Y is needed without adding a new feature,
and to better match a typical TableGen style, this replaces the existing
"AssemblerCondString" with a dag "AssemblerCondDag" which represents the
same information. Two operators are defined for use with
AssemblerCondDag, "all_of", which matches the current behaviour, and
"any_of", which adds the new proposed ORing features functionality.
This was originally proposed in the RFC at
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-February/139138.html
Changes to all current backends are mechanical to support the replaced
functionality, and are NFCI.
At this stage, it is illegal to combine features with ands and ors in a
single AssemblerCondDag. I suspect this case is sufficiently rare that
adding more complex changes to support it are unnecessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74338
This was checking for default operands in the current DAG instruction,
rather than the correct result operand list. I'm not entirly sure how
this managed to work before, but was failing for me when multiple
default operands were overridden.
Summary:
Previously TableGen would crash trying to print the undefined value as
an integer.
Change-Id: I3900071ceaa07c26acafb33bc49966d7d7a02828
Reviewers: nhaehnle
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74210
Summary:
In the DAG pattern backend, `SimplifyTree` simplifies a pattern by
removing bitconverts between two identical types. But that function is
also run on the fragments list in instances of `PatFrags`, in which
the types haven't been specified yet. So the input and output of the
bitconvert always evaluate to the empty set of types, which makes them
compare equal. So the test always passes, and bitconverts are
unconditionally removed from the PatFrag RHS.
Fixed by spotting the empty type set and using it to inhibit the
optimization.
Reviewers: nhaehnle, hfinkel
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74627
This reverts commit 80a34ae311 with fixes.
Previously, since bots turning on EXPENSIVE_CHECKS are essentially turning on
MachineVerifierPass by default on X86 and the fact that
inline-asm-avx-v-constraint-32bit.ll and inline-asm-avx512vl-v-constraint-32bit.ll
are not expected to generate functioning machine code, this would go
down to `report_fatal_error` in MachineVerifierPass. Here passing
`-verify-machineinstrs=0` to make the intent explicit.
This reverts commit 80a34ae311 with fixes.
On bots llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-ubuntu and
llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-debian only,
llc returns 0 for these two tests unexpectedly. I tweaked the RUN line a little
bit in the hope that LIT is the culprit since this change is not in the
codepath these tests are testing.
llvm\test\CodeGen\X86\inline-asm-avx-v-constraint-32bit.ll
llvm\test\CodeGen\X86\inline-asm-avx512vl-v-constraint-32bit.ll
Tablegen's DAGISelMatcher emits integers in a VBR format,
so if an integer is below 128 it can fit into a single
byte, otherwise high bit is set, next byte is used etc.
MatcherTable is essentially an unsigned char table. When
SelectionDAGISel parses the table it does a reverse translation.
In a situation when numeric value of an integer to emit is
unknown it can be emitted not as OPC_EmitInteger but as
OPC_EmitStringInteger using a symbolic name of the value.
In this situation the value should not exceed 127.
One of the situations when OPC_EmitStringInteger is used is
if we need to emit a subreg into a matcher table. However,
number of subregs can exceed 127. Currently last defined subreg
for AMDGPU is 192. That results in a silent bug in the ISel
with matcher reading from an invalid offset.
Fixed this bug to emit actual VBR encoded value for a subregs
which value exceeds 127.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74368
This reverts commit rGcd5b308b828e, rGcd5b308b828e, rG8cedf0e2994c.
There are issues to be investigated for polly bots and bots turning on
EXPENSIVE_CHECKS.
Summary:
There are a few field init values that are concrete but not complete/foldable (e.g. `?`). This allows for using those values as initializers without erroring out.
Example:
```
class A {
string value = ?;
}
class B<A impl> : A {
let value = impl.value; // This currently emits an error.
let value = ?; // This doesn't emit an error.
}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74360
Summary:
The following example gives the error message "expected value of type
'bits<32>', got 'bit'" on the assignment.
class Instruction { bits<32> encoding; }
def foo: Instruction { let encoding{10} = !eq(0, 1); }
But there's nothing wrong with this code: 'bit' is a perfectly good
type for the RHS of an assignment to a //single bit// of an
instruction encoding.
The problem is that `ParseBodyItem` is accidentally type-checking the
RHS against the full type of the `encoding` field, without adjusting
it in the case where we're only assigning to a subset of the bits. The
fix is trivial.
Reviewers: nhaehnle, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74220
This previously only handled EXTRACT_SUBREGs from leafs, such as
operands directly in the original output. Handle extracting from a
result instruction.
Summary:
This patch could be treated as a rebase of D33960. It also fixes PR35547.
A fix for `llvm/test/Other/close-stderr.ll` is proposed in D68164. Seems
the consensus is that the test is passing by chance and I'm not
sure how important it is for us. So it is removed like in D33960 for now.
The rest of the test fixes are just adding `--crash` flag to `not` tool.
** The reason it fixes PR35547 is
`exit` does cleanup including calling class destructor whereas `abort`
does not do any cleanup. In multithreading environment such as ThinLTO or JIT,
threads may share states which mostly are ManagedStatic<>. If faulting thread
tearing down a class when another thread is using it, there are chances of
memory corruption. This is bad 1. It will stop error reporting like pretty
stack printer; 2. The memory corruption is distracting and nondeterministic in
terms of error message, and corruption type (depending one the timing, it
could be double free, heap free after use, etc.).
Reviewers: rnk, chandlerc, zturner, sepavloff, MaskRay, espindola
Reviewed By: rnk, MaskRay
Subscribers: wuzish, jholewinski, qcolombet, dschuff, jyknight, emaste, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, sbc100, arichardson, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, cfe-commits, MaskRay, filcab, davide, MatzeB, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, rupprecht, seiya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67847
Summary:
This allows you to make some of the defs in a multiclass or `foreach`
conditional on an expression computed from the parameters or iteration
variables.
It was already possible to simulate an if statement using a `foreach`
with a dummy iteration variable and a list constructed using `!if` so
that it had length 0 or 1 depending on the condition, e.g.
foreach unusedIterationVar = !if(condition, [1], []<int>) in { ... }
But this syntax is nicer to read, and also more convenient because it
allows an else clause.
To avoid upheaval in the implementation, I've implemented `if` as pure
syntactic sugar on the `foreach` implementation: internally, `ParseIf`
actually does construct exactly the kind of foreach shown above (and
another reversed one for the else clause if present).
Reviewers: nhaehnle, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71474
Summary:
This allows you to define a global or local variable to an arbitrary
value, and refer to it in subsequent definitions.
The main use I anticipate for this is if you have to compute some
difficult function of the parameters of a multiclass, and then use it
many times. For example:
multiclass Foo<int i, string s> {
defvar op = !cast<BaseClass>("whatnot_" # s # "_" # i);
def myRecord {
dag a = (op this, (op that, the other), (op x, y, z));
int b = op.subfield;
}
def myOtherRecord<"template params including", op>;
}
There are a couple of ways to do this already, but they're not really
satisfactory. You can replace `defvar x = y` with a loop over a
singleton list, `foreach x = [y] in { ... }` - but that's unintuitive
to someone who hasn't seen that workaround idiom before, and requires
an extra pair of braces that you often didn't really want. Or you can
define a nested pair of multiclasses, with the inner one taking `x` as
a template parameter, and the outer one instantiating it just once
with the desired value of `x` computed from its other parameters - but
that makes it awkward to sequentially compute each value based on the
previous ones. I think `defvar` makes things considerably easier.
You can also use `defvar` at the top level, where it inserts globals
into the same map used by `defset`. That allows you to define global
constants without having to make a dummy record for them to live in:
defvar MAX_BUFSIZE = 512;
// previously:
// def Dummy { int MAX_BUFSIZE = 512; }
// and then refer to Dummy.MAX_BUFSIZE everywhere
Reviewers: nhaehnle, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71407
For arguments that are not expected to be materialized with
G_CONSTANT, this was emitting predicates which could never match. It
was first adding a meaningless LLT check, which would always fail due
to the operand not being a register.
Infer the cases where a literal should check for an immediate operand,
instead of a register This avoids needing to invent a special way of
representing timm literal values.
Also handle immediate arguments in GIM_CheckLiteralInt. The comments
stated it handled isImm() and isCImm(), but that wasn't really true.
This unblocks work on the selection of all of the complicated AMDGPU
intrinsics in future commits.
The current implementation assumes there is an instruction associated
with the transform, but this is not the case for
timm/TargetConstant/immarg values. These transforms should directly
operate on a specific MachineOperand in the source
instruction. TableGen would assert if you attempted to define an
equivalent GISDNodeXFormEquiv using timm when it failed to find the
instruction matcher.
Specially recognize SDNodeXForms on timm, and pass the operand index
to the render function.
Ideally this would be a separate render function type that looks like
void renderFoo(MachineInstrBuilder, const MachineOperand&), but this
proved to be somewhat mechanically painful. Add an optional operand
index which will only be passed if the transform should only look at
the one source operand.
Theoretically it would also be possible to only ever pass the
MachineOperand, and the existing renderers would check the parent. I
think that would be somewhat ugly for the standard usage which may
want to inspect other operands, and I also think MachineOperand should
eventually not carry a pointer to the parent instruction.
Use it in one sample pattern. This isn't a great example, since the
transform exists to satisfy DAG type constraints. This could also be
avoided by just changing the MachineInstr's arbitrary choice of
operand type from i16 to i32. Other patterns have nontrivial uses, but
this serves as the simplest example.
One flaw this still has is if you try to use an SDNodeXForm defined
for imm, but the source pattern uses timm, you still see the "Failed
to lookup instruction" assert. However, there is now a way to avoid
it.
Summary:
GIMatchTree's job is to build a decision tree by zipping all the
GIMatchDag's together.
Each DAG is added to the tree builder as a leaf and partitioners are used
to subdivide each node until there are no more partitioners to apply. At
this point, the code generator is responsible for testing any untested
predicates and following any unvisited traversals (there shouldn't be any
of the latter as the getVRegDef partitioner handles them all).
Note that the leaves don't always fit into partitions cleanly and the
partitions may overlap as a result. This is resolved by cloning the leaf
into every partition it belongs to. One example of this is a rule that can
match one of N opcodes. The leaf for this rule would end up in N partitions
when processed by the opcode partitioner. A similar example is the
getVRegDef partitioner where having rules (add $a, $b), and (add ($a, $b), $c)
will result in the former being in the partition for successfully
following the vreg-def and failing to do so as it doesn't care which
happens.
Depends on D69151
Fixed the issues with the windows bots which were caused by stdout/stderr
interleaving.
Reviewers: bogner, volkan
Reviewed By: volkan
Subscribers: lkail, mgorny, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69152
Copy the logic from the existing handling in the DAG matcher emittter.
This will enable some AMDGPU pattern cleanups without breaking
GlobalISel tests, and eventually handle importing more patterns.
The test is a bit annoying since the sections seem to randomly sort
themselves if anything else is added in the future.