Commit Graph

1165 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Trick 05938a5481 AArch64: Safely handle the incoming sret call argument.
This adds a safe interface to the machine independent InputArg struct
for accessing the index of the original (IR-level) argument. When a
non-native return type is lowered, we generate the hidden
machine-level sret argument on-the-fly. Before this fix, we were
representing this argument as OrigArgIndex == 0, which is an outright
lie. In particular this crashed in the AArch64 backend where we
actually try to access the type of the original argument.

Now we use a sentinel value for machine arguments that have no
original argument index. AArch64, ARM, Mips, and PPC now check for this
case before accessing the original argument.

Fixes <rdar://19792160> Null pointer assertion in AArch64TargetLowering

llvm-svn: 229413
2015-02-16 18:10:47 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 5bedaf934f PowerPC: Canonicalize access to function attributes, NFC
Canonicalize access to function attributes to use the simpler API.

getAttributes().getAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
  => getFnAttribute(Kind)

getAttributes().hasAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
  => hasFnAttribute(Kind)

llvm-svn: 229224
2015-02-14 02:54:07 +00:00
Eric Christopher e8dbfe1cf8 Stash the TargetMachine on the subtarget so we can access it later.
Clean up a subtarget function that has it passed in while we're at it.

llvm-svn: 229164
2015-02-13 22:23:04 +00:00
Eric Christopher a4ae213193 PPC LinkageSize can be computed at initialization time, do so.
llvm-svn: 229163
2015-02-13 22:22:57 +00:00
Eric Christopher dc3a8a4a66 PPCFrameLowering's FramePointerOffset can be computed at initialization
time. Do so.

llvm-svn: 228998
2015-02-13 00:39:38 +00:00
Eric Christopher 736d39e189 The TOC save offset can be computed at compile time, do so and
propagate changes.

llvm-svn: 228997
2015-02-13 00:39:36 +00:00
Eric Christopher f71609b5dd The return save offset can be computed at initialization time - do
so and save the value.

llvm-svn: 228996
2015-02-13 00:39:27 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7a0516ea66 [PowerPC] Mark jumps as expensive (using using CR bits)
On PowerPC, which has a full set of logical operations on (its multiple sets
of) condition-register bits, it is not profitable to break of complex
conditions feeding a jump into multiple jumps. We can turn off this feature of
CGP/SDAGBuilder by marking jumps as "expensive".

P7 test-suite speedups (no regressions):
MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/pcompress2/pcompress2
	-0.626647% +/- 0.323583%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Olden/power/power
	-18.2821% +/- 8.06481%

llvm-svn: 228895
2015-02-12 01:02:52 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 82f1c775a0 [PowerPC] Fix reverted patch r227976 to avoid register assignment issues
See full discussion in http://reviews.llvm.org/D7491.

We now hide the add-immediate and call instructions together in a
separate pseudo-op, which is tagged to define GPR3 and clobber the
call-killed registers.  The PPCTLSDynamicCall pass prior to RA now
expands this op into the two separate addi and call ops, with explicit
definitions of GPR3 on both instructions, and explicit clobbers on the
call instruction.  The pass is now marked as requiring and preserving
the LiveIntervals and SlotIndexes analyses, and fixes these up after
the replacement sequences are introduced.

Self-hosting has been verified on LE P8 and BE P7 with various
optimization levels, etc.  It has also been verified with the
--no-tls-optimize flag workaround removed.

llvm-svn: 228725
2015-02-10 19:09:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel 0d2a1515d5 Revert "r227976 - [PowerPC] Yet another approach to __tls_get_addr" and related fixups
Unfortunately, even with the workaround of disabling the linker TLS
optimizations in Clang restored (which has already been done), this still
breaks self-hosting on my P7 machine (-O3 -DNDEBUG -mcpu=native).

Bill is currently working on an alternate implementation to address the TLS
issue in a way that also fully elides the linker bug (which, unfortunately,
this approach did not fully), so I'm reverting this now.

llvm-svn: 228460
2015-02-06 23:07:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel 65d1cbf9df [PowerPC] Generate pre-increment floating-point ld/st instructions
PowerPC supports pre-increment floating-point load/store instructions, both r+r
and r+i, and we had patterns for them, but they were not marked as legal. Mark
them as legal (and add a test case).

llvm-svn: 228327
2015-02-05 18:42:53 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 433b1c3aae [PowerPC] Implement the vclz instructions for PWR8
Patch by Kit Barton.

Add the vector count leading zeros instruction for byte, halfword,
word, and doubleword sizes.  This is a fairly straightforward addition
after the changes made for vpopcnt:

 1. Add the correct definitions for the various instructions in
    PPCInstrAltivec.td
 2. Make the CTLZ operation legal on vector types when using P8Altivec
    in PPCISelLowering.cpp 

Test Plan

Created new test case in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vec_clz.ll to check the
instructions are being generated when the CTLZ operation is used in
LLVM.

Check the encoding and decoding in test/MC/PowerPC/ppc_encoding_vmx.s
and test/Disassembler/PowerPC/ppc_encoding_vmx.txt respectively.

llvm-svn: 228301
2015-02-05 15:24:47 +00:00
Bill Schmidt fe88b18990 [PowerPC] Implement the vpopcnt instructions for POWER8
Patch by Kit Barton.

Add the vector population count instructions for byte, halfword, word,
and doubleword sizes.  There are two major changes here:

    PPCISelLowering.cpp: Make CTPOP legal for vector types.
    PPCRegisterInfo.td: Added v2i64 to the VRRC register
      definition. This is needed for the doubleword variations of the
      integer ops that were added in P8. 

Test Plan

Test the instruction vpcnt* encoding/decoding in ppc64-encoding-vmx.s

Test the generation of the vpopcnt instructions for various vector
data types.  When adding the v2i64 type to the Vector Register set, I
also needed to add the appropriate bit conversion patterns between
v2i64 and the existing vector types.  Testing for these conversions
were also added in the test case by passing a different vector type as
a parameter into the test functions.  There is also a run step that
will ensure the vpopcnt instructions are generated when the vsx
feature is disabled.

llvm-svn: 228046
2015-02-03 21:58:23 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 685aa8b0c5 [PowerPC] Yet another approach to __tls_get_addr
This patch is a third attempt to properly handle the local-dynamic and
global-dynamic TLS models.

In my original implementation, calls to __tls_get_addr were hidden
from view until the asm-printer phase, at which point the underlying
branch-and-link instruction was created with proper relocations.  This
mostly worked well, but I used some repellent techniques to ensure
that the TLS_GET_ADDR nodes at the SD and MI levels correctly received
input from GPR3 and produced output into GPR3.  This proved to work
badly in the presence of multiple TLS variable accesses, with the
copies to and from GPR3 being scheduled incorrectly and generally
creating havoc.

In r221703, I addressed that problem by representing the calls to
__tls_get_addr as true calls during instruction lowering.  This had
the advantage of removing all of the bad hacks and relying on the
existing call machinery to properly glue the copies in place. It
looked like this was going to be the right way to go.

However, as a side effect of the recent discovery of problems with
linker optimizations for TLS, we discovered cases of suboptimal code
generation with this strategy.  The problem comes when tls_get_addr is
called for the same address, and there is a resulting CSE
opportunity.  It turns out that in such cases MachineCSE will common
the addis/addi instructions that set up the input value to
tls_get_addr, but will not common the calls themselves.  MachineCSE
does not have any machinery to common idempotent calls.  This is
perfectly sensible, since presumably this would be done at the IR
level, and introducing calls in the back end isn't commonplace.  In
any case, we end up with two calls to __tls_get_addr when one would
suffice, and that isn't good.

I presumed that the original design would have allowed commoning of
the machine-specific nodes that hid the __tls_get_addr calls, so as
suggested by Ulrich Weigand, I went back to that design and cleaned it
up so that the copies were properly held together by glue
nodes.  However, it turned out that this didn't work either...the
presence of copies to physical registers kept the machine-specific
nodes from being commoned also.

All of which leads to the design presented here.  This is a return to
the original design, except that no attempt is made to introduce
copies to and from GPR3 during instruction lowering.  Virtual registers
are used until prior to register allocation.  At that point, a special
pass is run that identifies the machine-specific nodes that hide the
tls_get_addr calls and introduces the copies to and from GPR3 around
them.  The register allocator then coalesces these copies away.  With
this design, MachineCSE succeeds in commoning tls_get_addr calls where
possible, and we get nice optimal code generation (better than GCC at
the moment, which does not common these calls).

One additional problem must be dealt with:  After introducing the
mentions of the physical register GPR3, the aggressive anti-dependence
breaker sees opportunities to improve scheduling by selecting a
different register instead.  Flags must be used on the instruction
descriptions to tell the anti-dependence breaker to keep its hands in
its pockets.

One thing missing from the original design was recording a definition
of the link register on the GET_TLS_ADDR nodes.  Doing this was found
to be insufficient to force a stack frame to be created, which led to
looping behavior because two different LR values were stored at the
same address.  This appears to have been an oversight in
PPCFrameLowering::determineFrameLayout(), which is repaired here.

Because MustSaveLR() returns true for calls to builtin_return_address,
this changed the expected behavior of
test/CodeGen/PowerPC/retaddr2.ll, which now stacks a frame but
formerly did not.  I've fixed the test case to reflect this.

There are existing TLS tests to catch regressions; the checks in
test/CodeGen/PowerPC/tls-store2.ll proved to be too restrictive in the
face of instruction scheduling with these changes, so I fixed that
up.

I've added a new test case based on the PrettyStackTrace module that
demonstrated the original problem. This checks that we get correct
code generation and that CSE of the calls to __get_tls_addr has taken
place.

llvm-svn: 227976
2015-02-03 16:16:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel e6698d5305 [PowerPC] Make r2 allocatable on PPC64/ELF for some leaf functions
The TOC base pointer is passed in r2, and we normally reserve this register so
that we can depend on it being there. However, for leaf functions, and
specifically those leaf functions that don't do any TOC access of their own
(which is generally due to accessing the constant pool, using TLS, etc.),
we can treat r2 as an ordinary callee-saved register (it must be callee-saved
because, for local direct calls, the linker will not insert any save/restore
code).

The allocation order has been changed slightly for PPC64/ELF systems to put r2
at the end of the list (while leaving it near the beginning for Darwin systems
to prevent unnecessary output changes). While r2 is allocatable, using it still
requires spill/restore traffic, and thus comes at the end of the list.

llvm-svn: 227745
2015-02-01 15:03:28 +00:00
Eric Christopher cccae7951c Use the cached subtargets and remove calls to getSubtarget/getSubtargetImpl
without a Function argument.

llvm-svn: 227622
2015-01-30 22:02:31 +00:00
Eric Christopher 8b7706517c Move DataLayout back to the TargetMachine from TargetSubtargetInfo
derived classes.

Since global data alignment, layout, and mangling is often based on the
DataLayout, move it to the TargetMachine. This ensures that global
data is going to be layed out and mangled consistently if the subtarget
changes on a per function basis. Prior to this all targets(*) have
had subtarget dependent code moved out and onto the TargetMachine.

*One target hasn't been migrated as part of this change: R600. The
R600 port has, as a subtarget feature, the size of pointers and
this affects global data layout. I've currently hacked in a FIXME
to enable progress, but the port needs to be updated to either pass
the 64-bitness to the TargetMachine, or fix the DataLayout to
avoid subtarget dependent features.

llvm-svn: 227113
2015-01-26 19:03:15 +00:00
Hal Finkel af51993ee1 [PowerPC] Add r2 as an operand for all calls under both PPC64 ELF V1 and V2
Our PPC64 ELF V2 call lowering logic added r2 as an operand to all direct call
instructions in order to represent the dependency on the TOC base pointer
value. Restricting this to ELF V2, however, does not seem to make sense: calls
under ELF V1 have the same dependence, and indirect calls have an r2 dependence
just as direct ones. Make sure the dependence is noted for all calls under both
ELF V1 and ELF V2.

llvm-svn: 226432
2015-01-19 07:20:27 +00:00
Hal Finkel 8ea446b6a4 [PowerPC] Add some FIXMEs for fastcc and FPR <-> GPR moves
So we don't forget, once we support FPR <-> GPR moves on the P8, we'll likely
want to re-visit this part of the calling convention.

llvm-svn: 226401
2015-01-18 14:31:10 +00:00
Hal Finkel f81b6dd7a2 [PowerPC] Initial PPC64 calling-convention changes for fastcc
The default calling convention specified by the PPC64 ELF (V1 and V2) ABI is
designed to work with both prototyped and non-prototyped/varargs functions. As
a result, GPRs and stack space are allocated for every argument, even those
that are passed in floating-point or vector registers.

GlobalOpt::OptimizeFunctions will transform local non-varargs functions (that
do not have their address taken) to use the 'fast' calling convention.

When functions are using the 'fast' calling convention, don't allocate GPRs for
arguments passed in other types of registers, and don't allocate stack space for
arguments passed in registers. Other changes for the fast calling convention
may be added in the future.

llvm-svn: 226399
2015-01-18 12:08:47 +00:00
Hal Finkel c19805a75d [PowerPC] Don't list R11 as a patchpoint scratch register
R11's status is the same under both the PPC64 ELF V1 and V2 ABIs: it is
reserved for use as an "environment pointer" for compilation models that
require such a thing. We don't, we also don't need a second scratch register,
and because we support only "local" patchpoint call targets, we might as well
let R11 be used for anyregcc patchpoints.

llvm-svn: 226369
2015-01-17 03:57:34 +00:00
Hal Finkel 52f7c018d3 [PowerPC] Adjust PatchPoints for ppc64le
Bill Schmidt pointed out that some adjustments would be needed to properly
support powerpc64le (using the ELF V2 ABI). For one thing, R11 is not available
as a scratch register, so we need to use R12. R12 is also available under ELF
V1, so to maintain consistency, I flipped the order to make R12 the first
scratch register in the array under both ABIs.

llvm-svn: 226247
2015-01-16 04:40:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel e2ab0f17cf [PowerPC] Loosen ELFv1 PPC64 func descriptor loads for indirect calls
Function pointers under PPC64 ELFv1 (which is used on PPC64/Linux on the
POWER7, A2 and earlier cores) are really pointers to a function descriptor, a
structure with three pointers: the actual pointer to the code to which to jump,
the pointer to the TOC needed by the callee, and an environment pointer. We
used to chain these loads, and make them opaque to the rest of the optimizer,
so that they'd always occur directly before the call. This is not necessary,
and in fact, highly suboptimal on embedded cores. Once the function pointer is
known, the loads can be performed ahead of time; in fact, they can be hoisted
out of loops.

Now these function descriptors are almost always generated by the linker, and
thus the contents of the descriptors are invariant. As a result, by default,
we'll mark the associated loads as invariant (allowing them to be hoisted out
of loops). I've added a target feature to turn this off, however, just in case
someone needs that option (constructing an on-stack descriptor, casting it to a
function pointer, and then calling it cannot be well-defined C/C++ code, but I
can imagine some JIT-compilation system doing so).

Consider this simple test:
  $ cat call.c

  typedef void (*fp)();
  void bar(fp x) {
    for (int i = 0; i < 1600000000; ++i)
      x();
  }

  $ cat main.c

  typedef void (*fp)();
  void bar(fp x);
  void foo() {}
  int main() {
    bar(foo);
  }

On the PPC A2 (the BG/Q supercomputer), marking the function-descriptor loads
as invariant brings the execution time down to ~8 seconds from ~32 seconds with
the loads in the loop.

The difference on the POWER7 is smaller. Compiling with:

  gcc -std=c99 -O3 -mcpu=native call.c main.c : ~6 seconds [this is 4.8.2]

  clang -O3 -mcpu=native call.c main.c : ~5.3 seconds

  clang -O3 -mcpu=native call.c main.c -mno-invariant-function-descriptors : ~4 seconds
  (looks like we'd benefit from additional loop unrolling here, as a first
   guess, because this is faster with the extra loads)

The -mno-invariant-function-descriptors will be added to Clang shortly.

llvm-svn: 226207
2015-01-15 21:17:34 +00:00
Hal Finkel 64202167c5 [PowerPC] Add assembler support for mcrfs and friends
Fill out our support for the floating-point status and control register
instructions (mcrfs and friends). As it turns out, these are necessary for
compiling src/test/harness_fp.h in TBB for PowerPC.

Thanks to Raf Schietekat for reporting the issue!

llvm-svn: 226070
2015-01-15 01:00:53 +00:00
Hal Finkel 934361a4b8 Revert "r225811 - Revert "r225808 - [PowerPC] Add StackMap/PatchPoint support""
This re-applies r225808, fixed to avoid problems with SDAG dependencies along
with the preceding fix to ScheduleDAGSDNodes::RegDefIter::InitNodeNumDefs.
These problems caused the original regression tests to assert/segfault on many
(but not all) systems.

Original commit message:

This commit does two things:

 1. Refactors PPCFastISel to use more of the common infrastructure for call
    lowering (this lets us take advantage of this common code for lowering some
    common intrinsics, stackmap/patchpoint among them).

 2. Adds support for stackmap/patchpoint lowering. For the most part, this is
    very similar to the support in the AArch64 target, with the obvious differences
    (different registers, NOP instructions, etc.). The test cases are adapted
    from the AArch64 test cases.

One difference of note is that the patchpoint call sequence takes 24 bytes, so
you can't use less than that (on AArch64 you can go down to 16). Also, as noted
in the docs, we take the patchpoint address to be the actual code address
(assuming the call is local in the TOC-sharing sense), which should yield
higher performance than generating the full cross-DSO indirect-call sequence
and is likely just as useful for JITed code (if not, we'll change it).

StackMaps and Patchpoints are still marked as experimental, and so this support
is doubly experimental. So go ahead and experiment!

llvm-svn: 225909
2015-01-14 01:07:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel 63fb928109 Revert "r225808 - [PowerPC] Add StackMap/PatchPoint support"
Reverting this while I investiage buildbot failures (segfaulting in
GetCostForDef at ScheduleDAGRRList.cpp:314).

llvm-svn: 225811
2015-01-13 18:25:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel 821befd52b [PowerPC] Add StackMap/PatchPoint support
This commit does two things:

 1. Refactors PPCFastISel to use more of the common infrastructure for call
    lowering (this lets us take advantage of this common code for lowering some
    common intrinsics, stackmap/patchpoint among them).

 2. Adds support for stackmap/patchpoint lowering. For the most part, this is
    very similar to the support in the AArch64 target, with the obvious differences
    (different registers, NOP instructions, etc.). The test cases are adapted
    from the AArch64 test cases.

One difference of note is that the patchpoint call sequence takes 24 bytes, so
you can't use less than that (on AArch64 you can go down to 16). Also, as noted
in the docs, we take the patchpoint address to be the actual code address
(assuming the call is local in the TOC-sharing sense), which should yield
higher performance than generating the full cross-DSO indirect-call sequence
and is likely just as useful for JITed code (if not, we'll change it).

StackMaps and Patchpoints are still marked as experimental, and so this support
is doubly experimental. So go ahead and experiment!

llvm-svn: 225808
2015-01-13 17:48:12 +00:00
Olivier Sallenave 325096980b Added TLI hook for isFPExtFree. Some of the FMA combine heuristics are now guarded with that hook.
llvm-svn: 225795
2015-01-13 15:06:36 +00:00
Hal Finkel 87deb0b8e3 [PowerPC] Fix calls to non-function objects
Looking at r225438 inspired me to see how the PowerPC backend handled the
situation (calling a bitcasted TLS global), and it turns out we also produced
an error (cannot select ...). What it means to "call" something that is not a
function is implementation and platform specific, but in the name of doing
something (besides crashing), this makes sure we do what GCC does (treat all
such calls as calls through a function pointer -- meaning that the pointer is
assumed, as is the convention on PPC, to point to a function descriptor
structure holding the actual code address along with the function's TOC pointer
and environment pointer). As GCC does, we now do the same for calling regular
(non-TLS) non-function globals too.

I'm not sure whether this is the most useful way to define the behavior, but at
least we won't be alone.

llvm-svn: 225617
2015-01-12 04:34:47 +00:00
Hal Finkel 5d5d1539cc [PowerPC] Mark zext of a small scalar load as free
This initial implementation of PPCTargetLowering::isZExtFree marks as free
zexts of small scalar loads (that are not sign-extending). This callback is
used by SelectionDAGBuilder's RegsForValue::getCopyToRegs, and thus to
determine whether a zext or an anyext is used to lower illegally-typed PHIs.
Because later truncates of zero-extended values are nops, this allows for the
elimination of later unnecessary truncations.

Fixes the initial complaint associated with PR22120.

llvm-svn: 225584
2015-01-10 08:21:59 +00:00
Justin Hibbits 17744c1e0d Remove some whitespace.
llvm-svn: 225583
2015-01-10 07:50:31 +00:00
Hal Finkel 6c39269a4c [PowerPC] Fold [sz]ext with fp_to_int lowering where possible
On modern cores with lfiw[az]x, we can fold a sign or zero extension from i32
to i64 into the load necessary for an i64 -> fp conversion.

llvm-svn: 225493
2015-01-09 01:34:30 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha 2b6917b020 [SelectionDAG] Allow targets to specify legality of extloads' result
type (in addition to the memory type).

The *LoadExt* legalization handling used to only have one type, the
memory type.  This forced users to assume that as long as the extload
for the memory type was declared legal, and the result type was legal,
the whole extload was legal.

However, this isn't always the case.  For instance, on X86, with AVX,
this is legal:
    v4i32 load, zext from v4i8
but this isn't:
    v4i64 load, zext from v4i8
Whereas v4i64 is (arguably) legal, even without AVX2.

Note that the same thing was done a while ago for truncstores (r46140),
but I assume no one needed it yet for extloads, so here we go.

Calls to getLoadExtAction were changed to add the value type, found
manually in the surrounding code.

Calls to setLoadExtAction were mechanically changed, by wrapping the
call in a loop, to match previous behavior.  The loop iterates over
the MVT subrange corresponding to the memory type (FP vectors, etc...).
I also pulled neighboring setTruncStoreActions into some of the loops;
those shouldn't make a difference, as the additional types are illegal.
(e.g., i128->i1 truncstores on PPC.)

No functional change intended.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6532

llvm-svn: 225421
2015-01-08 00:51:32 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha 67dd2d25a3 [CodeGen] Use MVT iterator_ranges in legality loops. NFC intended.
A few loops do trickier things than just iterating on an MVT subset,
so I'll leave them be for now.
Follow-up of r225387.

llvm-svn: 225392
2015-01-07 21:27:10 +00:00
Hal Finkel ed844c4ad1 [PowerPC] Reuse a load operand in int->fp conversions
int->fp conversions on PPC must be done through memory loads and stores. On a
modern core, this process begins by storing the int value to memory, then
loading it using a (sometimes special) FP load instruction. Unfortunately, we
would do this even when the value to be converted was itself a load, and we can
just use that same memory location instead of copying it to another first.
There is a slight complication when handling int_to_fp(fp_to_int(x)) pairs,
because the fp_to_int operand has not been lowered when the int_to_fp is being
lowered. We handle this specially by invoking fp_to_int's lowering logic
(partially) and getting the necessary memory location (some trivial refactoring
was done to make this possible).

This is all somewhat ugly, and it would be nice if some later CodeGen stage
could just clean this stuff up, but because doing so would involve modifying
target-specific nodes (or instructions), it is not immediately clear how that
would work.

Also, remove a related entry from the README.txt for which we now generate
reasonable code.

llvm-svn: 225301
2015-01-06 22:31:02 +00:00
Hal Finkel 3fe09ea4d9 [PowerPC] Add some missing names in getTargetNodeName
These are used for debugging output; NFC.

llvm-svn: 225249
2015-01-06 07:02:15 +00:00
Hal Finkel 5efb918844 [PowerPC] Improve int_to_fp(fp_to_int(x)) combining
The old target DAG combine that allowed for performing int_to_fp(fp_to_int(x))
without a load/store pair is updated here with support for unsigned integers,
and to support single-precision values without a third rounding step, on newer
cores with the appropriate instructions.

llvm-svn: 225248
2015-01-06 06:01:57 +00:00
Hal Finkel 5772566ed6 [PowerPC/BlockPlacement] Allow target to provide a per-loop alignment preference
The existing code provided for specifying a global loop alignment preference.
However, the preferred loop alignment might depend on the loop itself. For
recent POWER cores, loops between 5 and 8 instructions should have 32-byte
alignment (while the others are better with 16-byte alignment) so that the
entire loop will fit in one i-cache line.

To support this, getPrefLoopAlignment has been made virtual, and can be
provided with an optional MachineLoop* so the target can inspect the loop
before answering the query. The default behavior, as before, is to return the
value set with setPrefLoopAlignment. MachineBlockPlacement now queries the
target for each loop instead of only once per function. There should be no
functional change for other targets.

llvm-svn: 225117
2015-01-03 17:58:24 +00:00
Hal Finkel d73bfba7eb [PowerPC] Use 16-byte alignment for modern cores for functions/loops
Most modern PowerPC cores prefer that functions and loops start on
16-byte-aligned boundaries (*), so instruct block placement, etc. to make this
happen. The branch selector has also been adjusted so account for the extra
nops that might now be inserted before loop headers.

(*) Some cores actually prefer other alignments for small loops, but that will
    be addressed in a follow-up commit.

llvm-svn: 225115
2015-01-03 14:58:25 +00:00
Hal Finkel 4edc66b8de [PowerPC] Add support for the CMPB instruction
Newer POWER cores, and the A2, support the cmpb instruction. This instruction
compares its operands, treating each of the 8 bytes in the GPRs separately,
returning a 'mask' result of 0 (for false) or -1 (for true) in each byte.

Code generation support is added, in the form of a PPCISelDAGToDAG
DAG-preprocessing routine, that recognizes patterns close to what the
instruction computes (either exactly, or related by a constant masking
operation), and generates the cmpb instruction (along with any necessary
constant masking operation). This can be expanded if use cases arise.

llvm-svn: 225106
2015-01-03 01:16:37 +00:00
Hal Finkel fc096c98f3 [PowerPC] Ensure that the TOC reload directly follows bctrl on PPC64
On non-Darwin PPC64, the TOC reload needs to come directly after the bctrl
instruction (for indirect calls) because the 'bctrl/ld 2, 40(1)' instruction
sequence is interpreted by the unwinding code in libgcc. To make sure these
occur as a pair, as with other pairings interpreted by the linker, fuse the two
instructions into one instruction (for code generation only).

In the future, we might wish to do this by emitting CFI directives instead,
but this solution is simpler, and mirrors what GCC does. Additional discussion
on this point is contained in the PR.

Fixes PR22015.

llvm-svn: 224788
2014-12-23 22:29:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel 6e27c6d450 [PowerPC] Don't mark the return-address slot as immutable
It is tempting to mark the fixed stack slot used to store the return address as
immutable when lowering @llvm.returnaddress(i32 0). Unfortunately, within the
function, it is not completely immutable: it is written during the function
prologue. When using post-RA instruction scheduling, the prologue instructions
are available for scheduling, and we're not free to interchange the order of a
particular store in the prologue with loads from that stack location.

Fixes PR21976.

llvm-svn: 224761
2014-12-23 09:45:06 +00:00
Hal Finkel 04b16b51ec [PowerPC] Don't attempt a 64-bit pow2 division on PPC32
In r224033, in moving the signed power-of-2 division expansion into
BuildSDIVPow2, I accidentally made it possible to attempt the lowering for a
64-bit division on PPC32. This later asserts.

Fixes PR21928.

llvm-svn: 224758
2014-12-23 08:38:50 +00:00
Hal Finkel 4104a1a346 [PowerPC] Handle cmp op promotion for SELECT[_CC] nodes in PPCTL::DAGCombineExtBoolTrunc
PPCTargetLowering::DAGCombineExtBoolTrunc contains logic to remove unwanted
truncations and extensions when dealing with nodes of the form:
  zext(binary-ops(binary-ops(trunc(x), trunc(y)), ...)

There was a FIXME in the implementation (now removed) regarding the fact that
the function would abort the transformations if any of the non-output operands
of a SELECT or SELECT_CC node would need to be promoted (because they were
also output operands, for example). As a result, we continued to generate
unnecessary zero-extends for code such as this:

  unsigned foo(unsigned a, unsigned b) {
    return  (a <= b) ? a : b;
  }

which would produce:

  cmplw 0, 3, 4
  isel 3, 4, 3, 1
  rldicl 3, 3, 0, 32
  blr

and now we produce:

  cmplw 0, 3, 4
  isel 3, 4, 3, 1
  blr

which is better in the obvious way.

llvm-svn: 224213
2014-12-14 05:53:19 +00:00
Hal Finkel 13d104bf78 [PowerPC] Implement BuildSDIVPow2, lower i64 pow2 sdiv using sradi
PPCISelDAGToDAG contained existing code to lower i32 sdiv by a power-of-2 using
srawi/addze, but did not implement the i64 case. DAGCombine now contains a
callback specifically designed for this purpose (BuildSDIVPow2), and part of
the logic has been moved to an implementation of that callback. Doing this
lowering using BuildSDIVPow2 likely does not matter, compared to handling
everything in PPCISelDAGToDAG, for the positive divisor case, but the negative
divisor case, which generates an additional negation, can potentially benefit
from additional folding from DAGCombine. Now, both the i32 and the i64 cases
have been implemented.

Fixes PR20732.

llvm-svn: 224033
2014-12-11 18:37:52 +00:00
Bill Schmidt fae5d71584 [PowerPC 1/4] Little-endian adjustments for VSX loads/stores
This patch addresses the inherent big-endian bias in the lxvd2x,
lxvw4x, stxvd2x, and stxvw4x instructions.  These instructions load
vector elements into registers left-to-right (with the first element
loaded into the high-order bits of the register), regardless of the
endian setting of the processor.  However, these are the only
vector memory instructions that permit unaligned storage accesses, so
we want to use them for little-endian.

To make this work, a lxvd2x or lxvw4x is replaced with an lxvd2x
followed by an xxswapd, which swaps the doublewords.  This works for
lxvw4x as well as lxvd2x, because for lxvw4x on an LE system the
vector elements are in LE order (right-to-left) within each
doubleword.  (Thus after lxvw2x of a <4 x float> the elements will
appear as 1, 0, 3, 2.  Following the swap, they will appear as 3, 2,
0, 1, as desired.)   For stores, an stxvd2x or stxvw4x is replaced
with an stxvd2x preceded by an xxswapd.

Introduction of extra swap instructions provides correctness, but
obviously is not ideal from a performance perspective.  Future patches
will address this with optimizations to remove most of the introduced
swaps, which have proven effective in other implementations.

The introduction of the swaps is performed during lowering of LOAD,
STORE, INTRINSIC_W_CHAIN, and INTRINSIC_VOID operations.  The latter
are used to translate intrinsics that specify the VSX loads and stores
directly into equivalent sequences for little endian.  Thus code that
uses vec_vsx_ld and vec_vsx_st does not have to be modified to be
ported from BE to LE.

We introduce new PPCISD opcodes for LXVD2X, STXVD2X, and XXSWAPD for
use during this lowering step.  In PPCInstrVSX.td, we add new SDType
and SDNode definitions for these (PPClxvd2x, PPCstxvd2x, PPCxxswapd).
These are recognized during instruction selection and mapped to the
correct instructions.

Several tests that were written to use -mcpu=pwr7 or pwr8 are modified
to disable VSX on LE variants because code generation changes with
this and subsequent patches in this set.  I chose to include all of
these in the first patch than try to rigorously sort out which tests
were broken by one or another of the patches.  Sorry about that.

The new test vsx-ldst-builtin-le.ll, and the changes to vsx-ldst.ll,
are disabled until LE support is enabled because of breakages that
occur as noted in those tests.  They are re-enabled in patch 4/4.

llvm-svn: 223783
2014-12-09 16:35:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel aa10b3caaf [PowerPC] Don't use a non-allocatable register to implement the 'cc' alias
GCC accepts 'cc' as an alias for 'cr0', and we need to do the same when
processing inline asm constraints. This had previously been implemented using a
non-allocatable register, named 'cc', that was listed as an alias of 'cr0', but
the infrastructure does not seem to support this properly (neither the register
allocator nor the scheduler properly accounts for the alias). Instead, we can
just process this as a naming alias inside of the inline asm
constraint-processing code, so we'll do that instead.

There are two regression tests, one where the post-RA scheduler did the wrong
thing with the non-allocatable alias, and one where the register allocator did
the wrong thing. Fixes PR21742.

llvm-svn: 223708
2014-12-08 22:54:22 +00:00
Hal Finkel c91fc11181 [PowerPC] Print all inline-asm consts as signed numbers
Almost all immediates in PowerPC assembly (both 32-bit and 64-bit) are signed
numbers, and it is important that we print them as such. To make sure that
happens, we change PPCTargetLowering::LowerAsmOperandForConstraint so that it
does all intermediate checks on a signed-extended int64_t value, and then
creates the resulting target constant using MVT::i64. This will ensure that all
negative values are printed as negative values (mirroring what is done in other
backends to achieve the same sign-extension effect).

This came up in the context of inline assembly like this:
  "add%I2   %0,%0,%2", ..., "Ir"(-1ll)
where we used to print:
  addi   3,3,4294967295
and gcc would print:
  addi   3,3,-1
and gas accepts both forms, but our builtin assembler (correctly) does not. Now
we print -1 like gcc does.

While here, I replaced a bunch of custom integer checks with isInt<16> and
friends from MathExtras.h.

Thanks to Paul Hargrove for the bug report.

llvm-svn: 223220
2014-12-03 09:37:50 +00:00
Hal Finkel 01fa7701e6 [PowerPC] Fix readcyclecounter to be custom expanded for all 32-bit targets
We need to use the custom expansion of readcyclecounter on all 32-bit targets
(even those with 64-bit registers). This should fix the ppc64 buildbot.

llvm-svn: 223182
2014-12-03 00:19:17 +00:00
Hal Finkel bbdee93638 [PowerPC] Implement readcyclecounter for PPC32
We've long supported readcyclecounter on PPC64, but it is easier there (the
read of the 64-bit time-base register can be accomplished via a single
instruction). This now provides an implementation for PPC32 as well. On PPC32,
the time-base register is still 64 bits, but can only be read 32 bits at a time
via two separate SPRs. The ISA manual explains how to do this properly (it
involves re-reading the upper bits and looping if the counter has wrapped while
being read).

This requires PPC to implement a custom integer splitting legalization for the
READCYCLECOUNTER node, turning it into a target-specific SDAG node, which then
gets turned into a pseudo-instruction, which is then expanded to the necessary
sequence (which has three SPR reads, the comparison and the branch).

Thanks to Paul Hargrove for pointing out to me that this was still unimplemented.

llvm-svn: 223161
2014-12-02 22:01:00 +00:00
Hal Finkel 360f213d03 [PowerPC] Implement combineRepeatedFPDivisors
This does not matter on newer cores (where we can use reciprocal estimates in
fast-math mode anyway), but for older cores this allows us to generate better
fast-math code where we have multiple FDIVs with a common divisor.

llvm-svn: 222710
2014-11-24 23:45:21 +00:00
Craig Topper 61e88f44f9 Remove a bunch of unnecessary typecasts to 'const TargetRegisterClass *'
llvm-svn: 222509
2014-11-21 05:58:21 +00:00
David Blaikie 70573dcd9f Update SetVector to rely on the underlying set's insert to return a pair<iterator, bool>
This is to be consistent with StringSet and ultimately with the standard
library's associative container insert function.

This lead to updating SmallSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update SmallPtrSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update all the existing users of those functions...

llvm-svn: 222334
2014-11-19 07:49:26 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar 3053155652 We can get the TLOF from the TargetMachine - so constructor no longer requires TargetLoweringObjectFile to be passed.
llvm-svn: 221926
2014-11-13 21:29:21 +00:00
Aditya Nandakumar a27193297f This patch changes the ownership of TLOF from TargetLoweringBase to TargetMachine so that different subtargets could share the TLOF effectively
llvm-svn: 221878
2014-11-13 09:26:31 +00:00
Justin Hibbits a88b605721 Add support for small-model PIC for PowerPC.
Summary:
Large-model was added first.  With the addition of support for multiple PIC
models in LLVM, now add small-model PIC for 32-bit PowerPC, SysV4 ABI.  This
generates more optimal code, for shared libraries with less than about 16380
data objects.

Test Plan: Test cases added or updated

Reviewers: joerg, hfinkel

Reviewed By: hfinkel

Subscribers: jholewinski, mcrosier, emaste, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5399

llvm-svn: 221791
2014-11-12 15:16:30 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 729547847f [PowerPC] Add vec_vsx_ld and vec_vsx_st intrinsics
This patch enables the vec_vsx_ld and vec_vsx_st intrinsics for
PowerPC, which provide programmer access to the lxvd2x, lxvw4x,
stxvd2x, and stxvw4x instructions.

New LLVM intrinsics are provided to represent these four instructions
in IntrinsicsPowerPC.td.  These are patterned after the similar
intrinsics for lvx and stvx (Altivec).  In PPCInstrVSX.td, these
intrinsics are tied to the code gen patterns, with additional patterns
to allow plain vanilla loads and stores to still generate these
instructions.

At -O1 and higher the intrinsics are immediately converted to loads
and stores in InstCombineCalls.cpp.  This will open up more
optimization opportunities while still allowing the correct
instructions to be generated.  (Similar code exists for aligned
Altivec loads and stores.)

The new intrinsics are added to the code that checks for consecutive
loads and stores in PPCISelLowering.cpp, as well as to
PPCTargetLowering::getTgtMemIntrinsic().

There's a new test to verify the correct instructions are generated.
The loads and stores tend to be reordered, so the test just counts
their number.  It runs at -O2, as it's not very effective to test this
at -O0, when many unnecessary loads and stores are generated.

I ended up having to modify vsx-fma-m.ll.  It turns out this test case
is slightly unreliable, but I don't know a good way to prevent
problems with it.  The xvmaddmdp instructions read and write the same
register, which is one of the multiplicands.  Commutativity allows
either to be chosen.  If the FMAs are reordered differently than
expected by the test, the register assignment can be different as a
result.  Hopefully this doesn't change often.

There is a companion patch for Clang.

llvm-svn: 221767
2014-11-12 04:19:40 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 3d9674cfb1 [PowerPC] Replace foul hackery with real calls to __tls_get_addr
My original support for the general dynamic and local dynamic TLS
models contained some fairly obtuse hacks to generate calls to
__tls_get_addr when lowering a TargetGlobalAddress.  Rather than
generating real calls, special GET_TLS_ADDR nodes were used to wrap
the calls and only reveal them at assembly time.  I attempted to
provide correct parameter and return values by chaining CopyToReg and
CopyFromReg nodes onto the GET_TLS_ADDR nodes, but this was also not
fully correct.  Problems were seen with two back-to-back stores to TLS
variables, where the call sequences ended up overlapping with unhappy
results.  Additionally, since these weren't real calls, the proper
register side effects of a call were not recorded, so clobbered values
were kept live across the calls.

The proper thing to do is to lower these into calls in the first
place.  This is relatively straightforward; see the changes to
PPCTargetLowering::LowerGlobalTLSAddress() in PPCISelLowering.cpp.
The changes here are standard call lowering, except that we need to
track the fact that these calls will require a relocation.  This is
done by adding a machine operand flag of MO_TLSLD or MO_TLSGD to the
TargetGlobalAddress operand that appears earlier in the sequence.

The calls to LowerCallTo() eventually find their way to
LowerCall_64SVR4() or LowerCall_32SVR4(), which call FinishCall(),
which calls PrepareCall().  In PrepareCall(), we detect the calls to
__tls_get_addr and immediately snag the TargetGlobalTLSAddress with
the annotated relocation information.  This becomes an extra operand
on the call following the callee, which is expected for nodes of type
tlscall.  We change the call opcode to CALL_TLS for this case.  Back
in FinishCall(), we change it again to CALL_NOP_TLS for 64-bit only,
since we require a TOC-restore nop following the call for the 64-bit
ABIs.

During selection, patterns in PPCInstrInfo.td and PPCInstr64Bit.td
convert the CALL_TLS nodes into BL_TLS nodes, and convert the
CALL_NOP_TLS nodes into BL8_NOP_TLS nodes.  This replaces the code
removed from PPCAsmPrinter.cpp, as the BL_TLS or BL8_NOP_TLS
nodes can now be emitted normally using their patterns and the
associated printTLSCall print method.

Finally, as a result of these changes, all references to get-tls-addr
in its various guises are no longer used, so they have been removed.

There are existing TLS tests to verify the changes haven't messed
anything up).  I've added one new test that verifies that the problem
with the original code has been fixed.

llvm-svn: 221703
2014-11-11 20:44:09 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand c8c2ea2854 [PowerPC] Load BlockAddress values from the TOC in 64-bit SVR4 code
Since block address values can be larger than 2GB in 64-bit code, they
cannot be loaded simply using an @l / @ha pair, but instead must be
loaded from the TOC, just like GlobalAddress, ConstantPool, and
JumpTable values are.

The commit also fixes a bug in PPCLinuxAsmPrinter::doFinalization where
temporary labels could not be used as TOC values, since code would
attempt (and fail) to use GetOrCreateSymbol to create a symbol of the
same name as the temporary label.

llvm-svn: 220959
2014-10-31 10:33:14 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 957efc23bb Use rsqrt (X86) to speed up reciprocal square root calcs
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
2014-10-24 17:02:16 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 9c54bbd791 [PATCH] Support select-cc for VSFRC when VSX is enabled
A previous patch enabled SELECT_VSRC and SELECT_CC_VSRC for VSX to
handle <2 x double> cases.  This patch adds SELECT_VSFRC and
SELECT_CC_VSFRC to allow use of all 64 vector-scalar registers for the
f64 type when VSX is enabled.  The changes are analogous to those in
the previous patch.  I've added a new variant to vsx.ll to test the
code generation.

(I also cleaned up a little formatting in PPCInstrVSX.td from the
previous patch.)

llvm-svn: 220395
2014-10-22 16:58:20 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 61e652334f [PowerPC] Support select-cc for VSX
The tests test/CodeGen/Generic/select-cc.ll and
test/CodeGen/PowerPC/select-cc.ll both fail with VSX enabled.  The
problem is that the lowering logic for the SELECT and SELECT_CC
operations doesn't currently support the VSX registers.  This patch
fixes that.

In lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCInstrInfo.td, we have pseudos to handle this
for other register classes.  Similar pseudos are added in
PPCInstrVSX.td (they must be there, because the "vsrc" register class
definition appears there) for the VSRC register class.  The
SELECT_VSRC pseudo is then used in pattern matching for SELECT_CC.

The rest of the patch just adds logic for SELECT_VSRC wherever similar
logic appears for SELECT_VRRC.

There are no new test cases because the existing tests above test
this, along with a variant in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vsx.ll.

After discussion with Hal, a future patch will add similar _VSFRC
variants to override f64 type handling (currently using F8RC).

llvm-svn: 220385
2014-10-22 13:13:40 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 2d1128acb2 [PowerPC] Enable use of lxvw4x/stxvw4x in VSX code generation
Currently the VSX support enables use of lxvd2x and stxvd2x for 2x64
types, but does not yet use lxvw4x and stxvw4x for 4x32 types.  This
patch adds that support.

As with lxvd2x/stxvd2x, this involves straightforward overriding of
the patterns normally recognized for lvx/stvx, with preference given
to the VSX patterns when VSX is enabled.

In addition, the logic for permitting misaligned memory accesses is
modified so that v4r32 and v4i32 are treated the same as v2f64 and
v2i64 when VSX is enabled.  Finally, the DAG generation for unaligned
loads is changed to just use a normal LOAD (which will become lxvw4x)
on P8 and later hardware, where unaligned loads are preferred over
lvsl/lvx/lvx/vperm.

A number of tests now generate the VSX loads/stores instead of
lvx/stvx, so this patch adds VSX variants to those tests.  I've also
added <4 x float> tests to the vsx.ll test case, and created a
vsx-p8.ll test case to be used for testing code generation for the
P8Vector feature.  For now, that simply tests the unaligned load/store
behavior.

This has been tested along with a temporary patch to enable the VSX
and P8Vector features, with no new regressions encountered with or
without the temporary patch applied.

llvm-svn: 220047
2014-10-17 15:13:38 +00:00
Robin Morisset e1ca44bd4c [Power] Improve the expansion of atomic loads/stores
Summary:
Atomic loads and store of up to the native size (32 bits, or 64 for PPC64)
can be lowered to a simple load or store instruction (as the synchronization
is already handled by AtomicExpand, and the atomicity is guaranteed thanks to
the alignment requirements of atomic accesses). This is exactly what this patch
does. Previously, these were implemented by complex
load-linked/store-conditional loops.. an obvious performance problem.

For example, this patch turns
```
define void @store_i8_unordered(i8* %mem) {
  store atomic i8 42, i8* %mem unordered, align 1
  ret void
}
```
from
```
_store_i8_unordered:                    ; @store_i8_unordered
; BB#0:
    rlwinm r2, r3, 3, 27, 28
    li r4, 42
    xori r5, r2, 24
    rlwinm r2, r3, 0, 0, 29
    li r3, 255
    slw r4, r4, r5
    slw r3, r3, r5
    and r4, r4, r3
LBB4_1:                                 ; =>This Inner Loop Header: Depth=1
    lwarx r5, 0, r2
    andc r5, r5, r3
    or r5, r4, r5
    stwcx. r5, 0, r2
    bne cr0, LBB4_1
; BB#2:
    blr
```
into
```
_store_i8_unordered:                    ; @store_i8_unordered
; BB#0:
    li r2, 42
    stb r2, 0(r3)
    blr

```
which looks like a pretty clear win to me.

Test Plan:
fixed the tests + new test for indexed accesses + make check-all

Reviewers: jfb, wschmidt, hfinkel

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5587

llvm-svn: 218922
2014-10-02 22:27:07 +00:00
Eric Christopher f6ed33e7fa constify the TargetMachine argument used in the subtarget and
lowering constructors.

llvm-svn: 218832
2014-10-01 21:36:28 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 8fde95cb2b Split the estimate() interface into separate functions for each type. NFC.
It was hacky to use an opcode as a switch because it won't always match
(rsqrte != sqrte), and it looks like we'll need to add more special casing
per arch than I had hoped for. Eg, x86 will prefer a different NR estimate
implementation. ARM will want to use it's 'step' instructions. There also
don't appear to be any new estimate instructions in any arch in a long,
long time. Altivec vloge and vexpte may have been the first and last in
that field...

llvm-svn: 218698
2014-09-30 20:28:48 +00:00
Sanjay Patel bdf1e38856 Refactor reciprocal and reciprocal square root estimate into target-independent functions (part 2).
This is purely refactoring. No functional changes intended. PowerPC is the only target
that is currently using this interface.

The ultimate goal is to allow targets other than PowerPC (certainly X86 and Aarch64) to turn this:

z = y / sqrt(x)

into:

z = y * rsqrte(x)

And:

z = y / x

into:

z = y * rcpe(x)

using whatever HW magic they can use. See http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20900 .

There is one hook in TargetLowering to get the target-specific opcode for an estimate instruction
along with the number of refinement steps needed to make the estimate usable.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5484

llvm-svn: 218553
2014-09-26 23:01:47 +00:00
Robin Morisset 2212996936 [Power] Use AtomicExpandPass for fence insertion, and use lwsync where appropriate
Summary:
This patch makes use of AtomicExpandPass in Power for inserting fences around
atomic as part of an effort to remove fence insertion from SelectionDAGBuilder.
As a big bonus, it lets us use sync 1 (lightweight sync, often used by the mnemonic
lwsync) instead of sync 0 (heavyweight sync) in many cases.

I also added a test, as there was no test for the barriers emitted by the Power
backend for atomic loads and stores.

Test Plan: new test + make check-all

Reviewers: jfb

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5180

llvm-svn: 218331
2014-09-23 20:46:49 +00:00
Sanjay Patel b67bd262ea Refactor reciprocal square root estimate into target-independent function; NFC.
This is purely a plumbing patch. No functional changes intended.

The ultimate goal is to allow targets other than PowerPC (certainly X86 and Aarch64) to turn this:

z = y / sqrt(x)

into:

z = y * rsqrte(x)

using whatever HW magic they can use. See http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20900 .

The first step is to add a target hook for RSQRTE, take the already target-independent code selfishly hoarded by PPC, and put it into DAGCombiner.

Next steps:

    The code in DAGCombiner::BuildRSQRTE() should be refactored further; tests that exercise that logic need to be added.
    Logic in PPCTargetLowering::BuildRSQRTE() should be hoisted into DAGCombiner.
    X86 and AArch64 overrides for TargetLowering.BuildRSQRTE() should be added.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5425

llvm-svn: 218219
2014-09-21 15:19:15 +00:00
Hal Finkel 62ac736faa Optionally enable more-aggressive FMA formation in DAGCombine
The heuristic used by DAGCombine to form FMAs checks that the FMUL has only one
use, but this is overly-conservative on some systems. Specifically, if the FMA
and the FADD have the same latency (and the FMA does not compete for resources
with the FMUL any more than the FADD does), there is no need for the
restriction, and furthermore, forming the FMA leaving the FMUL can still allow
for higher overall throughput and decreased critical-path length.

Here we add a new TLI callback, enableAggressiveFMAFusion, false by default, to
elide the hasOneUse check. This is enabled for PowerPC by default, as most
PowerPC systems will benefit.

Patch by Olivier Sallenave, thanks!

llvm-svn: 218120
2014-09-19 11:42:56 +00:00
Craig Topper 7ff1592960 Use cast to MVT instead of EVT on a couple calls to getSizeInBits.
llvm-svn: 217473
2014-09-10 04:51:36 +00:00
Eric Christopher 79cc1e3ae7 Reinstate "Nuke the old JIT."
Approved by Jim Grosbach, Lang Hames, Rafael Espindola.

This reinstates commits r215111, 215115, 215116, 215117, 215136.

llvm-svn: 216982
2014-09-02 22:28:02 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 2cdea4c41e name change: isPow2DivCheap -> isPow2SDivCheap
isPow2DivCheap

That name doesn't specify signed or unsigned.

Lazy as I am, I eventually read the function and variable comments. It turns out that this is strictly about signed div. But I discovered that the comments are wrong:

   srl/add/sra

is not the general sequence for signed integer division by power-of-2. We need one more 'sra':

   sra/srl/add/sra

That's the sequence produced in DAGCombiner. The first 'sra' may be removed when dividing by exactly '2', but that's a special case.

This patch corrects the comments, changes the name of the flag bit, and changes the name of the accessor methods.

No functional change intended.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5010

llvm-svn: 216237
2014-08-21 22:31:48 +00:00
Hal Finkel 41a55ad0a5 [PowerPC] Mark fixed-offset byvals as pointed-to by IR values
A byval object, even if allocated at a fixed offset (prescribed by the ABI) is
pointed to by IR values. Most fixed-offset stack objects are not pointed-to by
IR values, so the default is to assume this is not possible. However, we need
to override the default in this case (instruction scheduling can cause
miscompiles otherwise).

Fixes PR20280.

llvm-svn: 215795
2014-08-16 00:17:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel dda588cdc1 [PowerPC] Darwin byval arguments are not immutable
On PPC/Darwin, byval arguments occur at fixed stack offsets in the callee's
frame, but are not immutable -- the pointer value is directly available to the
higher-level code as the address of the argument, and the value of the byval
argument can be modified at the IR level.

This is necessary, but not sufficient, to fix PR20280. When PR20280 is fixed in
a follow-up commit, its test case will cover this change.

llvm-svn: 215793
2014-08-16 00:16:29 +00:00
Hal Finkel 46ef7ce283 [PowerPC] Implement PPCTargetLowering::getTgtMemIntrinsic
This implements PPCTargetLowering::getTgtMemIntrinsic for Altivec load/store
intrinsics. As with the construction of the MachineMemOperands for the
intrinsic calls used for unaligned load/store lowering, the only slight
complication is that we need to represent a larger memory range than the
loaded/stored value-type size (because the address is rounded down to an
aligned address, and we need to conservatively represent the entire possible
range of the actual access). This required adding an extra size field to
TargetLowering::IntrinsicInfo, and this was done in a way that required no
modifications to other targets (the size defaults to the store size of the
provided memory data type).

This fixes test/CodeGen/PowerPC/unal-altivec-wint.ll (so it can be un-XFAILed).

llvm-svn: 215512
2014-08-13 01:15:40 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger eb8655afd3 Add low-level option for avoiding float stores from va_start until
soft-float is properly supported.

llvm-svn: 215221
2014-08-08 16:46:10 +00:00
Eric Christopher b9fd9ed37e Temporarily Revert "Nuke the old JIT." as it's not quite ready to
be deleted. This will be reapplied as soon as possible and before
the 3.6 branch date at any rate.

Approved by Jim Grosbach, Lang Hames, Rafael Espindola.

This reverts commits r215111, 215115, 215116, 215117, 215136.

llvm-svn: 215154
2014-08-07 22:02:54 +00:00
Rafael Espindola f8b27c41e8 Nuke the old JIT.
I am sure we will be finding bits and pieces of dead code for years to
come, but this is a good start.

Thanks to Lang Hames for making MCJIT a good replacement!

llvm-svn: 215111
2014-08-07 14:21:18 +00:00
Eric Christopher b5217507c7 Remove the target machine from CCState. Previously it was only used
to get the subtarget and that's accessible from the MachineFunction
now. This helps clear the way for smaller changes where we getting
a subtarget will require passing in a MachineFunction/Function as
well.

llvm-svn: 214988
2014-08-06 18:45:26 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 42a6936c78 [PowerPC] Swap arguments and adjust shift count for vsldoi on little endian
Commits r213915 and r214718 fix recognition of shuffle masks for vmrg*
and vpku*um instructions for a little-endian target, by swapping the
input arguments.  The vsldoi instruction requires similar treatment,
and also needs its shift count adjusted for little endian.

Reviewed by Ulrich Weigand.

This is a bug fix candidate for release 3.5 (and hopefully the last of
those for PowerPC).

llvm-svn: 214923
2014-08-05 20:47:25 +00:00
Eric Christopher fc6de428c8 Have MachineFunction cache a pointer to the subtarget to make lookups
shorter/easier and have the DAG use that to do the same lookup. This
can be used in the future for TargetMachine based caching lookups from
the MachineFunction easily.

Update the MIPS subtarget switching machinery to update this pointer
at the same time it runs.

llvm-svn: 214838
2014-08-05 02:39:49 +00:00
Bill Schmidt f04e998e00 [PPC64LE] Fix wrong IR for vec_sld and vec_vsldoi
My original LE implementation of the vsldoi instruction, with its
altivec.h interfaces vec_sld and vec_vsldoi, produces incorrect
shufflevector operations in the LLVM IR.  Correct code is generated
because the back end handles the incorrect shufflevector in a
consistent manner.

This patch and a companion patch for Clang correct this problem by
removing the fixup from altivec.h and the corresponding fixup from the
PowerPC back end.  Several test cases are also modified to reflect the
now-correct LLVM IR.

llvm-svn: 214800
2014-08-04 23:21:01 +00:00
Eric Christopher d913448b38 Remove the TargetMachine forwards for TargetSubtargetInfo based
information and update all callers. No functional change.

llvm-svn: 214781
2014-08-04 21:25:23 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand cc9909b881 [PowerPC] Swap arguments to vpkuhum/vpkuwum on little-endian
In commit r213915, Bill fixed little-endian usage of vmrgh* and vmrgl*
by swapping the input arguments.  As it turns out, the exact same fix
is also required for the vpkuhum/vpkuwum patterns.

This fixes another regression in llvmpipe when vector support is
enabled.

Reviewed by Bill Schmidt.

llvm-svn: 214718
2014-08-04 13:53:40 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 51eccec5d9 [PowerPC] MULHU/MULHS are not legal for vector types
I ran into some test failures where common code changed vector division
by constant into a multiply-high operation (MULHU).  But these are not
implemented by the back-end, so we failed to recognize the insn.

Fixed by marking MULHU/MULHS as Expand for vector types.

llvm-svn: 214716
2014-08-04 13:27:12 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand c4cc7febb0 [PowerPC] Fix and improve vector comparisons
This patch refactors code generation of vector comparisons.

This fixes a wrong code-gen bug for ISD::SETGE for floating-point types,
and improves generated code for vector comparisons in general.

Specifically, the patch moves all logic deciding how to implement vector
comparisons into getVCmpInst, which gets two extra boolean outputs
indicating to its caller whether its needs to swap the input operands
and/or negate the result of the comparison.  Apart from implementing
these two modifications as directed by getVCmpInst, there is no need
to ever implement vector comparisons in any other manner; in particular,
there is never a need to perform two separate comparisons (e.g. one for
equal and one for greater-than, as code used to do before this patch).

Reviewed by Bill Schmidt.

llvm-svn: 214714
2014-08-04 13:13:57 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 087606898b [PowerPC] PR20280 - Slots for byval parameters are not immutable
Found by inspection while looking at PR20280: code would mark slots
in the parameter save area where a byval parameter is passed as
"immutable".  This is not correct since code is allowed to modify
byval parameters in place in the parameter save area.

llvm-svn: 214517
2014-08-01 14:35:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel b6d0d6b263 [PowerPC] Generate unaligned vector loads using intrinsics instead of regular loads
Altivec vector loads on PowerPC have an interesting property: They always load
from an aligned address (by rounding down the address actually provided if
necessary). In order to generate an actual unaligned load, you can generate two
load instructions, one with the original address, one offset by one vector
length, and use a special permutation to extract the bytes desired.

When this was originally implemented, I generated these two loads using regular
ISD::LOAD nodes, now marked as aligned. Unfortunately, there is a problem with
this:

The alignment of a load does not contribute to its identity, and SDNodes
are uniqued. So, imagine that we have some unaligned load, L1, that is not
aligned. The routine will create two loads, L1(aligned) and (L1+16)(aligned).
Further imagine that there had already existed a load (L1+16)(unaligned) with
the same chain operand as the load L1. When (L1+16)(aligned) is created as part
of the lowering of L1, this load *is* also the (L1+16)(unaligned) node, just
now marked as aligned (because the new alignment overwrites the old). But the
original users of (L1+16)(unaligned) now get the data intended for the
permutation yielding the data for L1, and (L1+16)(unaligned) no longer exists
to get its own permutation-based expansion. This was PR19991.

A second potential problem has to do with the MMOs on these loads, which can be
used by AA during instruction scheduling to break chain-based dependencies. If
the new "aligned" loads get the MMO from the original unaligned load, this does
not represent the fact that it will load data from below the original address.
Normally, this would not matter, but this load might be combined with another
load pair for a previous vector, and then the dependency on the otherwise-
ignored lower bytes can matter.

To fix both problems, instead of generating the necessary loads using regular
ISD::LOAD instructions, ppc_altivec_lvx intrinsics are used instead. These are
provided with MMOs with a conservative address range.

Unfortunately, I no longer have a failing test case (since PR19991 was
reported, other changes in CodeGen have forced this bug back into hiding it
again). Nevertheless, this should fix the underlying problem.

llvm-svn: 214481
2014-08-01 05:20:41 +00:00
Hal Finkel 3604bf7fe7 [PowerPC] Recognize consecutive memory accesses from intrinsics
When generating unaligned vector loads, we need to search for other loads or
stores nearby offset by one vector width. If we find one, then we know that we
can safely generate another aligned load at that address. Otherwise, we must
generate the next load using an offset of the vector width minus one byte (so
we don't read off the end of the allocation if the base unaligned address
happened to be aligned at runtime). We had previously done this using only
other vector loads and stores, but did not consider the PowerPC-specific vector
load/store intrinsics. Now we'll also consider vector intrinsics. By itself,
this change is a feature enhancement, but is a necessary step toward fixing the
underlying problem behind PR19991.

llvm-svn: 214469
2014-08-01 01:02:01 +00:00
Louis Gerbarg 67474e3755 Make sure no loads resulting from load->switch DAGCombine are marked invariant
Currently when DAGCombine converts loads feeding a switch into a switch of
addresses feeding a load the new load inherits the isInvariant flag of the left
side. This is incorrect since invariant loads can be reordered in cases where it
is illegal to reoarder normal loads.

This patch adds an isInvariant parameter to getExtLoad() and updates all call
sites to pass in the data if they have it or false if they don't. It also
changes the DAGCombine to use that data to make the right decision when
creating the new load.

llvm-svn: 214449
2014-07-31 21:45:05 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 57e74d2010 Fix typos / grammar.
llvm-svn: 214147
2014-07-29 00:02:40 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 6f2a526101 Add alignment value to allowsUnalignedMemoryAccess
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
2014-07-27 17:46:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7c8ae53506 [PowerPC] Support TLS on PPC32/ELF
Patch by Justin Hibbits!

llvm-svn: 213960
2014-07-25 17:47:22 +00:00
Bill Schmidt c9fa5dd618 [PATCH][PPC64LE] Correct little-endian usage of vmrgh* and vmrgl*.
Because the PowerPC vmrgh* and vmrgl* instructions have a built-in
big-endian bias, it is necessary to swap their inputs in little-endian
mode when using them to implement a vector shuffle.  This was
previously missed in the vector LE implementation.

There was already logic to distinguish between unary and "normal"
vmrg* vector shuffles, so this patch extends that logic to use a third
option:  "swapped" vmrg* vector shuffles that are used for little
endian in place of the "normal" ones.

I've updated the vec-shuffle-le.ll test to check for the expected
register ordering on the generated instructions.

This bug was discovered when testing the LE and ELFv2 patches for
safety if they were backported to 3.4.  A different vectorization
decision was made in 3.4 than on mainline trunk, and that exposed the
problem.  I've verified this fix takes care of that issue.

llvm-svn: 213915
2014-07-25 01:55:55 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger b5459e6e22 Don't use 128bit functions on PPC32.
llvm-svn: 213899
2014-07-24 22:20:10 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 85d5df25de [PowerPC] ELFv2 aggregate passing support
This patch adds infrastructure support for passing array types
directly.  These can be used by the front-end to pass aggregate
types (coerced to an appropriate array type).  The details of the
array type being used inform the back-end about ABI-relevant
properties.  Specifically, the array element type encodes:
- whether the parameter should be passed in FPRs, VRs, or just
  GPRs/stack slots  (for float / vector / integer element types,
  respectively)
- what the alignment requirements of the parameter are when passed in
  GPRs/stack slots  (8 for float / 16 for vector / the element type
  size for integer element types) -- this corresponds to the
  "byval align" field

Using the infrastructure provided by this patch, a companion patch
to clang will enable two features:
- In the ELFv2 ABI, pass (and return) "homogeneous" floating-point
  or vector aggregates in FPRs and VRs (this is similar to the ARM
  homogeneous aggregate ABI)
- As an optimization for both ELFv1 and ELFv2 ABIs, pass aggregates
  that fit fully in registers without using the "byval" mechanism

The patch uses the functionArgumentNeedsConsecutiveRegisters callback
to encode that special treatment is required for all directly-passed
array types.  The isInConsecutiveRegs / isInConsecutiveRegsLast bits set
as a results are then used to implement the required size and alignment
rules in CalculateStackSlotSize / CalculateStackSlotAlignment etc.

As a related change, the ABI routines have to be modified to support
passing floating-point types in GPRs.  This is necessary because with
homogeneous aggregates of 4-byte float type we can now run out of FPRs
*before* we run out of the 64-byte argument save area that is shadowed
by GPRs.  Any extra floating-point arguments that no longer fit in FPRs
must now be passed in GPRs until we run out of those too.

Note that there was already code to pass floating-point arguments in
GPRs used with vararg parameters, which was done by writing the argument
out to the argument save area first and then reloading into GPRs.  The
patch re-implements this, however, in favor of code packing float arguments
directly via extension/truncation, BITCAST, and BUILD_PAIR operations.

This is required to support the ELFv2 ABI, since we cannot unconditionally
write to the argument save area (which the caller might not have allocated).
The change does, however, affect ELFv1 varags routines too; but even here
the overall effect should be advantageous: Instead of loading the argument
into the FPR, then storing the argument to the stack slot, and finally
reloading the argument from the stack slot into a GPR, the new code now
just loads the argument into the FPR, and subsequently loads the argument
into the GPR (via BITCAST).  That BITCAST might imply a save/reload from
a stack temporary (in which case we're no worse than before); but it
might be implemented more efficiently in some cases.

The final part of the patch enables up to 8 FPRs and VRs for argument
return in PPCCallingConv.td; this is required to support returning
ELFv2 homogeneous aggregates.  (Note that this doesn't affect other ABIs
since LLVM wil only look for which register to use if the parameter is
marked as "direct" return anyway.)

Reviewed by Hal Finkel.

llvm-svn: 213493
2014-07-21 00:13:26 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 8658f17eef [PowerPC] ELFv2 stack space reduction
The ELFv2 ABI reduces the amount of stack required to implement an
ABI-compliant function call in two ways:
* the "linkage area" is reduced from 48 bytes to 32 bytes by
  eliminating two unused doublewords
* the 64-byte "parameter save area" is now optional and need not be
  present in certain cases (it remains mandatory in functions with
  variable arguments, and functions that have any parameter that is
  passed on the stack)

The following patch implements this required changes:
- reducing the linkage area, and associated relocation of the TOC save
  slot, in getLinkageSize / getTOCSaveOffset (this requires updating all
  callers of these routines to pass in the isELFv2ABI flag).
- (partially) handling the case where the parameter save are is optional

This latter part requires some extra explanation:  Currently, we still
always allocate the parameter save area when *calling* a function.
That is certainly always compliant with the ABI, but may cause code to
allocate stack unnecessarily.  This can be addressed by a follow-on
optimization patch.

On the *callee* side, in LowerFormalArguments, we *must* track
correctly whether the ABI guarantees that the caller has allocated
the parameter save area for our use, and the patch does so. However,
there is one complication: the code that handles incoming "byval"
arguments will currently *always* write to the parameter save area,
because it has to force incoming register arguments to the stack since
it must return an *address* to implement the byval semantics.

To fix this, the patch changes the LowerFormalArguments code to write
arguments to a freshly allocated stack slot on the function's own stack
frame instead of the argument save area in those cases where that area
is not present.

Reviewed by Hal Finkel.

llvm-svn: 213490
2014-07-20 23:43:15 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand aa0ac4f11c [PowerPC] ELFv2 function call changes
This patch builds upon the two preceding MC changes to implement the
basic ELFv2 function call convention.  In the ELFv1 ABI, a "function
descriptor" was associated with every function, pointing to both the
entry address and the related TOC base (and a static chain pointer
for nested functions).  Function pointers would actually refer to that
descriptor, and the indirect call sequence needed to load up both entry
address and TOC base.

In the ELFv2 ABI, there are no more function descriptors, and function
pointers simply refer to the (global) entry point of the function code.
Indirect function calls simply branch to that address, after loading it
up into r12 (as required by the ABI rules for a global entry point).
Direct function calls continue to just do a "bl" to the target symbol;
this will be resolved by the linker to the local entry point of the
target function if it is local, and to a PLT stub if it is global.
That PLT stub would then load the (global) entry point address of the
final target into r12 and branch to it.  Note that when performing a
local function call, r2 must be set up to point to the current TOC
base: if the target ends up local, the ABI requires that its local
entry point is called with r2 set up; if the target ends up global,
the PLT stub requires that r2 is set up.

This patch implements all LLVM changes to implement that scheme:
- No longer create a function descriptor when emitting a function
  definition (in EmitFunctionEntryLabel)
- Emit two entry points *if* the function needs the TOC base (r2)
  anywhere (this is done EmitFunctionBodyStart; note that this cannot
  be done in EmitFunctionBodyStart because the global entry point
  prologue code must be *part* of the function as covered by debug info).
- In order to make use tracking of r2 (as needed above) work correctly,
  mark direct function calls as implicitly using r2.
- Implement the ELFv2 indirect function call sequence (no function
  descriptors; load target address into r12).
- When creating an ELFv2 object file, emit the .abiversion 2 directive
  to tell the linker to create the appropriate version of PLT stubs.  

Reviewed by Hal Finkel.

llvm-svn: 213489
2014-07-20 23:31:44 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 241959722e [PowerPC] Refactor byval handling in LowerFormalArguments_64SVR4
When handling an incoming byval argument, we need to possibly write
incoming registers to the stack in order to create an on-stack image
of the parameter, so we can return its address to common code.

This currently uses CreateFixedObject to access the parts of the
parameter save area where the argument is (or needs to be) stored.
However, sometimes we need to access multiple parts of that area,
e.g. to write multiple registers.  The code currently uses a new
CreateFixedObject call for each of these accesses, resulting in
a patchwork of overlapping (fixed) stack objects.

This doesn't really matter in the case of fixed objects, since
any access to those turns into a fixed stackpointer + offset
address anyway.  However, with the upcoming ELFv2 patches, we
may actually need to place an incoming argument into our *own*
stack frame instead of the caller's.  This means we need to use
CreateStackObject instead, and we cannot have multiple overlapping
instances of those.

To make the rest of the argument handling code work equally in
both situations, this patch refactors it to always use just a
single call to CreateFixedObject, and access parts of that object
as required using address arithmetic.  This way, we can in a future
patch substitute CreateStackObject without further changes.

No change to generated code intended.

llvm-svn: 213483
2014-07-20 22:36:52 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 55a96650d9 [PowerPC] Fix FrameIndex handling in SelectAddressRegImm
The PPCTargetLowering::SelectAddressRegImm routine needs to handle
FrameIndex nodes in a special manner, by tranlating them into a
TargetFrameIndex node.  This was done in most cases, but seems to
have been neglected in one path: when the input tree has an OR of
the FrameIndex with an immediate.  This can happen if the FrameIndex
can be proven to be sufficiently aligned that an OR of that immediate
is equivalent to an ADD.

The missing handling of FrameIndex in that case caused the SelectionDAG
instruction selection to miss opportunities to merge the OR back into
the FrameIndex node, leading to superfluous addi/ori instructions in
the final assembler output.

llvm-svn: 213482
2014-07-20 22:26:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel 3ee2af7d1c [PowerPC] 32-bit ELF PIC support
This adds initial support for PPC32 ELF PIC (Position Independent Code; the
-fPIC variety), thus rectifying a long-standing deficiency in the PowerPC
backend.

Patch by Justin Hibbits!

llvm-svn: 213427
2014-07-18 23:29:49 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 862d8b8d06 [PowerPC] Implement atomic NAND operations as actual NAND
This changes the implementation of atomic NAND operations
from "a & ~b" (compatible with GCC < 4.4) to actual "~(a & b)"
(compatible with GCC >= 4.4).

This is in line with the common-code and ARM back-end change
implemented in r212433.

llvm-svn: 212547
2014-07-08 16:16:02 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand de8641bfde [PowerPC] Fix no-assert build
r212476 caused a compile failure (unused variable) in a non-assertion
build ...

llvm-svn: 212477
2014-07-07 19:39:44 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand ec2bf93895 [PowerPC] Fix "byval align" arguments
Arguments passed as "byval align" should get the specified alignment
in the parameter save area.  There was some code in PPCISelLowering.cpp
that attempted to implement this, but this didn't work correctly:
while code did update the ArgOffset value, it neglected to update
the PtrOff value (which was already computed from the old ArgOffset),
and it also neglected to update GPR_idx -- fields skipped due to
alignment in the save area must likewise be skipped in GPRs.

This patch fixes and simplifies this logic by:
- handling argument offset alignment right at the beginning
  of argument processing, using a new helper routine
  CalculateStackSlotAlignment (this avoids having to update
  PtrOff and other derived values later on)
- not tracking GPR_idx separately, but always computing the
  correct GPR_idx for each argument *from* its ArgOffset
- removing some redundant computation in LowerFormalArguments:
  MinReservedArea must equal ArgOffset after argument processing,
  so there's no use in computing it twice.

[This doesn't change the behavior of the current clang front-end,
since that never creates "byval align" arguments at the moment.
This will change with a follow-on patch, however.]

llvm-svn: 212476
2014-07-07 19:26:41 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 3bd03c7099 [DAG] Pass the argument list to the CallLoweringInfo via move semantics. NFCI.
The argument list vector is never used after it has been passed to the
CallLoweringInfo and moving it to the CallLoweringInfo is cleaner and
pretty much as cheap as keeping a pointer to it.

llvm-svn: 212135
2014-07-01 22:01:54 +00:00
Craig Topper 66e588be09 Add ops() method to SDNode that returns an ArrayRef<SDUse>. Use it to simplify some code.
llvm-svn: 211993
2014-06-29 00:40:57 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 8ca988f31a [PowerPC] Refactor getMinCallFrameSize / getMinCallArgumentsSize
As of r211495, the only remaining users of getMinCallFrameSize are in
core ABI code (LowerFormalParameter / LowerCall).  This is actually a
good thing, since the details of the parameter save area are ABI specific.

With the new ELFv2 ABI in particular, the rules defining the size of the
save area will become significantly more complex, so it wouldn't make
sense to implement those outside ABI code that has all required
information.

In preparation, this patch eliminates the getMinCallFrameSize (and
associated getMinCallArgumentsSize) routines, and inlines them into all
callers.  Note that since nearly all call arguments are constant, this
allows simplifying the inlined copies to a single line everywhere.

No change in generate code expected.

llvm-svn: 211497
2014-06-23 14:15:53 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand c6fcb7a5de [PowerPC] Fix IsDarwin arg in PPCFrameLowering:: calls
As remarked in the commit message to r211493, in several places
throughout the 64-bit SVR4 ABI code there are calls to
PPCFrameLowering::getLinkageSize and getMinCallFrameSize
using an incorrect IsDarwin argument of "true".

(Some of those were made explicit by the above refactoring patch, others
have been there all along.)

This patch fixes those places to pass "false" for IsDarwin.

No change in generated code expected.

llvm-svn: 211494
2014-06-23 13:21:43 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 2bffb95915 [PowerPC] Refactor setMinReservedArea and CalculateParameterAndLinkageAreaSize
The PPCISelLowering.cpp routines PPCTargetLowering::setMinReservedArea and
CalculateParameterAndLinkageAreaSize are currently used as subroutines
from both 64-bit SVR4 and Darwin ABI code.

However, the two ABIs are already quite different w.r.t. AltiVec
conventions, and they will become more different when the ELFv2 ABI is
supported.  Also, in general it seems better to disentangle ABI support
routines for different ABIs to avoid accidentally affecting one ABI when
intending to change only the other.

(Actually, the current code strictly speaking already contains a bug:
these routines call PPCFrameLowering::getMinCallFrameSize and
PPCFrameLowering::getLinkageSize with the IsDarwin parameter set to
"true" even on 64-bit SVR4.  This bug currently has no adverse effect
since those routines always return the same for 64-bit SVR4 and 64-bit
Darwin, but it still seems wrong ...  I'll fix this in a follow-up
commit shortly.)

To remove this code sharing, I'm simply inlining both routines into all
call sites (there are just two each, one for 64-bit SVR4 and one for
Darwin), and simplifying due to constant parameters where possible.

A small piece of code that *does* make sense to share is refactored into
the new routine EnsureStackAlignment, now also called from 32-bit SVR4
ABI code.

No change in generated code is expected.

llvm-svn: 211493
2014-06-23 13:08:27 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 9ba552db89 [PowerPC] Fix on-stack AltiVec arguments with 64-bit SVR4
Current 64-bit SVR4 code seems to have some remnants of Darwin code
in AltiVec argument handing.  This had the effect that AltiVec arguments
(or subsequent arguments) were not correctly placed in the parameter area
in some cases.

The correct behaviour with the 64-bit SVR4 ABI is:
- All AltiVec arguments take up space in the parameter area, just like
  any other arguments, whether vararg or not.
- They are always 16-byte aligned, skipping a parameter area doubleword
  (and the associated GPR, if any), if necessary.

This patch implements the correct behaviour and adds a test case.
(Verified against GCC behaviour via the ABI compat test suite.)

llvm-svn: 211492
2014-06-23 12:36:34 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 59c6ab20d6 [PowerPC] Fix small argument stack slot offset for LE
When small arguments (structures < 8 bytes or "float") are passed in a
stack slot in the ppc64 SVR4 ABI, they must reside in the least
significant part of that slot.  On BE, this means that an offset needs
to be added to the stack address of the parameter, but on LE, the least
significant part of the slot has the same address as the slot itself.

This changes the PowerPC back-end ABI code to only add the small
argument stack slot offset for BE.  It also adds test cases to verify
the correct behavior on both BE and LE.

llvm-svn: 211368
2014-06-20 16:34:05 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand f460d69ada [PowerPC] Remove unnecessary load of r12 in indirect call
When looking at the 64-bit SVR4 indirect call sequence, I noticed
an unnecessary load of r12.  And indeed the code says:

  // R12 must contain the address of an indirect callee. 

But this is not correct; in the 64-bit SVR4 (ELFv1) ABI, there is
no need to load r12 at this point.  It seems this code and comment
is a remnant of code originally shared with the Darwin ABI ...

This patch simply removes the unnecessary load.

llvm-svn: 211203
2014-06-18 18:33:36 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand ad0cb91ed9 [PowerPC] Simplify and improve loading into TOC register
During an indirect function call sequence on the 64-bit SVR4 ABI,
generate code must load and then restore the TOC register.

This does not use a regular LOAD instruction since the TOC
register r2 is marked as reserved.  Instead, the are two
special instruction patterns:

 let RST = 2, DS = 2 in
 def LDinto_toc: DSForm_1a<58, 0, (outs), (ins g8rc:$reg),
                     "ld 2, 8($reg)", IIC_LdStLD,
                     [(PPCload_toc i64:$reg)]>, isPPC64;
 
 let RST = 2, DS = 10, RA = 1 in
 def LDtoc_restore : DSForm_1a<58, 0, (outs), (ins),
                     "ld 2, 40(1)", IIC_LdStLD,
                     [(PPCtoc_restore)]>, isPPC64;

Note that these not only restrict the destination of the
load to r2, but they also restrict the *source* of the
load to particular address combinations.  The latter is
a problem when we want to support the ELFv2 ABI, since
there the TOC save slot is no longer at 40(1).

This patch replaces those two instructions with a single
instruction pattern that only hard-codes r2 as destination,
but supports generic addresses as source.  This will allow
supporting the ELFv2 ABI, and also helps generate more
efficient code for calls to absolute addresses (allowing
simplification of the ppc64-calls.ll test case).

llvm-svn: 211193
2014-06-18 17:52:49 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 9aa09ef30f [PowerPC] Do not use BLA with the 64-bit SVR4 ABI
The PowerPC back-end uses BLA to implement calls to functions at
known-constant addresses, which is apparently used for certain
system routines on Darwin.

However, with the 64-bit SVR4 ABI, this is actually incorrect.
An immediate function pointer value on this platform is not
directly usable as a target address for BLA:
- in the ELFv1 ABI, the function pointer value refers to the
  *function descriptor*, not the code address
- in the ELFv2 ABI, the function pointer value refers to the
  global entry point, but BL(A) would only be correct when
  calling the *local* entry point

This bug didn't show up since using immediate function pointer
values is not usually done in the 64-bit SVR4 ABI in the first
place.  However, I ran into this issue with a certain use case
of LLVM as JIT, where immediate function pointer values were
uses to implement callbacks from JITted code to helpers in
statically compiled code.

Fixed by simply not using BLA with the 64-bit SVR4 ABI.

llvm-svn: 211174
2014-06-18 16:14:04 +00:00
Eric Christopher d90a8746df Remove an extraneous this-> to access the subtarget.
llvm-svn: 210849
2014-06-12 22:38:20 +00:00
Eric Christopher b1aaebecb1 Rename PPCSubTarget to Subtarget in PPCTargetLowering for consistency.
Also remove an extra local subtarget in the initialization functions.

llvm-svn: 210848
2014-06-12 22:38:18 +00:00
Bill Schmidt f910a0650e [PPC64LE] Recognize shufflevector patterns for little endian
Various masks on shufflevector instructions are recognizable as
specific PowerPC instructions (vector pack, vector merge, etc.).
There is existing code in PPCISelLowering.cpp to recognize the correct
patterns for big endian code.  The masks for these instructions are
different for little endian code due to the big-endian numbering
employed by these instructions.  This patch adds the recognition code
for little endian.

I've added a new test case test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vec_shuffle_le.ll for
this.  The existing recognizer test (vec_shuffle.ll) is unnecessarily
verbose and difficult to read, so I felt it was better to add a new
test rather than modify the old one.

llvm-svn: 210536
2014-06-10 14:35:01 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 6b5a7dfc24 [PPC64LE] Generate correct code for unaligned little-endian vector loads
The code in PPCTargetLowering::PerformDAGCombine() that handles
unaligned Altivec vector loads generates a lvsl followed by a vperm.
As we've seen in numerous other places, the vperm instruction has a
big-endian bias, and this is fixed for little endian by complementing
the permute control vector and swapping the input operands.  In this
case the lvsl is providing the permute control vector.  Rather than
generating an lvsl and a complement operation, it is sufficient to
generate an lvsr instruction instead.  Thus for LE code generation we
will generate an lvsr rather than an lvsl, and swap the other input
arguments on the vperm.

The existing test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vec_misalign.ll is updated to test
the code generation for PPC64 and PPC64LE, in addition to the existing
PPC32/G5 testing.

llvm-svn: 210493
2014-06-09 22:00:52 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 42995e8c74 [PPC64LE] Generate correct little-endian code for v16i8 multiply
The existing code in PPCTargetLowering::LowerMUL() for multiplying two
v16i8 values assumes that vector elements are numbered in big-endian
order.  For little-endian targets, the vector element numbering is
reversed, but the vmuleub, vmuloub, and vperm instructions still
assume big-endian numbering.  To account for this, we must adjust the
permute control vector and reverse the order of the input registers on
the vperm instruction.

The existing test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vec_mul.ll is updated to be executed
on powerpc64 and powerpc64le targets as well as the original powerpc
(32-bit) target.

llvm-svn: 210474
2014-06-09 16:06:29 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 4aedff8995 [PPC64LE] Fix lowering of BUILD_VECTOR and SHUFFLE_VECTOR for little endian
This patch fixes a couple of lowering issues for little endian
PowerPC.  The code for lowering BUILD_VECTOR contains a number of
optimizations that are only valid for big endian.  For now, we disable
those optimizations for correctness.  In the future, we will add
analogous optimizations that are correct for little endian.

When lowering a SHUFFLE_VECTOR to a VPERM operation, we again need to
make the now-familiar transformation of swapping the input operands
and complementing the permute control vector.  Correctness of this
transformation is tested by the accompanying test case.

llvm-svn: 210336
2014-06-06 14:06:26 +00:00
Eric Christopher a84189a2e4 Omit else branch after return.
llvm-svn: 210034
2014-06-02 17:29:07 +00:00
Eric Christopher 8995833a34 Have the TLOF creation take a Triple rather than needing a subtarget.
llvm-svn: 209937
2014-05-31 00:07:32 +00:00
Eric Christopher 5435224a53 isSVR4ABI() returned !isDarwin() so just move that to the else
block and remove the unreachable code.

llvm-svn: 209927
2014-05-30 22:47:53 +00:00
Eric Christopher 174c662b7c Rename CreateTLOF->createTLOF to match the rest of the file and the
rest of the targets with a similar function name.

llvm-svn: 209926
2014-05-30 22:47:48 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 71dddd51d9 [PATCH] Correct type used for VADD_SPLAT optimization on PowerPC
In PPCISelLowering.cpp: PPCTargetLowering::LowerBUILD_VECTOR(), there
is an optimization for certain patterns to generate one or two vector
splats followed by a vector add or subtract.  This operation is
represented by a VADD_SPLAT in the selection DAG.  Prior to this
patch, it was possible for the VADD_SPLAT to be assigned the wrong
data type, causing incorrect code generation.  This patch corrects the
problem.

Specifically, the code previously assigned the value type of the
BUILD_VECTOR node to the newly generated VADD_SPLAT node.  This is
correct much of the time, but not always.  The problem is that the
call to isConstantSplat() may return a SplatBitSize that is not the
same as the number of bits in the original element vector type.  The
correct type to assign is a vector type with the same element bit size
as SplatBitSize.

The included test case shows an example of this, where the
BUILD_VECTOR node has a type of v16i8.  The vector to be built is {0,
16, 0, 16, 0, 16, 0, 16, 0, 16, 0, 16, 0, 16, 0, 16}.  isConstantSplat
detects that we can generate a splat of 16 for type v8i16, which is
the type we must assign to the VADD_SPLAT node.  If we do not, we
generate a vspltisb of 8 and a vaddubm, which generates the incorrect
result {16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 16,
16}.  The correct code generation is a vspltish of 8 and a vadduhm.

This patch also corrected code generation for
CodeGen/PowerPC/2008-07-10-SplatMiscompile.ll, which had been marked
as an XFAIL, so we can remove the XFAIL from the test case.

llvm-svn: 209662
2014-05-27 15:57:51 +00:00
Adam Nemet 571eb5fc91 [PowerPC] PR19796: Also match ISD::TargetConstant in isIntS16Immediate
The SplitIndexingFromLoad changes exposed a latent isel bug in the PowerPC64
backend.  We matched an immediate offset with STWX8 even though it only
supports register offset.

The culprit is the complex-pattern predicate, SelectAddrIdx, which decides
that if the offset is not ISD::Constant it must be a register.

Many thanks to Bill Schmidt for testing this.

llvm-svn: 209219
2014-05-20 17:20:34 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer f3ad23551d SDAG: Legalize vector BSWAP into a shuffle if the shuffle is legal but the bswap not.
- On ARM/ARM64 we get a vrev because the shuffle matching code is really smart. We still unroll anything that's not v4i32 though.
- On X86 we get a pshufb with SSSE3. Required more cleverness in isShuffleMaskLegal.
- On PPC we get a vperm for v8i16 and v4i32. v2i64 is unrolled.

llvm-svn: 209123
2014-05-19 13:12:38 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool f3a5a5c546 Target: remove old constructors for CallLoweringInfo
This is mostly a mechanical change changing all the call sites to the newer
chained-function construction pattern.  This removes the horrible 15-parameter
constructor for the CallLoweringInfo in favour of setting properties of the call
via chained functions.  No functional change beyond the removal of the old
constructors are intended.

llvm-svn: 209082
2014-05-17 21:50:17 +00:00
Jay Foad a0653a3e6c Rename ComputeMaskedBits to computeKnownBits. "Masked" has been
inappropriate since it lost its Mask parameter in r154011.

llvm-svn: 208811
2014-05-14 21:14:37 +00:00
Hal Finkel 0d8db46799 [PowerPC] Add global named register support
Support for the intrinsics that read from and write to global named registers
is added for r1, r2 and r13 (depending on the subtarget).

llvm-svn: 208509
2014-05-11 19:29:11 +00:00
Craig Topper 2d2aa0ca1f Use makeArrayRef insted of calling ArrayRef<T> constructor directly. I introduced most of these recently.
llvm-svn: 207616
2014-04-30 07:17:30 +00:00
Craig Topper 8c0b4d0791 Convert more SelectionDAG functions to use ArrayRef.
llvm-svn: 207397
2014-04-28 05:57:50 +00:00
Craig Topper e73658ddbb [C++] Use 'nullptr'.
llvm-svn: 207394
2014-04-28 04:05:08 +00:00
Craig Topper 64941d9786 Convert SelectionDAG::getMergeValues to use ArrayRef.
llvm-svn: 207374
2014-04-27 19:20:57 +00:00
Craig Topper 206fcd450a Convert getMemIntrinsicNode to take ArrayRef of SDValue instead of pointer and size.
llvm-svn: 207329
2014-04-26 19:29:41 +00:00
Craig Topper 48d114bed1 Convert SelectionDAG::getNode methods to use ArrayRef<SDValue>.
llvm-svn: 207327
2014-04-26 18:35:24 +00:00
Craig Topper 062a2baef0 [C++] Use 'nullptr'. Target edition.
llvm-svn: 207197
2014-04-25 05:30:21 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 5772b77789 Add 'musttail' marker to call instructions
This is similar to the 'tail' marker, except that it guarantees that
tail call optimization will occur.  It also comes with convervative IR
verification rules that ensure that tail call optimization is possible.

Reviewers: nicholas

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3240

llvm-svn: 207143
2014-04-24 20:14:34 +00:00
Nick Lewycky aad475b324 Break PseudoSourceValue out of the Value hierarchy. It is now the root of its own tree containing FixedStackPseudoSourceValue (which you can use isa/dyn_cast on) and MipsCallEntry (which you can't). Anything that needs to use either a PseudoSourceValue* and Value* is strongly encouraged to use a MachinePointerInfo instead.
llvm-svn: 206255
2014-04-15 07:22:52 +00:00
Hal Finkel 34974ed503 [PowerPC] Implement some additional TLI callbacks
Add implementations of:
  bool isLegalICmpImmediate(int64_t Imm) const
  bool isLegalAddImmediate(int64_t Imm) const
  bool isTruncateFree(Type *Ty1, Type *Ty2) const
  bool isTruncateFree(EVT VT1, EVT VT2) const
  bool shouldConvertConstantLoadToIntImm(const APInt &Imm, Type *Ty) const

Unfortunately, this regresses counter-register-based loop formation because
some of the loops now end up in forms were SE cannot compute loop counts.
However, nevertheless, the test-suite results favor committing:

SingleSource/Benchmarks/BenchmarkGame/puzzle: 26% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/analyzer/analyzer: 21% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/automotive-susan/automotive-susan: 20% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Polybench/linear-algebra/kernels/trisolv/trisolv: 19% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Polybench/linear-algebra/kernels/gesummv/gesummv: 15% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/pcompress2/pcompress2: 2% speedup

MultiSource/Benchmarks/VersaBench/bmm/bmm: 26% slowdown

llvm-svn: 206120
2014-04-12 21:52:38 +00:00
Hal Finkel a775e51274 [PowerPC] Don't return false from PPC::isVSLDOIShuffleMask
PPC::isVSLDOIShuffleMask should return -1, not false, when the shuffle
predicate should be false.

Noticed by inspection; no test case (yet).

llvm-svn: 205787
2014-04-08 19:00:27 +00:00
Craig Topper 840beec2d0 Make consistent use of MCPhysReg instead of uint16_t throughout the tree.
llvm-svn: 205610
2014-04-04 05:16:06 +00:00
Hal Finkel b4240ca0f4 [PowerPC] Don't ever expand BUILD_VECTOR of v2i64 with shuffles
If we have two unique values for a v2i64 build vector, this will always result
in two vector loads if we expand using shuffles. Only one is necessary.

llvm-svn: 205231
2014-03-31 17:48:16 +00:00
Hal Finkel 5c0d1454d6 [PowerPC] Handle VSX v2i64 SIGN_EXTEND_INREG
sitofp from v2i32 to v2f64 ends up generating a SIGN_EXTEND_INREG v2i64 node
(and similarly for v2i16 and v2i8). Even though there are no sign-extension (or
algebraic shifts) for v2i64 types, we can handle v2i32 sign extensions by
converting two and from v2i64. The small trick necessary here is to shift the
i32 elements into the right lanes before the i32 -> f64 step. This is because
of the big Endian nature of the system, we need the i32 portion in the high
word of the i64 elements.

For v2i16 and v2i8 we can do the same, but we first use the default Altivec
shift-based expansion from v2i16 or v2i8 to v2i32 (by casting to v4i32) and
then apply the above procedure.

llvm-svn: 205146
2014-03-30 13:22:59 +00:00
Hal Finkel 777c9dd90a [PowerPC] Handle v2i64 comparisons
v2i64 is a legal type under VSX, however we don't have native vector
comparisons. We can handle eq/ne by casting it to an Altivec type, but
everything else must be expanded.

llvm-svn: 205106
2014-03-29 16:04:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel 19be506a5e [PowerPC] Add subregister classes for f64 VSX values
We had stored both f64 values and v2f64, etc. values in the VSX registers. This
worked, but was suboptimal because we would always spill 16-byte values even
through we almost always had scalar 8-byte values. This resulted in an
increase in stack-size use, extra memory bandwidth, etc. To fix this, I've
added 64-bit subregisters of the Altivec registers, and combined those with the
existing scalar floating-point registers to form a class of VSX scalar
floating-point registers. The ABI code has also been enhanced to use this
register class and some other necessary improvements have been made.

llvm-svn: 205075
2014-03-29 05:29:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7811c6188e [PowerPC] v2[fi]64 need to be explicitly passed in VSX registers
v2[fi]64 values need to be explicitly passed in VSX registers. This is because
the code in TRI that finds the minimal register class given a register and a
value type will assert if given an Altivec register and a non-Altivec type.

llvm-svn: 205041
2014-03-28 19:58:11 +00:00
Hal Finkel 82569b6366 [PowerPC] Fix v2f64 vector extract and related patterns
First, v2f64 vector extract had not been declared legal (and so the existing
patterns were not being used). Second, the patterns for that, and for
scalar_to_vector, should really be a regclass copy, not a subregister
operation, because the VSX registers directly hold both the vector and scalar data.

llvm-svn: 204971
2014-03-27 22:22:48 +00:00
Hal Finkel ad801b7459 [PowerPC] Expand v2i64 shifts
These operations need to be expanded during legalization so that isel does not
crash. In theory, we might be able to custom lower some of these. That,
however, would need to be follow-up work.

llvm-svn: 204963
2014-03-27 21:26:33 +00:00
Hal Finkel df3e34d944 [PowerPC] Generate VSX permutations for v2[fi]64 vectors
llvm-svn: 204873
2014-03-26 22:58:37 +00:00
Hal Finkel 6e28e6aaaf [PowerPC] VSX loads and stores support unaligned access
I've not yet updated PPCTTI because I'm not sure what the actual relative cost
is compared to the aligned uses.

llvm-svn: 204848
2014-03-26 19:39:09 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7279f4b00d [PowerPC] Use v2f64 <-> v2i64 VSX conversion instructions
llvm-svn: 204843
2014-03-26 19:13:54 +00:00
Hal Finkel 9281c9a38b [PowerPC] Use VSX vector load/stores for v2[fi]64
These instructions have access to the complete VSX register file. In addition,
they "swap" the order of the elements so that element 0 (the scalar part) comes
first in memory and element 1 follows at a higher address.

llvm-svn: 204838
2014-03-26 18:26:30 +00:00
Hal Finkel a6c8b51212 [PowerPC] Add v2i64 as a legal VSX type
v2i64 needs to be a legal VSX type because it is the SetCC result type from
v2f64 comparisons. We need to expand all non-arithmetic v2i64 operations.

This fixes the lowering for v2f64 VSELECT.

llvm-svn: 204828
2014-03-26 16:12:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel 732f0f73a7 [PowerPC] Lower VSELECT using xxsel when VSX is available
With VSX there is a real vector select instruction, and so we should use it.
Note that VSELECT will still scalarize for v2f64 because the corresponding
SetCC result type (v2i64) is not currently a legal type.

llvm-svn: 204801
2014-03-26 12:49:28 +00:00
Hal Finkel 27774d9274 [PowerPC] Initial support for the VSX instruction set
VSX is an ISA extension supported on the POWER7 and later cores that enhances
floating-point vector and scalar capabilities. Among other things, this adds
<2 x double> support and generally helps to reduce register pressure.

The interesting part of this ISA feature is the register configuration: there
are 64 new 128-bit vector registers, the 32 of which are super-registers of the
existing 32 scalar floating-point registers, and the second 32 of which overlap
with the 32 Altivec vector registers. This makes things like vector insertion
and extraction tricky: this can be free but only if we force a restriction to
the right register subclass when needed. A new "minipass" PPCVSXCopy takes care
of this (although it could do a more-optimal job of it; see the comment about
unnecessary copies below).

Please note that, currently, VSX is not enabled by default when targeting
anything because it is not yet ready for that.  The assembler and disassembler
are fully implemented and tested. However:

 - CodeGen support causes miscompiles; test-suite runtime failures:
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/distray/distray
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/McCat/08-main/main
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/Olden/voronoi/voronoi
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/mafft/pairlocalalign
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/tramp3d-v4/tramp3d-v4
      SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/almabench
      SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/matmul_f64_4x4

 - The lowering currently falls back to using Altivec instructions far more
   than it should. Worse, there are some things that are scalarized through the
   stack that shouldn't be.

 - A lot of unnecessary copies make it past the optimizers, and this needs to
   be fixed.

 - Many more regression tests are needed.

Normally, I'd fix these things prior to committing, but there are some
students and other contributors who would like to work this, and so it makes
sense to move this development process upstream where it can be subject to the
regular code-review procedures.

llvm-svn: 203768
2014-03-13 07:58:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7f908e8ef4 Fixup PPC Darwin i1 argument handling
Like on other targets, we need to zero_extend/truncate i1 args before copying
them to GPRs.

llvm-svn: 203045
2014-03-06 00:45:19 +00:00
Hal Finkel 2a9d318e4a When using CR bit registers on PPC32, handle the i1 vaarg case
When copying an i1 value into a GPR for a vaarg call, we need to explicitly
zero-extend the i1 value (otherwise an invalid CRBIT -> GPR copy will be
generated).

llvm-svn: 203041
2014-03-06 00:23:33 +00:00
Hal Finkel 6a56b21729 With PPC CR bit registers, handle int_to_fp on older cores
On cores without fpcvt support, we cannot promote int_to_fp i1 operations,
because there is nothing to promote them to. The most straightforward
implementation of this uses a select to choose between the two possible
resulting floating-point values (and that's what is done here).

llvm-svn: 203015
2014-03-05 22:14:00 +00:00
Hal Finkel 6aca2373f2 Add a PPC inline asm constraint type for single CR bits
Now that the PowerPC backend can track individual CR bits as first-class
registers, we should also have a way of allocating them for inline asm
statements. Because these registers are only one bit, if an output variable is
implicitly cast to a larger integer size, we'll get an any_extend to that
larger type (this is part of the existing target-independent logic). As a
result, regardless of the size of the output type, only the first bit is
meaningful.

The constraint identifier "wc" has been chosen for this purpose. Although gcc
does not currently support allocating individual CR bits, this identifier
choice has been coordinated with the gcc PowerPC team, and will be marked as
reserved for this purpose in the gcc constraints.md file.

llvm-svn: 202657
2014-03-02 18:23:39 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer b6d0bd48bd [C++11] Replace llvm::next and llvm::prior with std::next and std::prev.
Remove the old functions.

llvm-svn: 202636
2014-03-02 12:27:27 +00:00
Hal Finkel 46043edc56 Remove extra truncs/exts around i32 bit operations on PPC64
This generalizes the code to eliminate extra truncs/exts around i1 bit
operations to also do the same on PPC64 for i32 bit operations. This eliminates
a fairly prevalent code wart:

int foo(int a) {
  return a == 5 ? 7 : 8;
}

On PPC64, because of the extension implied by the ABI, this would generate:

	cmplwi 0, 3, 5
	li 12, 8
	li 4, 7
	isel 3, 4, 12, 2
	rldicl 3, 3, 0, 32
	blr

where the 'rldicl 3, 3, 0, 32', the extension, is completely unnecessary. At
least for the single-BB case (which is all that the DAG combine mechanism can
handle), this unnecessary extension is no longer generated.

llvm-svn: 202600
2014-03-01 21:36:57 +00:00
Hal Finkel 5cae2168c7 Trying to unbreak the darwin11 builder
The CR bit tracking code broke PPC/Darwin; trying to get it working again...

(the darwin11 builder, which defaults to the darwin ABI when running PPC tests,
asserted when running test/CodeGen/PowerPC/inverted-bool-compares.ll)

llvm-svn: 202459
2014-02-28 01:17:25 +00:00
Hal Finkel 940ab934d4 Add CR-bit tracking to the PowerPC backend for i1 values
This change enables tracking i1 values in the PowerPC backend using the
condition register bits. These bits can be treated on PowerPC as separate
registers; individual bit operations (and, or, xor, etc.) are supported.
Tracking booleans in CR bits has several advantages:

 - Reduction in register pressure (because we no longer need GPRs to store
   boolean values).

 - Logical operations on booleans can be handled more efficiently; we used to
   have to move all results from comparisons into GPRs, perform promoted
   logical operations in GPRs, and then move the result back into condition
   register bits to be used by conditional branches. This can be very
   inefficient, because the throughput of these CR <-> GPR moves have high
   latency and low throughput (especially when other associated instructions
   are accounted for).

 - On the POWER7 and similar cores, we can increase total throughput by using
   the CR bits. CR bit operations have a dedicated functional unit.

Most of this is more-or-less mechanical: Adjustments were needed in the
calling-convention code, support was added for spilling/restoring individual
condition-register bits, and conditional branch instruction definitions taking
specific CR bits were added (plus patterns and code for generating bit-level
operations).

This is enabled by default when running at -O2 and higher. For -O0 and -O1,
where the ability to debug is more important, this feature is disabled by
default. Individual CR bits do not have assigned DWARF register numbers,
and storing values in CR bits makes them invisible to the debugger.

It is critical, however, that we don't move i1 values that have been promoted
to larger values (such as those passed as function arguments) into bit
registers only to quickly turn around and move the values back into GPRs (such
as happens when values are returned by functions). A pair of target-specific
DAG combines are added to remove the trunc/extends in:
  trunc(binary-ops(binary-ops(zext(x), zext(y)), ...)
and:
  zext(binary-ops(binary-ops(trunc(x), trunc(y)), ...)
In short, we only want to use CR bits where some of the i1 values come from
comparisons or are used by conditional branches or selects. To put it another
way, if we can do the entire i1 computation in GPRs, then we probably should
(on the POWER7, the GPR-operation throughput is higher, and for all cores, the
CR <-> GPR moves are expensive).

POWER7 test-suite performance results (from 10 runs in each configuration):

SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/mandel-2: 35% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Prolangs-C++/city/city: 21% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/automotive-susan: 23% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/huffbench: 13% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/Large/sphereflake: 13% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/mandel-text: 10% speedup

SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++-EH/spirit: 10% slowdown
MultiSource/Applications/lemon/lemon: 8% slowdown

llvm-svn: 202451
2014-02-28 00:27:01 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 25793a3f22 Add address space argument to allowsUnalignedMemoryAccess.
On R600, some address spaces have more strict alignment
requirements than others.

llvm-svn: 200887
2014-02-05 23:15:53 +00:00
Alp Toker cb40291100 Fix known typos
Sweep the codebase for common typos. Includes some changes to visible function
names that were misspelt.

llvm-svn: 200018
2014-01-24 17:20:08 +00:00
Hal Finkel 3e4a34c8c3 Fix pointer info on PPC byval stores
For PPC64 SVR (and Darwin), the stores that take byval aggregate parameters
from registers into the stack frame had MachinePointerInfo objects with
incorrect offsets. These offsets are relative to the object itself, not to the
stack frame base.

This fixes self hosting on PPC64 when compiling with -enable-aa-sched-mi.

llvm-svn: 199763
2014-01-21 20:15:58 +00:00
Bill Wendling 13199b17f8 Remove unnecessary #includes.
llvm-svn: 198585
2014-01-06 06:00:00 +00:00
Bill Wendling 908bf814e7 Refactor function that checks that __builtin_returnaddress's argument is constant.
This moves the check up into the parent class so that all targets can use it
without having to copy (and keep in sync) the same error message.

llvm-svn: 198579
2014-01-06 00:43:20 +00:00
Bill Wendling df7dd28dc8 Emit an error message if the value passed to __builtin_returnaddress isn't a constant
__builtin_returnaddress requires that the value passed into is be a constant.
However, at -O0 even a constant expression may not be converted to a constant.
Emit an error message intead of crashing.

llvm-svn: 198531
2014-01-05 01:47:20 +00:00
Roman Divacky 32143e2bda Implement initial-exec TLS for PPC32.
llvm-svn: 197824
2013-12-20 18:08:54 +00:00
Alp Toker f907b891da Correct word hyphenations
This patch tries to avoid unrelated changes other than fixing a few
hyphen-related ambiguities and contractions in nearby lines.

llvm-svn: 196471
2013-12-05 05:44:44 +00:00
Bill Schmidt cea1596205 [PowerPC] Fix PR17354: Generate nop after local calls for PIC code.
When generating code for shared libraries, even local calls may be
intercepted, so we need a nop after the call for the linker to fix up the
TOC.  Test case adapted from the one provided in PR17354.

llvm-svn: 191440
2013-09-26 17:09:28 +00:00
Bill Schmidt bdae03f227 [PowerPC] Add a FIXME.
Documenting a design choice to generate only medium model sequences for TLS
addresses at this time.  Small and large code models could be supported if
necessary.

llvm-svn: 190883
2013-09-17 20:22:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel 40c34781b5 PPC: Don't restrict lvsl generation to after type legalization
This is a re-commit of r190764, with an extra check to make sure that we're not
performing the transformation on illegal types (a small test case has been
added for this as well).

Original commit message:

The PPC backend uses a target-specific DAG combine to turn unaligned Altivec
loads into a permutation-based sequence when possible. Unfortunately, the
target-specific DAG combine is not always called on all loads of interest
(sometimes the routines in DAGCombine call CombineTo such that the new node and
users are not added to the worklist); allowing the combine to trigger early
(before type legalization) mitigates this problem. Because the autovectorizers
only create legal vector types, I don't expect a lot of cases where this
optimization is enabled by type legalization in practice.

llvm-svn: 190771
2013-09-15 22:09:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel 31025a6325 Revert r190764: PPC: Don't restrict lvsl generation to after type legalization
This is causing test-suite failures.

Original commit message:

The PPC backend uses a target-specific DAG combine to turn unaligned Altivec
loads into a permutation-based sequence when possible. Unfortunately, the
target-specific DAG combine is not always called on all loads of interest
(sometimes the routines in DAGCombine call CombineTo such that the new node and
users are not added to the worklist); allowing the combine to trigger early
(before type legalization) mitigates this problem. Because the autovectorizers
only create legal vector types, I don't expect a lot of cases where this
optimization is enabled by type legalization in practice.

llvm-svn: 190765
2013-09-15 15:41:11 +00:00
Hal Finkel 2945d4e916 PPC: Don't restrict lvsl generation to after type legalization
The PPC backend uses a target-specific DAG combine to turn unaligned Altivec
loads into a permutation-based sequence when possible. Unfortunately, the
target-specific DAG combine is not always called on all loads of interest
(sometimes the routines in DAGCombine call CombineTo such that the new node and
users are not added to the worklist); allowing the combine to trigger early
(before type legalization) mitigates this problem. Because the autovectorizers
only create legal vector types, I don't expect a lot of cases where this
optimization is enabled by type legalization in practice.

llvm-svn: 190764
2013-09-15 15:20:54 +00:00
Hal Finkel c3cfbf8677 Add missing break statement in PPCISelLowering
As it turns out, not a problem in practice, but it should be there.

llvm-svn: 190720
2013-09-13 20:09:02 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 51428e363f Remove an unused variable, fixing -Werror build with latest Clang.
llvm-svn: 190640
2013-09-12 23:30:48 +00:00
Hal Finkel 262a224712 Fix PPC ABI for ByVal structs with vector members
When a structure is passed by value, and that structure contains a vector
member, according to the PPC ABI, the structure will receive enhanced alignment
(so that the vector within the structure will always be aligned).

This should resolve PR16641.

llvm-svn: 190636
2013-09-12 23:20:06 +00:00
Hal Finkel 1e2e3ea584 Make the PPC fast-math sqrt expansion safe at 0
In fast-math mode sqrt(x) is calculated using the fast expansion of the
reciprocal of the reciprocal sqrt expansion. The reciprocal and reciprocal
sqrt expansions use the associated estimate instructions along with some Newton
iterations. Unfortunately, as a result, sqrt(0) was being calculated as NaN,
which is not correct. Now we explicitly return a result of zero if the input is
zero.

llvm-svn: 190624
2013-09-12 19:04:12 +00:00
Hal Finkel 21442b24fb Enable MI scheduling (and CodeGen AA) by default for embedded PPC cores
For embedded PPC cores (especially the A2 core), using the MI scheduler with AA
is far superior to the other scheduling options.

llvm-svn: 190558
2013-09-11 23:05:25 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 8470b0f96c [PowerPC] Call support for fast-isel.
This patch adds fast-isel support for calls (but not intrinsic calls
or varargs calls).  It also removes a badly-formed assert.  There are
some new tests just for calls, and also for folding loads into
arguments on calls to avoid extra extends.

llvm-svn: 189701
2013-08-30 22:18:55 +00:00
Bill Schmidt ccecf26157 [PowerPC] Add loads, stores, and related things to fast-isel.
This is the next big chunk of fast-isel code.  The primary purpose is
to implement selection of loads and stores, but there is a lot of
drag-along to support this.  The common code to analyze addresses for
both loads and stores is substantial.  It's also necessary to add the
materialization code for global values.

Related to load-store processing is the code to fold loads into
integer extends, since otherwise we generate lots of redundant
instructions.  We also need to add some overrides to some FastEmit
routines to ensure we don't assign GPR 0 to a virtual register when
this would change the meaning of an instruction.

I added handling selection of a few binary arithmetic instructions, to
enable committing some test cases I wrote a while back.

Finally, ap couple of miscellaneous changes:
 * I cleaned up some poor style from a previous patch in
   PPCISelLowering.cpp, pointed out by David Blaikie.
 * I enlarged the Addr.Offset field to avoid sign problems with 32-bit
   offsets. 

llvm-svn: 189636
2013-08-30 02:29:45 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 8c3976eca1 Dummy code to silence warning from 4189266
llvm-svn: 189272
2013-08-26 20:11:46 +00:00
Hal Finkel dbc78e1f73 Add the PPC fcpsgn instruction
Modern PPC cores support a floating-point copysign instruction, and we can use
this to lower the FCOPYSIGN node (which is created from calls to the libm
copysign function). A couple of extra patterns are necessary because the
operand types of FCOPYSIGN need not agree.

llvm-svn: 188653
2013-08-19 05:01:02 +00:00
Craig Topper 5671010cbb Replace getValueType().getSimpleVT() with getSimpleValueType(). Also remove one weird cast from MVT->EVT just to call getSimpleVT().
llvm-svn: 188441
2013-08-15 02:33:50 +00:00
Hal Finkel b3ca00d2a3 Actually fix PPC64 64-bit GPR inline asm constraint matching
This is a follow-up to r187693, correcting that code to request the correct
register class. The previous version, with the wrong register class, was not
really correcting the constraints, but rather was removing them. Coincidentally,
this fixed the failing test case in r187693, but obviously created other
problems.

llvm-svn: 188407
2013-08-14 20:05:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel 2b7b2f373b PPC: Map frin to round() not nearbyint() and rint()
Making use of the recently-added ISD::FROUND, which allows for custom lowering
of round(), the PPC backend will now map frin to round(). Previously, we had
been using frin to lower nearbyint() (and rint() via some custom lowering to
handle the extra fenv flags requirements), but only in fast-math mode because
frin does not tie-to-even. Several users had complained about this behavior,
and this new mapping of frin to round is certainly more appropriate (and does
not require fast-math mode).

In effect, this reverts r178362 (and part of r178337, replacing the nearbyint
mapping with the round mapping).

llvm-svn: 187960
2013-08-08 04:31:34 +00:00
Hal Finkel b176acb6b7 Fix PPC64 64-bit GPR inline asm constraint matching
Internally, the PowerPC backend names the 32-bit GPRs R[0-9]+, and names the
64-bit parent GPRs X[0-9]+. When matching inline assembly constraints with
explicit register names, on PPC64 when an i64 MVT has been requested, we need
to follow gcc's convention of using r[0-9]+ to refer to the 64-bit (parent)
registers.

At some point, we'll probably want to arrange things so that the generic code
in TargetLowering uses the AsmName fields declared in *RegisterInfo.td in order
to match these inline asm register constraints. If we do that, this change can
be reverted.

llvm-svn: 187693
2013-08-03 12:25:10 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 0cf702fa61 [PowerPC] Skeletal FastISel support for 64-bit PowerPC ELF.
This is the first of many upcoming patches for PowerPC fast
instruction selection support.  This patch implements the minimum
necessary for a functional (but extremely limited) FastISel pass.  It
allows the table-generated portions of the selector to be created and
used, but in most cases selection will fall back to the DAG selector.
None of the block terminator instructions are implemented yet, and
most interesting instructions require some special handling.
Therefore there aren't any new test cases with this patch.  There will
be quite a few tests coming with future patches.

This patch adds the make/CMake support for the new code (including
tablegen -gen-fast-isel) and creates the FastISel object for PPC64 ELF
only.  It instantiates the necessary virtual functions
(TargetSelectInstruction, TargetMaterializeConstant,
TargetMaterializeAlloca, tryToFoldLoadIntoMI, and FastLowerArguments),
but of these, only TargetMaterializeConstant contains any useful
implementation.  This is present since the table-generated code
requires the ability to materialize integer constants for some
instructions.

This patch has been tested by building and running the
projects/test-suite code with -O0.  All tests passed with the
exception of a couple of long-running tests that time out using -O0
code generation.

llvm-svn: 187399
2013-07-30 00:50:39 +00:00
Roman Divacky c3825df87e PPC32 va_list is an actual structure so va_copy needs to copy the whole
structure not just a pointer. This implements that and thus fixes va_copy
on PPC32. Fixes #15286. Both bug and patch by Florian Zeitz!

llvm-svn: 187158
2013-07-25 21:36:47 +00:00
Hal Finkel f05d6c7843 PPC: Add base-pointer support to builtin setjmp/longjmp
First, this changes the base-pointer implementation to remove an unnecessary
complication (and one that is incompatible with how builtin SjLj is
implemented): instead of using r31 as the base pointer when it is not needed as
a frame pointer, now the base pointer will always be r30 when needed.

Second, we introduce another pseudo register, BP, which is used just like the FP
pseudo register to refer to the base register before we know for certain what
register it will be.

Third, we now save BP into the jmp_buf, and restore r30 from that slot in
longjmp.  If the function that called setjmp did not use a base pointer, then
r30 will be overwritten by the setjmp-calling-function's restore code. FP
restoration (which is restored into r31) works the same way.

llvm-svn: 186545
2013-07-17 23:50:51 +00:00
Craig Topper b94011fd28 Use SmallVectorImpl& instead of SmallVector to avoid repeating small vector size.
llvm-svn: 186274
2013-07-14 04:42:23 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7ab3db52d3 PPC: Add a better comment about the i64 FI fixup
In discussing this change with Bill Schmidt, it was decided that the original
comment about negative FIs was incorrect. We'll still exclude them for now, but
now with a more-accurate explanation.

llvm-svn: 186005
2013-07-10 15:29:01 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 4122169308 [PowerPC] Better fix for PR16556.
A more complete example of the bug in PR16556 was recently provided,
showing that the previous fix was not sufficient.  The previous fix is
reverted herein.

The real problem is that ReplaceNodeResults() uses LowerFP_TO_INT as
custom lowering for FP_TO_SINT during type legalization, without
checking whether the input type is handled by that routine.
LowerFP_TO_INT requires the input to be f32 or f64, so we fail when
the input is ppcf128.

I'm leaving the test case from the initial fix (r185821) in place, and
adding the new test as another crash-only check.

llvm-svn: 185959
2013-07-09 18:50:20 +00:00
Stephen Lin 73de7bf5de AArch64/PowerPC/SystemZ/X86: This patch fixes the interface, usage, and all
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
2013-07-09 18:16:56 +00:00
Hal Finkel dbbf09b28e PPC: Allocate RS spill slot for unaligned i64 load/store
This fixes another bug found by llvm-stress!

If we happen to be doing an i64 load or store into a stack slot that has less
than a 4-byte alignment, then the frame-index elimination may need to use an
indexed load or store instruction (because the offset may not be a multiple of
4, a requirement of the STD/LD instructions). The extra register needed to hold
the offset comes from the register scavenger, and it is possible that the
scavenger will need to use an emergency spill slot. As a result, we need to
make sure that a spill slot is allocated when doing an i64 load/store into a
less-than-4-byte-aligned stack slot.

Because test cases for things like this tend to be fairly fragile, I've
concatenated a few small bugpoint-reduced test cases together to form the
regression test.

llvm-svn: 185907
2013-07-09 06:34:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel 21ada79757 PPC: Mark vector CC action for SETO and SETONE as Expand
Another bug found by llvm-stress! This fixes hitting
  llvm_unreachable("Invalid integer vector compare condition");
at the end of getVCmpInst in PPCISelDAGToDAG.

llvm-svn: 185855
2013-07-08 20:00:03 +00:00
Hal Finkel e39302258e PPC: Mark vector FREM as Expand by default
Another bug found by llvm-stress! This fixes crashing with:
  LLVM ERROR: Cannot select: v4f32 = frem ...

llvm-svn: 185840
2013-07-08 17:30:25 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 2db29ef467 [PowerPC] Fix PR16556 (handle undef ppcf128 in LowerFP_TO_INT).
PPCTargetLowering::LowerFP_TO_INT() expects its source operand to be
either an f32 or f64, but this is not checked.  A long double
(ppcf128) operand will normally be custom-lowered to a conversion to
f64 in this context.  However, this isn't the case for an UNDEF node.

This patch recognizes a ppcf128 as a legal source operand for
FP_TO_INT only if it's an undef, in which case it creates an undef of
the target type.

At some point we might want to do a wholesale custom lowering of
ISD::UNDEF when the type is ppcf128, but it's not really clear that's
a great idea, and probably more work than it's worth for a situation
that only arises in the case of a programming error.  At this point I
think simple is best.

The test case comes from PR16556, and is a crash-test only.

llvm-svn: 185821
2013-07-08 14:22:45 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 5b427591d6 [PowerPC] Support @tls in the asm parser
This adds support for the last missing construct to parse TLS-related
assembler code:
   add 3, 4, symbol@tls

The ADD8TLS currently hard-codes the @tls into the assembler string.
This cannot be handled by the asm parser, since @tls is parsed as
a symbol variant.  This patch changes ADD8TLS to have the @tls suffix
printed as symbol variant on output too, which allows us to remove
the isCodeGenOnly marker from ADD8TLS.  This in turn means that we
can add a AsmOperand to accept @tls marked symbols on input.

As a side effect, this means that the fixup_ppc_tlsreg fixup type
is no longer necessary and can be merged into fixup_ppc_nofixup.

llvm-svn: 185692
2013-07-05 12:22:36 +00:00
Jakob Stoklund Olesen db429d9483 Remove the EXCEPTIONADDR, EHSELECTION, and LSDAADDR ISD opcodes.
These exception-related opcodes are not used any longer.

llvm-svn: 185625
2013-07-04 13:54:20 +00:00
Jakob Stoklund Olesen a1f5b901a5 Revert r185595-185596 which broke buildbots.
Revert "Simplify landing pad lowering."
Revert "Remove the EXCEPTIONADDR, EHSELECTION, and LSDAADDR ISD opcodes."

llvm-svn: 185600
2013-07-04 00:26:30 +00:00
Jakob Stoklund Olesen f33ec531fa Remove the EXCEPTIONADDR, EHSELECTION, and LSDAADDR ISD opcodes.
These exception-related opcodes are not used any longer.

llvm-svn: 185596
2013-07-03 23:56:31 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand d5ebc626d5 [PowerPC] Always use mfocrf if available
When accessing just a single CR register, it is always preferable to
use mfocrf instead of mfcr, if the former is available on the CPU.

Current code makes that distinction in many, but not all places
where a single CR register value is retrieved.  One missing
location is PPCRegisterInfo::lowerCRSpilling.

To fix this and make this simpler in the future, this patch changes
the bulk of the back-end to always assume mfocrf is available and
simply generate it when needed.

On machines that actually do not support mfocrf, the instruction
is replaced by mfcr at the very end, in EmitInstruction.

This has the additional benefit that we no longer need the
MFCRpseud hack, since before EmitInstruction we always have
a MFOCRF instruction pattern, which already models data flow
as required.

The patch also adds the MFOCRF8 version of the instruction,
which was missing so far.

Except for the PPCRegisterInfo::lowerCRSpilling case, no change
in generated code intended.

llvm-svn: 185556
2013-07-03 17:05:42 +00:00
Chad Rosier 295bd43adb The getRegForInlineAsmConstraint function should only accept MVT value types.
llvm-svn: 184642
2013-06-22 18:37:38 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand d51c09f5d9 [PowerPC] Rename some more VK_PPC_ enums
This renames more VK_PPC_ enums, to make them more closely reflect
the @modifier string they represent.  This also prepares for adding
a bunch of new VK_PPC_ enums in upcoming patches.

For consistency, some MO_ flags related to VK_PPC_ enums are
likewise renamed.

No change in behaviour.

llvm-svn: 184547
2013-06-21 14:42:20 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 230b451389 [PowerPC] Expose some calling convention functions in PPCISelLowering.h.
This is a preparatory patch for fast-isel support.  The instruction
selector will need to access some functions in PPCGenCallingConv.inc,
which in turn requires several helper functions to be defined.  These
are currently defined near the only use of PCCGenCallingConv.inc,
inside PPCISelLowering.cpp.  This patch moves the declaration of the
functions into the associated header file to provide the needed
visibility.

No functional change intended.

llvm-svn: 183844
2013-06-12 16:39:22 +00:00
Bill Wendling 5e7656bf0c Don't cache the instruction and register info from the TargetMachine, because
the internals of TargetMachine could change.

No functionality change intended.

llvm-svn: 183494
2013-06-07 07:55:53 +00:00
Andrew Trick ad6d08ac6f Order CALLSEQ_START and CALLSEQ_END nodes.
Fixes PR16146: gdb.base__call-ar-st.exp fails after
pre-RA-sched=source fixes.

Patch by Xiaoyi Guo!

This also fixes an unsupported dbg.value test case. Codegen was
previously incorrect but the test was passing by luck.

llvm-svn: 182885
2013-05-29 22:03:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel 8ebfe6c263 PPC: Add a isConsecutiveLS utility function
isConsecutiveLS is a slightly more general form of
SelectionDAG::isConsecutiveLoad. Aside from also handling stores, it also does
not assume equality of the chain operands is necessary. In the case of the PPC
backend, this chain condition is checked in a more general way by the
surrounding code.

Mostly, this part of the refactoring in preparation for supporting optimized
unaligned stores.

llvm-svn: 182723
2013-05-27 02:06:39 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7d8a691b5d Prefer to duplicate PPC Altivec loads when expanding unaligned loads
When expanding unaligned Altivec loads, we use the decremented offset trick to
prevent page faults. Unfortunately, if we have a sequence of consecutive
unaligned loads, this leads to suboptimal code generation because the 'extra'
load from the first unaligned load can be combined with the base load from the
second (but only if the decremented offset trick is not used for the first).
Search up and down the chain, through loads and token factors, looking for
consecutive loads, and if one is found, don't use the offset reduction trick.
These duplicate loads are later combined to yield the desired sequence (in the
future, we might want a more-powerful chain search, but that will require some
changes to allow the combiner routines to access the AA object).

This should complete the initial implementation of the optimized unaligned
Altivec load expansion. There is some refactoring that should be done, but
that will happen when the unaligned store expansion is added.

llvm-svn: 182719
2013-05-26 18:08:30 +00:00
Hal Finkel bc2ee4c4e6 PPC: Combine duplicate (offset) lvsl Altivec intrinsics
The lvsl permutation control instruction is a function only of the alignment of
the pointer operand (relative to the 16-byte natural alignment of Altivec
vectors). As a result, multiple lvsl intrinsics where the operands differ by a
multiple of 16 can be combined.

llvm-svn: 182708
2013-05-25 04:05:05 +00:00
Andrew Trick ef9de2a739 Track IR ordering of SelectionDAG nodes 2/4.
Change SelectionDAG::getXXXNode() interfaces as well as call sites of
these functions to pass in SDLoc instead of DebugLoc.

llvm-svn: 182703
2013-05-25 02:42:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel cf2e908014 PPC: Initial support for permutation-based unaligned Altivec loads
Altivec only directly supports aligned loads, but the loads have a strange
property: If given an unaligned address, they truncate the address to the next
lower aligned address, and load from there.  This property, along with an extra
load and some special-purpose permutation-control instructions that generate
the appropriate permutations from the original unaligned address, allow
efficient lowering of aligned loads. This code uses the trick explained in the
Apple Velocity Engine optimization overview document to prevent the needed
extra load from possibly causing a page fault if the original address happens
to be aligned.

As noted in the FIXMEs, there are several additional optimizations that can be
performed to reduce the cost of these loads even more. These will be
implemented in future commits.

llvm-svn: 182691
2013-05-24 23:00:14 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 75865923c9 Add LLVMContext argument to getSetCCResultType
llvm-svn: 182180
2013-05-18 00:21:46 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 9d980cbdb9 [PowerPC] Use true offset value in "memrix" machine operands
This is the second part of the change to always return "true"
offset values from getPreIndexedAddressParts, tackling the
case of "memrix" type operands.

This is about instructions like LD/STD that only have a 14-bit
field to encode immediate offsets, which are implicitly extended
by two zero bits by the machine, so that in effect we can access
16-bit offsets as long as they are a multiple of 4.

The PowerPC back end currently handles such instructions by
carrying the 14-bit value (as it will get encoded into the
actual machine instructions) in the machine operand fields
for such instructions.  This means that those values are
in fact not the true offset, but rather the offset divided
by 4 (and then truncated to an unsigned 14-bit value).

Like in the case fixed in r182012, this makes common code
operations on such offset values not work as expected.
Furthermore, there doesn't really appear to be any strong
reason why we should encode machine operands this way.

This patch therefore changes the encoding of "memrix" type
machine operands to simply contain the "true" offset value
as a signed immediate value, while enforcing the rules that
it must fit in a 16-bit signed value and must also be a
multiple of 4.

This change must be made simultaneously in all places that
access machine operands of this type.  However, just about
all those changes make the code simpler; in many cases we
can now just share the same code for memri and memrix
operands.

llvm-svn: 182032
2013-05-16 17:58:02 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand 7aa76b6a07 [PowerPC] Report true displacement value from getPreIndexedAddressParts
DAGCombiner::CombineToPreIndexedLoadStore calls a target routine to
decompose a memory address into a base/offset pair.  It expects the
offset (if constant) to be the true displacement value in order to
perform optional additional optimizations; in particular, to convert
other uses of the original pointer into uses of the new base pointer
after pre-increment.

The PowerPC implementation of getPreIndexedAddressParts, however,
simply calls SelectAddressRegImm, which returns a TargetConstant.
This value is appropriate for encoding into the instruction, but
it is not always usable as true displacement value:

- Its type is always MVT::i32, even on 64-bit, where addresses
  ought to be i64 ... this causes the optimization to simply
  always fail on 64-bit due to this line in DAGCombiner:

      // FIXME: In some cases, we can be smarter about this.
      if (Op1.getValueType() != Offset.getValueType()) {

- Its value is truncated to an unsigned 16-bit value if negative.
  This causes the above opimization to generate wrong code.

This patch fixes both problems by simply returning the true
displacement value (in its original type).  This doesn't
affect any other user of the displacement.

llvm-svn: 182012
2013-05-16 14:53:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel 25c1992bc7 Implement PPC counter loops as a late IR-level pass
The old PPCCTRLoops pass, like the Hexagon pass version from which it was
derived, could only handle some simple loops in canonical form. We cannot
directly adapt the new Hexagon hardware loops pass, however, because the
Hexagon pass contains a fundamental assumption that non-constant-trip-count
loops will contain a guard, and this is not always true (the result being that
incorrect negative counts can be generated). With this commit, we replace the
pass with a late IR-level pass which makes use of SE to calculate the
backedge-taken counts and safely generate the loop-count expressions (including
any necessary max() parts). This IR level pass inserts custom intrinsics that
are lowered into the desired decrement-and-branch instructions.

The most fragile part of this new implementation is that interfering uses of
the counter register must be detected on the IR level (and, on PPC, this also
includes any indirect branches in addition to function calls). Also, to make
all of this work, we need a variant of the mtctr instruction that is marked
as having side effects. Without this, machine-code level CSE, DCE, etc.
illegally transform the resulting code. Hopefully, this can be improved
in the future.

This new pass is smaller than the original (and much smaller than the new
Hexagon hardware loops pass), and can handle many additional cases correctly.
In addition, the preheader-creation code has been copied from LoopSimplify, and
after we decide on where it belongs, this code will be refactored so that it
can be explicitly shared (making this implementation even smaller).

The new test-case files ctrloop-{le,lt,ne}.ll have been adapted from tests for
the new Hexagon pass. There are a few classes of loops that this pass does not
transform (noted by FIXMEs in the files), but these deficiencies can be
addressed within the SE infrastructure (thus helping many other passes as well).

llvm-svn: 181927
2013-05-15 21:37:41 +00:00
Bill Schmidt a87a7e2620 Implement the PowerPC system call (sc) instruction.
Instruction added at request of Roman Divacky.  Tested via asm-parser.

llvm-svn: 181821
2013-05-14 19:35:45 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 22d40dcfe9 PPC64: Constant initializers with dynamic relocations go in .data.rel.ro.
This fixes warning messages observed in the oggenc application test in
projects/test-suite.  Special handling is needed for the 64-bit
PowerPC SVR4 ABI when a constant is initialized with a pointer to a
function in a shared library.  Because a function address is
implemented as the address of a function descriptor, the use of copy
relocations can lead to problems with initialization.  GNU ld
therefore replaces copy relocations with dynamic relocations to be
resolved by the dynamic linker.  This means the constant cannot reside
in the read-only data section, but instead belongs in .data.rel.ro,
which is designed for constants containing dynamic relocations.

The implementation creates a class PPC64LinuxTargetObjectFile
inheriting from TargetLoweringObjectFileELF, which behaves like its
parent except to place constants of this sort into .data.rel.ro.

The test case is reduced from the oggenc application.

llvm-svn: 181723
2013-05-13 19:34:37 +00:00
Roman Divacky 2d26e8e56b Remove unused isLegalAddressImmediate() method.
llvm-svn: 181452
2013-05-08 17:51:39 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 38b6cb51bc Fix handling of anonymous aggregate parameters for powerpc*-apple-darwin8.
This fixes bug 15821 similarly to the powerpc64-linux fix for bug 14779.

Patch by David Fang.

llvm-svn: 181449
2013-05-08 17:22:33 +00:00
Bill Schmidt a76bf5a6d0 Change commentary for PowerPC Boolean vector contents.
No functional change intended.

llvm-svn: 180131
2013-04-23 18:49:44 +00:00
Owen Anderson 2d4cca35c3 DAGCombine should not aggressively fold SEXT(VSETCC(...)) into a wider VSETCC without first checking the target's vector boolean contents.
This exposed an issue with PowerPC AltiVec where it appears it was setting the wrong vector boolean contents.  The included change
fixes the PowerPC tests, and was OK'd by Hal.

llvm-svn: 180129
2013-04-23 18:09:28 +00:00
Hal Finkel 81f8799fe3 Cleanup and improve PPC fsel generation
First, we should not cheat: fsel-based lowering of select_cc is a
finite-math-only optimization (the ISA manual, section F.3 of v2.06, makes
this clear, as does a note in our own README).

This also adds fsel-based lowering of EQ and NE condition codes. As it turned
out, fsel generation was covered by a grand total of zero regression test
cases. I've added some test cases to cover the existing behavior (which is now
finite-math only), as well as the new EQ cases.

llvm-svn: 179000
2013-04-07 22:11:09 +00:00
Hal Finkel ed6a28597b Enable early if conversion on PPC
On cores for which we know the misprediction penalty, and we have
the isel instruction, we can profitably perform early if conversion.
This enables us to replace some small branch sequences with selects
and avoid the potential stalls from mispredicting the branches.

Enabling this feature required implementing canInsertSelect and
insertSelect in PPCInstrInfo; isel code in PPCISelLowering was
refactored to use these functions as well.

llvm-svn: 178926
2013-04-05 23:29:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel e5680b3c36 Rename the current PPC BCL definition to BCLalways
BCL is normally a conditional branch-and-link instruction, but has
an unconditional form (which is used in the SjLj code, for example).
To make clear that this BCL instruction definition is specifically
the special unconditional form (which does not meaningfully take
a condition-register input), rename it to BCLalways.

No functionality change intended.

llvm-svn: 178803
2013-04-04 22:55:54 +00:00
Hal Finkel f96c18e3bc PPC: Improve code generation for mixed-precision reciprocal sqrt
The DAGCombine logic that recognized a/sqrt(b) and transformed it into
a multiplication by the reciprocal sqrt did not handle cases where the
sqrt and the division were separated by an fpext or fptrunc.

llvm-svn: 178801
2013-04-04 22:44:12 +00:00
Hal Finkel b0c810ff6d Cleanup PPC reciprocal-estimate functionality
Incorporating review feedback from Bill Schmidt on r178617. No functionality
change intended.

llvm-svn: 178672
2013-04-03 17:44:56 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 92e26646bc Fix PR15632: No support for ppcf128 floating-point remainder on PowerPC.
For this we need to use a libcall.  Previously LLVM didn't implement
libcall support for frem, so I've added it in the usual
straightforward manner.  A test case from the bug report is included.

llvm-svn: 178639
2013-04-03 13:05:44 +00:00
Hal Finkel 2e10331057 Use PPC reciprocal estimates with Newton iteration in fast-math mode
When unsafe FP math operations are enabled, we can use the fre[s] and
frsqrte[s] instructions, which generate reciprocal (sqrt) estimates, together
with some Newton iteration, in order to quickly generate floating-point
division and sqrt results. All of these instructions are separately optional,
and so each has its own feature flag (except for the Altivec instructions,
which are covered under the existing Altivec flag). Doing this is not only
faster than using the IEEE-compliant fdiv/fsqrt instructions, but allows these
computations to be pipelined with other computations in order to hide their
overall latency.

I've also added a couple of missing fnmsub patterns which turned out to be
missing (but are necessary for good code generation of the Newton iterations).
Altivec needs a similar fix, but that will probably be more complicated because
fneg is expanded for Altivec's v4f32.

llvm-svn: 178617
2013-04-03 04:01:11 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 3581cd4b4c Fix PR15630: Replace faulty stdcx. with stwcx.
When doing a partword atomic operation, a lwarx was being paired with
a stdcx. instead of a stwcx. when compiling for a 64-bit target.  The
target has nothing to do with it in this case; we always need a stwcx.

Thanks to Kai Nacke for reporting the problem.

llvm-svn: 178559
2013-04-02 18:37:08 +00:00
Hal Finkel 93d75ea08a Fix typo in PPCISelLowering
Thanks to Bill Schmidt for finding this in review of r178480.

llvm-svn: 178521
2013-04-02 03:29:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel 3f88d08974 Fix a bad assert in PPCTargetLowering
llvm-svn: 178489
2013-04-01 18:42:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel f6d45f2379 Add more PPC floating-point conversion instructions
The P7 and A2 have additional floating-point conversion instructions which
allow a direct two-instruction sequence (plus load/store) to convert from all
combinations (signed/unsigned i32/i64) <--> (float/double) (on previous cores,
only some combinations were directly available).

llvm-svn: 178480
2013-04-01 17:52:07 +00:00
Hal Finkel 290376dd78 Add the PPC popcntw instruction
The popcntw instruction is available whenever the popcntd instruction is
available, and performs a separate popcnt on the lower and upper 32-bits.
Ignoring the high-order count, this can be used for the 32-bit input case
(saving on the explicit zero extension otherwise required to use popcntd).

llvm-svn: 178470
2013-04-01 15:58:15 +00:00
Hal Finkel 60c7510711 Treat PPCISD::STFIWX like the memory opcode that it is
PPCISD::STFIWX is really a memory opcode, and so it should come after
FIRST_TARGET_MEMORY_OPCODE, and we should use DAG.getMemIntrinsicNode to create
nodes using it.

No functionality change intended (although there could be optimization benefits
from preserving the MMO information).

llvm-svn: 178468
2013-04-01 15:37:53 +00:00
Hal Finkel beb296bea1 Add the PPC lfiwax instruction
This instruction is available on modern PPC64 CPUs, and is now used
to improve the SINT_TO_FP lowering (by eliminating the need for the
separate sign extension instruction and decreasing the amount of
needed stack space).

llvm-svn: 178446
2013-03-31 10:12:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel e53429a13e Cleanup PPC(64) i32 -> float/double conversion
The existing SINT_TO_FP code for i32 -> float/double conversion was disabled
because it relied on broken EXTSW_32/STD_32 instruction definitions. The
original intent had been to enable these 64-bit instructions to be used on CPUs
that support them even in 32-bit mode.  Unfortunately, this form of lying to
the infrastructure was buggy (as explained in the FIXME comment) and had
therefore been disabled.

This re-enables this functionality, using regular DAG nodes, but only when
compiling in 64-bit mode. The old STD_32/EXTSW_32 definitions (which were dead)
are removed.

llvm-svn: 178438
2013-03-31 01:58:02 +00:00
Hal Finkel f8ac57e289 Implement FRINT lowering on PPC using frin
Like nearbyint, rint can be implemented on PPC using the frin instruction. The
complication comes from the fact that rint needs to set the FE_INEXACT flag
when the result does not equal the input value (and frin does not do that). As
a result, we use a custom inserter which, after the rounding, compares the
rounded value with the original, and if they differ, explicitly sets the XX bit
in the FPSCR register (which corresponds to FE_INEXACT).

Once LLVM has better modeling of the floating-point environment we should be
able to (often) eliminate this extra complexity.

llvm-svn: 178362
2013-03-29 19:41:55 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 70671b9937 Remove the old CodePlacementOpt pass.
It was superseded by MachineBlockPlacement and disabled by default since LLVM 3.1.

llvm-svn: 178349
2013-03-29 17:14:24 +00:00
Hal Finkel c20a08d25b Add PPC FP rounding instructions fri[mnpz]
These instructions are available on the P5x (and later) and on the A2. They
implement the standard floating-point rounding operations (floor, trunc, etc.).
One caveat: frin (round to nearest) does not implement "ties to even", and so
is only enabled in fast-math mode.

llvm-svn: 178337
2013-03-29 08:57:48 +00:00
Hal Finkel 22e41c411e Only enable 64-bit bswap DAG combines for PPC64
Compiling in 32-bit mode on a P7 would assert after 64-bit DAG combines were
added for bswap with load/store. This is because these combines are really only
valid in 64-bit mode, regardless of the CPU (and this was not being checked).

llvm-svn: 178286
2013-03-28 20:23:46 +00:00
Hal Finkel 93492fa696 Fix bad indentation in r178276
Thanks to Bill Schmidt for pointing this out!

llvm-svn: 178280
2013-03-28 19:43:12 +00:00
Hal Finkel 31d2956510 Add the PPC64 ldbrx/stdbrx instructions
These are 64-bit load/store with byte-swap, and available on the P7 and the A2.
Like the similar instructions for 16- and 32-bit words, these are matched in the
target DAG-combine phase against load/store-bswap pairs.

llvm-svn: 178276
2013-03-28 19:25:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel a4d074863a Add the PPC64 popcntd instruction
PPC ISA 2.06 (P7, A2, etc.) has a popcntd instruction. Add this instruction and
tell TTI about it so that popcount-loop recognition will know about it.

llvm-svn: 178233
2013-03-28 13:29:47 +00:00
Hal Finkel 1996f3d87f Fix typo (common to both X86 and PPC)
Thanks to Bill Schmidt for pointing this out during code review!

llvm-svn: 178170
2013-03-27 19:10:42 +00:00