Manually update test r600.amdgpu-alias-analysis.ll for amdgiz environment
since it cannot be done by script.
The two pointers are swapped in the output because PrintResults in
AliasAnalysisEvaluator.cpp sorts the strings obtained from printAsOperand
before printing them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40131
llvm-svn: 318660
Move the hazard scheduling pass to after the long branch pass, as the
long branch pass can create forbiddden slot hazards. Rather than complicating
the implementation of the long branch pass to handle forbidden slot hazards,
just reorder the passes.
llvm-svn: 318657
The VSX versions have the advantage of a full 64-register target whereas the FP
ones have the advantage of lower latency and higher throughput. So what we’re
after is using the faster instructions in low register pressure situations and
using the larger register file in high register pressure situations.
The heuristic chooses between the following 7 pairs of instructions.
PPC::LXSSPX vs PPC::LFSX
PPC::LXSDX vs PPC::LFDX
PPC::STXSSPX vs PPC::STFSX
PPC::STXSDX vs PPC::STFDX
PPC::LXSIWAX vs PPC::LFIWAX
PPC::LXSIWZX vs PPC::LFIWZX
PPC::STXSIWX vs PPC::STFIWX
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38486
llvm-svn: 318651
Summary:
This patch fixes an issue so that the right alias is printed when the instruction has tied operands. It checks the number of operands in the resulting instruction as opposed to the alias, and then skips over tied operands that should not be printed in the alias.
This allows to generate the preferred assembly syntax for the AArch64 'ins' instruction, which should always be displayed as 'mov' according to the ARM Architecture Reference Manual. Several unit tests have changed as a result, but only to reflect the preferred disassembly. Some other InstAlias patterns (movk/bic/orr) needed a slight adjustment to stop them becoming the default and breaking other unit tests.
Please note that the patch is mostly the same as https://reviews.llvm.org/D29219 which was reverted because of an issue found when running TableGen with the Address Sanitizer. That issue has been addressed in this iteration of the patch.
Reviewers: rengolin, stoklund, huntergr, SjoerdMeijer, rovka
Reviewed By: rengolin, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: fhahn, aemerson, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40030
llvm-svn: 318650
This patch adds a new abstraction layer to VPlan and leverages it to model the planned
instructions that manipulate masks (AND, OR, NOT), introduced during predication.
The new VPValue and VPUser classes model how data flows into, through and out
of a VPlan, forming the vertices of a planned Def-Use graph. The new
VPInstruction class is a generic single-instruction Recipe that models a
planned instruction along with its opcode, operands and users. See
VectorizationPlan.rst for more details.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38676
llvm-svn: 318645
Add instruction selector test for RSBri, which is derived from
AsI1_rbin_irs, and make sure it doesn't get mistaken for SUBri, which is
derived from the very similar AsI1_bin_irs pattern.
llvm-svn: 318643
Remove some of the instruction selector tests for binary operators (and,
or, xor). These are all derived from the same kind of TableGen pattern,
AsI1_bin_irs, so there's no point in testing all of them.
llvm-svn: 318642
In rL316552, we ban intersection of unsigned latch range with signed range check and vice
versa, unless the entire range check iteration space is known positive. It was a correct
functional fix that saved us from dealing with ambiguous values, but it also appeared
to be a very restrictive limitation. In particular, in the following case:
loop:
%iv = phi i32 [ 0, %preheader ], [ %iv.next, %latch]
%iv.offset = add i32 %iv, 10
%rc = icmp slt i32 %iv.offset, %len
br i1 %rc, label %latch, label %deopt
latch:
%iv.next = add i32 %iv, 11
%cond = icmp i32 ult %iv.next, 100
br it %cond, label %loop, label %exit
Here, the unsigned iteration range is `[0, 100)`, and the safe range for range
check is `[-10, %len - 10)`. For unsigned iteration spaces, we use unsigned
min/max functions for range intersection. Given this, we wanted to avoid dealing
with `-10` because it is interpreted as a very big unsigned value. Semantically, range
check's safe range goes through unsigned border, so in fact it is two disjoint
ranges in IV's iteration space. Intersection of such ranges is not trivial, so we prohibited
this case saying that we are not allowed to intersect such ranges.
What semantics of this safe range actually means is that we can start from `-10` and go
up increasing the `%iv` by one until we reach `%len - 10` (for simplicity let's assume that
`%len - 10` is a reasonably big positive value).
In particular, this safe iteration space includes `0, 1, 2, ..., %len - 11`. So if we were able to return
safe iteration space `[0, %len - 10)`, we could safely intersect it with IV's iteration space. All
values in this range are non-negative, so using signed/unsigned min/max for them is unambiguous.
In this patch, we alter the algorithm of safe range calculation so that it returnes a subset of the
original safe space which is represented by one continuous range that does not go through wrap.
In order to reach this, we use modified SCEV substraction function. It can be imagined as a function
that substracts by `1` (or `-1`) as long as the further substraction does not cause a wrap in IV iteration
space. This allows us to perform IRCE in many situations when we deal with IV space and range check
of different types (in terms of signed/unsigned).
We apply this approach for both matching and not matching types of IV iteration space and the
range check. One implication of this is that now IRCE became smarter in detection of empty safe
ranges. For example, in this case:
loop:
%iv = phi i32 [ %begin, %preheader ], [ %iv.next, %latch]
%iv.offset = sub i32 %iv, 10
%rc = icmp ult i32 %iv.offset, %len
br i1 %rc, label %latch, label %deopt
latch:
%iv.next = add i32 %iv, 11
%cond = icmp i32 ult %iv.next, 100
br it %cond, label %loop, label %exit
If `%len` was less than 10 but SCEV failed to trivially prove that `%begin - 10 >u %len- 10`,
we could end up executing entire loop in safe preloop while the main loop was still generated,
but never executed. Now, cutting the ranges so that if both `begin - 10` and `%len - 10` overflow,
we have a trivially empty range of `[0, 0)`. This in some cases prevents us from meaningless optimization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39954
llvm-svn: 318639
We must collect all AddModes even if they are the same.
This is due to Original value is different but we need all original
values collected as they are used as anchors in common phi finding.
Reviewers: john.brawn, reames
Reviewed By: john.brawn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40166
llvm-svn: 318638
As the first test shows, we could transform an llvm intrinsic which never sets errno
into a libcall which could set errno (even though it's marked readnone?), so that's
not ideal.
It's possible that we can also transform a libcall which could set errno to an
intrinsic given the fast-math-flags constraint, but that's deferred to determine
exactly which set of FMF are needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40150
llvm-svn: 318628
The 'ord' and 'uno' predicates have a logic operation for NAN built into their definitions:
FCMP_ORD = 7, ///< 0 1 1 1 True if ordered (no nans)
FCMP_UNO = 8, ///< 1 0 0 0 True if unordered: isnan(X) | isnan(Y)
So we can simplify patterns like this:
(fcmp ord (known NNAN), X) && (fcmp ord X, Y) --> fcmp ord X, Y
(fcmp uno (known NNAN), X) || (fcmp uno X, Y) --> fcmp uno X, Y
It might be better to split this into (X uno 0) | (Y uno 0) as a canonicalization, but that
would be another patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40130
llvm-svn: 318627
kernel verifier is becoming smarter and soon will support
direct and indirect function calls.
Remove obsolete error from BPF backend.
Make call to use PCRel_4 fixup.
'bpf to bpf' calls are distinguished from 'bpf to kernel' calls
by insn->src_reg == BPF_PSEUDO_CALL == 1 which is used as relocation
indicator similar to ld_imm64->src_reg == BPF_PSEUDO_MAP_FD == 1
The actual 'call' instruction remains the same for both
'bpf to kernel' and 'bpf to bpf' calls.
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 318614
Summary:
Currently, LIT configures the LLVM binary path before the Clang binary path. However this breaks testing out-of-tree Clang builds (where the LLVM binary path includes a copy of Clang).
This patch reverses the order of the paths when looking for Clang, putting the Clang binary directory first.
Reviewers: zturner, beanz, chapuni, modocache, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40217
llvm-svn: 318607
The CodeGenCoverage.h header is installed, but it references
the build-only header "llvm/Config/config.h". This breaks use
of the CodeGenCoverage.h header once it is installed, because config.h isn't
available.
This patch fixes the error by moving the config.h include from
the CodeGenCoverage.h header (where it's not needed), to the
CodeGenCoverage.cpp source file.
llvm-svn: 318602
PR34553 has gone, adding tests to ensure it doesn't come back.
vselect_packss_v16i64 still has some awful codegen on AVX512 targets....
llvm-svn: 318599
We don't need a dyn_cast, the predicate already specified the base node. We only need to check the type of the index, the base ptr is guaranteed to be scalar.
llvm-svn: 318596
Summary:
With this patch I tried to reduce the complexity of the code sightly, by
removing some indirection. Please let me know what you think.
Reviewers: junbuml, mcrosier, davidxl
Reviewed By: junbuml
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40037
llvm-svn: 318593
This makes sure that functions that only clobber xmm registers
(on win64) also get the right cfi directives, if dwarf exceptions
are enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40191
llvm-svn: 318591
We used to detect loads feeding fp instructions, but we were
failing to take into account cases where this happens through copies.
For instance, loads can fed copies coming from the ABI lowering
of floating point arguments/results.
llvm-svn: 318589
We used to detect that stores were fed by fp instructions, but we were
failing to take into account cases where this happens through copies.
For instance, stores can be fed by copies coming from the ABI lowering
of floating point arguments.
llvm-svn: 318588
Instead of asserting that the type sizes are exactly equal, we check
that the new size is big enough to contain the original type.
We have to relax this constrain because, right now, we sometimes
specify that things that are smaller than a storage type are legal
instead of widening everything to the size of a storage type.
E.g., we say that G_AND s16 is legal and we map that on GPR32.
This is something we may revisit in the future (either by changing
the legalization process or keeping track separately of the storage
size and the size of the type), but let us reflect the reality of
the situation for now.
llvm-svn: 318587
We were not doing that for large shadow granularity. Also add more
stack frame layout tests for large shadow granularity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39475
llvm-svn: 318581
Revert the following commits:
r318369 [asan] Fallback to non-ifunc dynamic shadow on android<22.
r318235 [asan] Prevent rematerialization of &__asan_shadow.
r317948 [sanitizer] Remove unnecessary attribute hidden.
r317943 [asan] Use dynamic shadow on 32-bit Android.
MemoryRangeIsAvailable() reads /proc/$PID/maps into an mmap-ed buffer
that may overlap with the address range that we plan to use for the
dynamic shadow mapping. This is causing random startup crashes.
llvm-svn: 318575
ptypeN is functionally the same as typeN except that it informs the
SelectionDAG importer that an operand should be treated as a pointer even
if it was written as iN. This is important for patterns that use iN instead
of iPTR to represent pointers. E.g.:
(set GPR64:$dst, (load GPR64:$addr))
Previously, this was handled as a hardcoded special case for the appropriate
operands to G_LOAD and G_STORE.
llvm-svn: 318574
The passthrough is useful for setting up the options for the default
build, but we already have a different mechanism to pass CMake flags
to builds for builtins and runtimes targets so this is not really
needed there. Furthermore, when the flags are set for the default
build, with the prefix passthrough set we have to explicitly override
all options in other targets which can be cumbersome.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39988
llvm-svn: 318571