It is intended to fix PR11468.
Old prologue and epilogue looked like this:
push %rbp
mov %rsp, %rbp
and $alignment, %rsp
push %r14
push %r15
...
pop %r15
pop %r14
mov %rbp, %rsp
pop %rbp
The problem was to reference the locations of callee-saved registers in exception handling:
locations of callee-saved had to be re-calculated regarding the stack alignment operation. It would
take some effort to implement this in LLVM, as currently MachineLocation can only have the form
"Register + Offset". Funciton prologue and epilogue are now changed to:
push %rbp
mov %rsp, %rbp
push %14
push %15
and $alignment, %rsp
...
lea -$size_of_saved_registers(%rbp), %rsp
pop %r15
pop %r14
pop %rbp
Reviewed by Chad Rosier.
llvm-svn: 160248
the move of *Builder classes into the Core library.
No uses of this builder in Clang or DragonEgg I could find.
If there is a desire to have an IR-building-support library that
contains all of these builders, that can be easily added, but currently
it seems likely that these add no real overhead to VMCore.
llvm-svn: 160243
IRBuilder, DIBuilder, etc.
This is the proper layering as MDBuilder can't be used (or implemented)
without the Core Metadata representation.
Patches to Clang and Dragonegg coming up.
llvm-svn: 160237
Allow the folding of vbroadcastRR to vbroadcastRM, where the memory operand is a spill slot.
PR12782.
Together with Michael Kuperstein <michael.m.kuperstein@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 160230
Add a micro-optimization to getNode of CONCAT_VECTORS when both operands are undefs.
Can't find a testcase for this because VECTOR_SHUFFLE already handles undef operands, but Duncan suggested that we add this.
Together with Michael Kuperstein <michael.m.kuperstein@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 160229
The notable fix is to look at any dependencies attached to the kill
instruction (or other instructions between MI nad the kill) where the
dependencies are specific to the register in question.
The old code implicitly handled this by rejecting the transform if *any*
other uses were found within the block, but after the start point. The
new code directly finds the kill, and has to re-use the existing
dependency scan to check for non-kill uses.
This was caught by self-host, but I found the bug via inspection and use
of absurd assert scaffolding to compute the kills in two ways and
compare them. So I have no useful testcase for this other than
"bootstrap". I'd work harder to reduce a test case if this particular
code were likely to live for a long time.
Thanks to Benjamin Kramer for reviewing the fix itself.
llvm-svn: 160228
Catch uses of undefined physregs that haven't been added to basic block
live-in lists. Run the verifier to pinpoint the problem.
Also run the verifier when a virtual register use is not jointly
dominated by defs.
llvm-svn: 160207
All SCEV expressions used by LSR formulae must be safe to
expand. i.e. they may not contain UDiv unless we can prove nonzero
denominator.
Fixes PR11356: LSR hoists UDiv.
llvm-svn: 160205
This allows SCEVExpander to run on the IV expressions.
This codifies an assumption made by LSR to complete the fix for
PR11356, but I haven't been able to generate a separate unit test for
this part. I'm adding it as an extra safety check.
llvm-svn: 160204
intrinsics with target-indepdent intrinsics. The first instruction(s) to be
handled are the vector versions of count leading zeros (ctlz).
The changes here are to clang so that it generates a target independent
vector ctlz when it sees an ARM dependent vector ctlz. The changes in llvm
are to match the target independent vector ctlz and in VMCore/AutoUpgrade.cpp
to update any existing bc files containing ARM dependent vector ctlzs with
target-independent ctlzs. There are also changes to an existing test case in
llvm for ARM vector count instructions and a new test for the bitcode upgrade.
<rdar://problem/11831778>
There is deliberately no test for the change to clang, as so far as I know, no
consensus has been reached regarding how to test neon instructions in clang;
q.v. <rdar://problem/8762292>
llvm-svn: 160200
removes the largest scaling problem in the test cases from PR13225 when
ASan is switched to insert basic blocks in the natural CFG order.
It may also solve some scaling problems for more normal code with large
numbers of basic blocks and variables.
llvm-svn: 160194
Call instructions are no longer required to be variadic, and
variable_ops should only be used for instructions that encode a variable
number of arguments, like the ARM stm/ldm instructions.
llvm-svn: 160189
Function argument registers are added to the call SDNode, but
InstrEmitter now knows how to make those operands implicit, and the call
instruction doesn't have to be variadic.
Explicit register operands should only be those that are encoded in the
instruction, implicit register operands are for extra dependencies like
call argument and return values.
llvm-svn: 160188
is used in cases where global symbols are
directly represented in the GOT and we use an
offset into the global offset table.
This patch adds direct object support for R_MIPS_GOT_DISP.
llvm-svn: 160183
When dumping the DAG for a fatal 'Cannot select' back-end error, also
provide the name of the function the construct is in. Useful when dealing
with large testcases, as the next step is to llvm-extract the function
in question to get a small(er) testcase.
llvm-svn: 160152
Make sure the tblgen'erated asm matcher correctly returns numoperands+1
as the ErrorInfo when the problem was that there weren't enough operands
specified.
rdar://9142751
llvm-svn: 160144
the input vector, it can be bigger (this is helpful for powerpc where <2 x i16>
is a legal vector type but i16 isn't a legal type, IIRC). However this wasn't
being taken into account by ExpandRes_EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT, causing PR13220.
Lightly tweaked version of a patch by Michael Liao.
llvm-svn: 160116
%shr = lshr i64 %key, 3
%0 = load i64* %val, align 8
%sub = add i64 %0, -1
%and = and i64 %sub, %shr
ret i64 %and
to:
%shr = lshr i64 %key, 3
%0 = load i64* %val, align 8
%sub = add i64 %0, 2305843009213693951
%and = and i64 %sub, %shr
ret i64 %and
The demanded bit optimization is actually a pessimization because add -1 would
be codegen'ed as a sub 1. Teach the demanded constant shrinking optimization
to check for negated constant to make sure it is actually reducing the width
of the constant.
rdar://11793464
llvm-svn: 160101
def Pat<...>;
Results in 'record name is not a string!' diagnostic. Not the best,
but the lack of location information moves it from not very helpful
into completely useless. We're in the Record class when throwing the
error, so just add the location info directly.
llvm-svn: 160098
It is safe if CPSR is killed or re-defined.
When we are done with the basic block, check whether CPSR is live-out.
Do not optimize away cmp if CPSR is live-out.
llvm-svn: 160090
When WriteFragmentData() case FT_align called
Asm.getBackend().writeNopData() is called, nothing
is done since Mips implementation of writeNopData just
returned "true".
For some reason this has not caused problems in 32 bit
mode, but in 64 bit mode it caused an assert when processing
multiple function units.
The test case included will assert without this patch. It
runs twice with different flags to prevent false positives
due to changes in code generation over time.
llvm-svn: 160084
file buffer is null-terminated.
If the file is smaller than we thought, mmap will not allow dereferencing
past the pages that are enough to cover the actual file size,
even though we asked for a larger address range.
rdar://11612916
llvm-svn: 160075
r1025 = s/zext r1024, 4
r1026 = extract_subreg r1025, 4
to a copy:
r1026 = copy r1024
This is correct. However it uses TII->isCoalescableExtInstr() which can return
true for instructions which essentially does a sext_in_reg so this can end up
with an illegal copy where the source and destination register classes do not
match. Add a check to avoid it. Sorry, no test case possible at this time.
rdar://11849816
llvm-svn: 160059
Low order register of a double word register operand. Operands
are defined by the name of the variable they are marked with in
the inline assembler code. This is a way to specify that the
operand just refers to the low order register for that variable.
It is the opposite of modifier 'D' which specifies the high order
register.
Example:
main()
{
long long ll_input = 0x1111222233334444LL;
long long ll_val = 3;
int i_result = 0;
__asm__ __volatile__(
"or %0, %L1, %2"
: "=r" (i_result)
: "r" (ll_input), "r" (ll_val));
}
Which results in:
lui $2, %hi(_gp_disp)
addiu $2, $2, %lo(_gp_disp)
addiu $sp, $sp, -8
addu $2, $2, $25
sw $2, 0($sp)
lui $2, 13107
ori $3, $2, 17476 <-- Low 32 bits of ll_input
lui $2, 4369
ori $4, $2, 8738 <-- High 32 bits of ll_input
addiu $5, $zero, 3 <-- Low 32 bits of ll_val
addiu $2, $zero, 0 <-- High 32 bits of ll_val
#APP
or $3, $4, $5 <-- or i_result, high 32 ll_input, low 32 of ll_val
#NO_APP
addiu $sp, $sp, 8
jr $ra
If not direction is done for the long long for 32 bit variables results
in using the low 32 bits as ll_val shows.
There is an existing bug if 'L' or 'D' is used for the destination register
for 32 bit long longs in that the target value will be updated incorrectly
for the non-specified part unless explicitly set within the inline asm code.
llvm-svn: 160028
generalizing its implementation sufficiently to support this value
number scenario as well.
This cuts out another significant performance hit in large functions
(over 10k basic blocks, etc), especially those with "natural" CFG
structures.
llvm-svn: 160026
This ordering allows nested if-conversion without using a work list, and
it makes it possible to update the dominator tree on the fly as well.
Any erased basic blocks will always be dominated by the current
post-order position, so the domtree can be pruned without invalidating
the iterator.
llvm-svn: 160025
X86MachineFunctionInfo as this is currently only used by X86. If this ever
becomes an issue on another arch (e.g., ARM) then we can hoist it back out.
llvm-svn: 160009
X86. Basically, this is a reapplication of r158087 with a few fixes.
Specifically, (1) the stack pointer is restored from the base pointer before
popping callee-saved registers and (2) in obscure cases (see comments in patch)
we must cache the value of the original stack adjustment in the prologue and
apply it in the epilogue.
rdar://11496434
llvm-svn: 160002
back of it.
I don't have anything even remotely close to a test case for this. It
only broke two build bots, both of them doing bootstrap builds, one of
them a dragonegg bootstrap. It doesn't break for me when I bootstrap
either. It doesn't reproduce every time or on many machines during the
bootstrap. Many thanks to Duncan Sands who got the exact command (and
stage of the bootstrap) which failed on the dragonegg bootstrap and
managed to get it to trigger under valgrind with debug symbols. The fix
was then found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 159993
multiple scalars and insert them into a vector. Next, we shuffle the elements
into the correct places, as before.
Also fix a small dagcombine bug in SimplifyBinOpWithSameOpcodeHands, when the
migration of bitcasts happened too late in the SelectionDAG process.
llvm-svn: 159991
quadratic behavior when performing pathological merges. Fixes the core
element of PR12652.
There is only one user of addRangeFrom left: join. I'm hoping to
refactor further in a future patch and have join use this merge
operation as well.
llvm-svn: 159982
of the trick merge routines. This adds a layer of testing that was
necessary when implementing more efficient (and complex) merge logic for
this datastructure.
No functionality changed here.
llvm-svn: 159981
Some NEON instructions want to match against normal SDNodes for some
operand types and Intrinsics for others. For example, CTLZ. To enable this,
switch from explicitly requiring Intrinsic on the class templates to using
SDPatternOperator instead.
llvm-svn: 159974
TableGen has support for using an intrinics name directly in a DAG,
but this breaks down when referring to just a node, as that's
handled initializer list stuff entirely via subclassing in the
parser. That is, using an instrinsic like "(int_my_intrinsic ...)"
works fine. Using it standalone for parameterizing the operator
in such a DAG does not.
Fixing this is simple enough, as we simply declare Intrinsic
as deriving from SDPatternOperator, which is the class name
intended for exactly this purpose in TargetSelectionDAG.td.
When the intrinsic is actually used in the DAG pattern, it will
be recognized and expanded to an intrinsic_wo_chain (et. al.)
just like when it's used directly.
Incoming ARM NEON cleanup based on this and a bit of functionality
improvement after that.
llvm-svn: 159973
getCondFromSETOpc, getCondFromCMovOpc, getSETFromCond, getCMovFromCond
No functional change intended.
If we want to update the condition code of CMOV|SET|Jcc, we first analyze the
opcode to get the condition code, then update the condition code, finally
synthesize the new opcode form the new condition code.
llvm-svn: 159955
Access mips register classes via MCRegisterInfo's functions instead of via the
TargetRegisterClasses defined in MipsGenRegisterInfo.inc.
llvm-svn: 159953
This patch removes ~70 lines in InstCombineLoadStoreAlloca.cpp and makes both functions a bit more aggressive than before :)
In theory, we can be more aggressive when removing an alloca than a malloc, because an alloca pointer should never escape, but we are not taking advantage of this anyway
llvm-svn: 159952
subtarget CPU descriptions and support new features of
MachineScheduler.
MachineModel has three categories of data:
1) Basic properties for coarse grained instruction cost model.
2) Scheduler Read/Write resources for simple per-opcode and operand cost model (TBD).
3) Instruction itineraties for detailed per-cycle reservation tables.
These will all live side-by-side. Any subtarget can use any
combination of them. Instruction itineraries will not change in the
near term. In the long run, I expect them to only be relevant for
in-order VLIW machines that have complex contraints and require a
precise scheduling/bundling model. Once itineraries are only actively
used by VLIW-ish targets, they could be replaced by something more
appropriate for those targets.
This tablegen backend rewrite sets things up for introducing
MachineModel type #2: per opcode/operand cost model.
llvm-svn: 159891
It is safe if EFLAGS is killed or re-defined.
When we are done with the basic block, check whether EFLAGS is live-out.
Do not optimize away cmp if EFLAGS is live-out.
llvm-svn: 159888
This means we can do cheap DSE for heap memory.
Nothing is done if the pointer excapes or has a load.
The churn in the tests is mostly due to objectsize, since we want to make sure we
don't delete the malloc call before evaluating the objectsize (otherwise it becomes -1/0)
llvm-svn: 159876
For each Cmp, we check whether there is an earlier Sub which make Cmp
redundant. We handle the case where SUB operates on the same source operands as
Cmp, including the case where the two source operands are swapped.
llvm-svn: 159838
DwarfDebug class could generate the same (inlined) DIVariable twice:
1) when trying to find abstract debug variable for a concrete inlined instance.
2) when explicitly collecting info for variables that were optimized out.
This change makes sure that this duplication won't happen and makes
Clang pass "gdb.opt/inline-locals" test from gdb testsuite.
Reviewed by Eric Christopher.
llvm-svn: 159811
Print the second half of a double word operand.
The include list was cleaned up a bit as well.
Also the test case was modified to test for both
big and little patterns.
llvm-svn: 159787
hash_value overload for MachineOperands. This addresses a FIXME
sufficient for me to remove it, and cleans up the code nicely too.
The important changes to the hashing logic:
- TargetFlags are now included in all of the hashes. These were complete
missed.
- Register operands have their subregisters and whether they are a def
included in the hash.
- We now actually hash all of the operand types. Previously, many
operand types were simply *dropped on the floor*. For example:
- Floating point immediates
- Large integer immediates (>64-bit)
- External globals!
- Register masks
- Metadata operands
- It removes the offset from the block-address hash; I'm a bit
suspicious of this, but isIdenticalTo doesn't consider the offset for
black addresses.
Any patterns involving these entities could have triggered extreme
slowdowns in MachineCSE or PHIElimination. Let me know if there are PRs
you think might be closed now... I'm looking myself, but I may miss
them.
llvm-svn: 159743
broken. This patch fixes the superficial problems which lead to the
intractably slow compile times reported in PR13225.
The specific issue is that we were failing to include the *offset* of
a global variable in the hash code. Oops. This would in turn cause all
MIs which were only distinguishable due to operating on different
offsets of a global variable to produce identical hash functions. In
some of the test cases attached to the PR I saw hash table activity
where there were O(1000) probes-per-lookup *on average*. A very few
entries were responsible for most of these probes.
There is still quite a bit more to do here. The ad-hoc layering of data
in MachineOperands makes them *extremely* brittle to hash correctly.
We're missing quite a few other cases, the only ones I've fixed here are
the specific MO types which were allowed through the assert() in
getOffset().
llvm-svn: 159741
change.
Move the "Not profitable, avoid CSE!" debug message next to where we fail the
check for profitability and use a different message for avoiding CSE due to
being in different register classes.
llvm-svn: 159729
Also allow trailing register mask operands on non-variadic both
MachineSDNodes and MachineInstrs.
The extra physreg RegisterSDNode operands are added to the MI as
<imp-use> operands. This makes it possible to have non-variadic call
instructions.
Call and return instructions really are non-variadic, the argument
registers should only be used implicitly - they are not part of the
encoding.
llvm-svn: 159727
The CopyToReg nodes that set up the argument registers before a call
must be glued to the call instruction. Otherwise, the scheduler may emit
the physreg copies long before the call, causing long live ranges for
the fixed registers.
Besides disabling good register allocation, that can also expose
problems when EmitInstrWithCustomInserter() splits a basic block during
the live range of a physreg.
llvm-svn: 159721
IntegersSubsetMapping
- Replaced type of Items field from std::list with std::map. In neares future I'll test it with DenseMap and do the correspond replacement
if possible.
llvm-svn: 159703
Implement the TII hooks needed by EarlyIfConversion to create cmov
instructions and estimate their latency.
Early if-conversion is still not enabled by default.
llvm-svn: 159695
This pass performs if-conversion on SSA form machine code by
speculatively executing both sides of the branch and using a cmov
instruction to select the result. This can help lower the number of
branch mispredictions on architectures like x86 that don't have
predicable instructions.
The current implementation is very aggressive, and causes regressions on
mosts tests. It needs good heuristics that have yet to be implemented.
llvm-svn: 159694
IntegersSubsetMapping
- Replaced type of Items field from std::list with std::map. In neares future I'll test it with DenseMap and do the correspond replacement
if possible.
llvm-svn: 159659
some, and allows the routine to be inlined into common callers. The
various bits that hit this code in their hotpath seem slightly lower on
the profile, but I can't really measure a performance improvement as
everything seems to still be bottlenecked on likely cache misses. =/
llvm-svn: 159648
- execute_external should be;
- Not on Win32.
- Using bash.
In reverse, "execute_internal" shoud be (Win32 && !bash).
- lit.getBashPath() behaves differently before and after tweaking $PATH.
I will add a few explanations there later.
llvm-svn: 159641
inlineasm-cnstrnt-bad-r-1.ll is NOT supposed to fail, so it was removed. This resulted in the removal of a negative test (inlineasm-cnstrnt-bad-r-1.ll)
llvm-svn: 159625
It appears to have caught a use-after-free introduced as by r159567
and/or friends which call 'addPass' from many more places. The bug in
'addPass' doesn't appear to be new, and was spotted by inspection when
ASan shown a bright light of a stacktrace at these functions.
Hopefully this will fix the ASan failure -- I have no test case other
than running an ASan-built clang over the test suite.
llvm-svn: 159614
inlineasm-cnstrnt-bad-r-1.ll is NOT supposed to fail, so it was removed. This resulted in the removal of a negative test (inlineasm-cnstrnt-bad-r-1.ll)
llvm-svn: 159610