It's likely if a conditional branch needs to be expanded, the following
unconditional branch will also need expansion. By expanding the
unconditional branch first, the conditional branch can be simply
inverted to jump over the inserted indirect branch block. If the
conditional branch is expanded first, it results in an additional
branch.
This avoids test regressions in future commits.
llvm-svn: 285722
This bug was exposed by using nsw/nuw for more aggressive folds in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284844
The changes mimic the IR demanded bits logic in InstCombiner::SimplifyDemandedUseBits(),
but we can't just flip flag bits in the DAG; we have to create a new node that has the
bits cleared.
This should fix:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30841
llvm-svn: 285656
DW_TAG_atomic_type was already included in Dwarf.defs and emitted correctly,
however Verifier didn't recognize it as valid.
Thus we introduce the following changes:
* Make DW_TAG_atomic_type valid tag for IR and DWARF (enabled only with -gdwarf-5)
* Add it to related docs
* Add DebugInfo tests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26144
llvm-svn: 285624
Currently computeKnownBits returns the common known zero/one bits for all elements of vector data, when we may only be interested in one/some of the elements.
This patch adds a DemandedElts argument that allows us to specify the elements we actually care about. The original computeKnownBits implementation calls with a DemandedElts demanding all elements to match current behaviour. Scalar types set this to 1.
The approach was found to be easier than trying to add a per-element known bits solution, for a similar usefulness given the combines where computeKnownBits is typically used.
I've only added support for a few opcodes so far (the ones that have proven straightforward to test), all others will default to demanding all elements but can be updated in due course.
DemandedElts support could similarly be added to computeKnownBitsForTargetNode in a future commit.
This looked like this had caused compile time regressions on some buildbots (and was reverted in rL285381), but appears to have just been a harmless bystander!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25691
llvm-svn: 285494
Instead of asserting that the shift count is != 0 we just bail out
as it's not profitable trying to optimize a node which will be
removed anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26098
llvm-svn: 285480
When LivePhysRegs adds live-in registers, it recognizes ~0 as a special
lane mask indicating the entire register. If the lane mask is not ~0,
it will only add the subregisters that overlap the specified lane mask.
The problem is that if a live-in register does not have subregisters,
and the lane mask is not ~0, it will not be added to the live set.
(The given lane mask may simply be the lane mask of its register class.)
If a register does not have subregisters, add it to the live set if
the lane mask is non-zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26094
llvm-svn: 285440
TargetPassConfig::addMachinePasses() does some housekeeping first:
Handling the -print-machineinstrs flag and doing an initial printing
"After Instruction Selection". There is no reason for RegUsageInfoProp
to run before those two steps.
llvm-svn: 285422
There is a use after free bug in the existing code. Loop layout selects
a preferred exit block, and then lays out the loop. If this block is
removed during layout, it needs to be invalidated to prevent a use after
free.
llvm-svn: 285348
Summary:
Found when running Valgrind.
This removes two unnecessary assignments when using
AttrBuilder::removeAttribute.
AttrBuilder::removeAttribute returns a reference to the object.
As the LHSes were the same as the callees, the assignments
resulted in memcpy calls where dst = src.
Commited on behalf-of: dstenb (David Stenberg)
Reviewers: mkuper, rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25460
llvm-svn: 285298
Currently computeKnownBits returns the common known zero/one bits for all elements of vector data, when we may only be interested in one/some of the elements.
This patch adds a DemandedElts argument that allows us to specify the elements we actually care about. The original computeKnownBits implementation calls with a DemandedElts demanding all elements to match current behaviour. Scalar types set this to 1.
The approach was found to be easier than trying to add a per-element known bits solution, for a similar usefulness given the combines where computeKnownBits is typically used.
I've only added support for a few opcodes so far (the ones that have proven straightforward to test), all others will default to demanding all elements but can be updated in due course.
DemandedElts support could similarly be added to computeKnownBitsForTargetNode in a future commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25691
llvm-svn: 285296
Change type of some missed DebugInfo-related alignment variables,
that are still uint64_t, to uint32_t.
Original change introduced in r284482.
llvm-svn: 285242
This patch ensures that if a floating point vector operand is legalized by
expanding, it is legalized through the stack rather than by calling
DAGTypeLegalizer::IntegerToVector which will cause a failure since the operand
is a non-integer type.
This fixes PR 30715.
llvm-svn: 285231
This reapplies revision 285093. Original commit message:
The branch folding pass tail merges blocks into a common-tail. However, the
tail retains the debug information from one of the original inputs to the
merge (chosen randomly). This is a problem for sampled-based PGO, as hits
on the common-tail will be attributed to whichever block was chosen,
irrespective of which path was actually taken to the common-tail.
This patch fixes the issue by nulling the debug location for the common-tail.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25742
llvm-svn: 285212
This finds all of the references to a frame index in a function, and
sorts by the offset. If multiple instructions use the same offset,
nothing was breaking the tie for sorting.
This avoids the test failures the reverted r282999 introduced.
llvm-svn: 285201
Summary:
AMDGPU will need this one i16 is added as a legal type. This is tested by:
test/CodeGen/AMDGPU/sdiv.ll
test/CodeGen/AMDGPU/sdivrem24.ll
test/CodeGen/AMDGPU/udiv.ll
test/CodeGen/AMDGPU/udivrem24.ll
Reviewers: bogner, efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25699
llvm-svn: 285199
* Assume that clang passes non-zero alignment value to DIBuilder
only in case when it was forced by C++11 'alignas', C11 '_Alignas'
or compiler attribute '__attribute__((aligned (N)))'.
* Emit DW_AT_alignment if alignment is specified for type/object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24425
llvm-svn: 285189
* Assume that clang passes non-zero alignment value to DIBuilder
only in case when it was forced by C++11 'alignas', C11 '_Alignas'
or compiler attribute '__attribute__((aligned (N)))'.
* Emit DW_AT_alignment if alignment is specified for type/object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24425
llvm-svn: 285181
Summary:
Fixes PR28281.
MSVC lists indirect virtual base classes in the field list of a class,
using LF_IVBCLASS records. This change makes LLVM emit such records
when processing DW_TAG_inheritance tags with the DIFlagVirtual and
(newly introduced) DIFlagIndirect tags.
Reviewers: rnk, ruiu, zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25578
llvm-svn: 285130
This reverts r285093, as it caused unexpected buildbot failures on
clang-ppc64le-linux, clang-ppc64be-linux, clang-ppc64be-linux-multistage
and clang-ppc64be-linux-lnt. Failing test ubsan/TestCases/TypeCheck/vptr.cpp.
llvm-svn: 285110
Add an option to allow easier experimentation by target maintainers with the
minimum number of entries to create jump tables. Also clarify the name of
the other existing option governing the creation of jump tables.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25883
llvm-svn: 285104
When there's a tie between partitionings of jump tables, consider also cases
that result in no jump tables, but in one or a few cases. The motivation is
that many contemporary processors typically perform case switches fairly
quickly.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25212
llvm-svn: 285099
The branch folding pass tail merges blocks into a common-tail. However, the
tail retains the debug information from one of the original inputs to the
merge (chosen randomly). This is a problem for sampled-based PGO, as hits
on the common-tail will be attributed to whichever block was chosen,
irrespective of which path was actually taken to the common-tail.
This patch fixes the issue by nulling the debug location for the common-tail.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25742
llvm-svn: 285093
Summary:
Do *not* perform combines such as:
vector_shuffle<4,1,2,3>(build_vector(Ud, C0, C1 C2), scalar_to_vector(X))
->
build_vector(X, C0, C1, C2)
Keeping the shuffle allows lowering the constant build_vector to a materialized
constant vector (such as a vector-load from the constant-pool or some other idiom).
Reviewers: delena, igorb, spatel, mkuper, andreadb, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25524
llvm-svn: 285063
This is a function to go backwards in a block to find the first
instruction in a bundle, so iterator is a more natural choice for
parameter/return rather than a reference to a MachineInstruction.
llvm-svn: 285051
Passing a MachineFunction as argument is more natural and avoids an
unnecessary round-trip through the logic determining the correct
Subtarget because MachineFunction already has a reference anyway.
llvm-svn: 285039
(Const)?MIOperands is equivalent to the C++ style
MachineInstr::mop_iterator. Use the latter for consistency except for a
few callers of MIOperands::analyzePhysReg().
llvm-svn: 285029
These functions are about classifying a global which will actually be
emitted, so it does not make sense for them to take a GlobalValue which may
for example be an alias.
Change the Mach-O object writer and the Hexagon, Lanai and MIPS backends to
look through aliases before using TargetLoweringObjectFile interfaces. These
are functional changes but all appear to be bug fixes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25917
llvm-svn: 285006
Summary: With MSVC 2013 and GCC < 4.8 gone, we can use the "constexpr" keyword.
Reviewers: bkramer, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25901
llvm-svn: 284947
0 - X --> 0, if the sub is NUW
0 - X --> 0, if X is 0 or the minimum signed value and the sub is NSW
0 - X --> X, if X is 0 or the minimum signed value
This is the DAG equivalent of:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284649
plus the fold for the NUW case which already existed in InstSimplify.
Note that we miss a vector fold because of a deficiency in the DAG version of
computeKnownBits().
llvm-svn: 284844
Because we're just 'or-ing' these 2 variables later in the code, I
don't think there's a logical bug here, but of course the string with
"no size" is the one that should have the size suffix stripped off.
llvm-svn: 284826
As discussed in D24815, let's start the process of killing off the broken fast-math global
state housed in TargetOptions and eliminate the need for function-level fast-math attributes.
Here we enable two similar folds that are possible when we don't care about signed-zero:
fadd nsz x, 0 --> x
fsub nsz 0, x --> -x
Note that although the test cases include a 'sin' function call, I'm side-stepping the
FMF-on-calls question (and lack of support in the DAG) for now. It's not needed for these
tests - isNegatibleForFree/GetNegatedExpression just look through a ISD::FSIN node.
Also, when we create an FNEG node and propagate the Flags of the FSUB to it, this doesn't
actually do anything today because Flags are silently dropped for any node that is not a
binary operator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25297
llvm-svn: 284824
Summary:
The original heuristic to break critical edge during machine sink is relatively conservertive: when there is only one instruction sinkable to the critical edge, it is likely that the machine sink pass will not break the critical edge. This leads to many speculative instructions executed at runtime. However, with profile info, we could model the splitting benefits: if the critical edge has 50% taken rate, it would always be beneficial to split the critical edge to avoid the speculated runtime instructions. This patch uses profile to guide critical edge splitting in machine sink pass.
The performance impact on speccpu2006 on Intel sandybridge machines:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 25.3 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 45.96 -0.10%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 41.97 +1.49%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 36.83 -0.96%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 23.81 +0.32%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.17 +0.34%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 48.13 +0.69%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.45 +3.25%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 21.35 -2.06%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 36.02 -2.39%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.7 -0.17%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 22.9 +0.52%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.42 -0.54%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 39.59 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.98 -0.00%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.52 -0.18%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 28.26 +0.02%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 55.44 +3.74%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.67 -0.39%
geometric mean +0.20%
Manually checked 473 and 471 to verify the diff is in the noise range.
Reviewers: rengolin, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24818
llvm-svn: 284757
Summary:
While promoting *_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG nodes whose inputs are already
promoted, perform the appropriate sign extension for the promoted node
before doing the *_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG operation. If not, the undefined
high-order bits of the promoted operand may (a) be garbage inc ase of
zext) or (b) contribute the wrong sign-bit (in case of sext)
Updated the promote-vec3.ll test after this change. The diff shows
explicit zeroing in case of zext and intermediate sign extension in case
of sext.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, srhines
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25790
llvm-svn: 284752
This is a retry of r284495 which was reverted at r284513 due to use-after-scope bugs
caused by faulty usage of StringRef.
This version also renames a pair of functions:
getRecipEstimateDivEnabled()
getRecipEstimateSqrtEnabled()
as suggested by Eric Christopher.
original commit msg:
[Target] remove TargetRecip class; move reciprocal estimate isel functionality to TargetLowering
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D24816 - where we changed reciprocal estimates to be function attributes
rather than TargetOptions.
This patch is intended to be a structural, but not functional change. By moving all of the
TargetRecip functionality into TargetLowering, we can remove all of the reciprocal estimate
state, shield the callers from the string format implementation, and simplify/localize the
logic needed for a target to enable this.
If a function has a "reciprocal-estimates" attribute, those settings may override the target's
default reciprocal preferences for whatever operation and data type we're trying to optimize.
If there's no attribute string or specific setting for the op/type pair, just use the target
default settings.
As noted earlier, a better solution would be to move the reciprocal estimate settings to IR
instructions and SDNodes rather than function attributes, but that's a multi-step job that
requires infrastructure improvements. I intend to work on that, but it's not clear how long
it will take to get all the pieces in place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25440
llvm-svn: 284746
- Add alignment attribute to DIVariable family
- Modify bitcode format to match new DIVariable representation
- Update tests to match these changes (also add bitcode upgrade test)
- Expect that frontend passes non-zero align value only when it is not default
(was forcibly aligned by alignas()/_Alignas()/__atribute__(aligned())
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25073
llvm-svn: 284678
This code crashed on funclet-style EH instructions such as catchpad,
catchswitch, and cleanuppad. Just treat all EH pad instructions
equivalently and avoid merging the globals they reference through any
use.
llvm-svn: 284633
Use mask and negate for legalization of i1 source type with SIGN_EXTEND_INREG.
With the mask, this should be no worse than 2 shifts. The mask can be eliminated
in some cases, so that should be better than 2 shifts.
This change exposed some missing folds related to negation:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284239https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284395
There may be others, so please let me know if you see any regressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25485
llvm-svn: 284611
This will get the same ConstantSDNode scalar or vector splat value as the current separate dyn_cast<ConstantSDNode> / isVector() approach.
llvm-svn: 284578
Summary:
The original heuristic to break critical edge during machine sink is relatively conservertive: when there is only one instruction sinkable to the critical edge, it is likely that the machine sink pass will not break the critical edge. This leads to many speculative instructions executed at runtime. However, with profile info, we could model the splitting benefits: if the critical edge has 50% taken rate, it would always be beneficial to split the critical edge to avoid the speculated runtime instructions. This patch uses profile to guide critical edge splitting in machine sink pass.
The performance impact on speccpu2006 on Intel sandybridge machines:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 25.3 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 45.96 -0.10%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 41.97 +1.49%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 36.83 -0.96%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 23.81 +0.32%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.17 +0.34%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 48.13 +0.69%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.45 +3.25%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 21.35 -2.06%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 36.02 -2.39%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.7 -0.17%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 22.9 +0.52%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.42 -0.54%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 39.59 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.98 -0.00%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.52 -0.18%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 28.26 +0.02%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 55.44 +3.74%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.67 -0.39%
geometric mean +0.20%
Manually checked 473 and 471 to verify the diff is in the noise range.
Reviewers: rengolin, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24818
llvm-svn: 284545
Summary:
The original heuristic to break critical edge during machine sink is relatively conservertive: when there is only one instruction sinkable to the critical edge, it is likely that the machine sink pass will not break the critical edge. This leads to many speculative instructions executed at runtime. However, with profile info, we could model the splitting benefits: if the critical edge has 50% taken rate, it would always be beneficial to split the critical edge to avoid the speculated runtime instructions. This patch uses profile to guide critical edge splitting in machine sink pass.
The performance impact on speccpu2006 on Intel sandybridge machines:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 25.3 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 45.96 -0.10%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 41.97 +1.49%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 36.83 -0.96%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 23.81 +0.32%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.17 +0.34%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 48.13 +0.69%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.45 +3.25%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 21.35 -2.06%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 36.02 -2.39%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.7 -0.17%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 22.9 +0.52%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.42 -0.54%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 39.59 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.98 -0.00%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.52 -0.18%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 28.26 +0.02%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 55.44 +3.74%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.67 -0.39%
geometric mean +0.20%
Manually checked 473 and 471 to verify the diff is in the noise range.
Reviewers: rengolin, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24818
llvm-svn: 284541
Summary:
The original implementation is in r261607, which was reverted in r269726 to accomendate the ProfileSummaryInfo analysis pass. The new implementation:
1. add a new metadata for function section prefix
2. query against ProfileSummaryInfo in CGP to set the correct section prefix for each function
3. output the section prefix set by CGP
Reviewers: davidxl, eraman
Subscribers: vsk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24989
llvm-svn: 284533
This is a follow-up to D24816 - where we changed reciprocal estimates to be function attributes
rather than TargetOptions.
This patch is intended to be a structural, but not functional change. By moving all of the
TargetRecip functionality into TargetLowering, we can remove all of the reciprocal estimate
state, shield the callers from the string format implementation, and simplify/localize the
logic needed for a target to enable this.
If a function has a "reciprocal-estimates" attribute, those settings may override the target's
default reciprocal preferences for whatever operation and data type we're trying to optimize.
If there's no attribute string or specific setting for the op/type pair, just use the target
default settings.
As noted earlier, a better solution would be to move the reciprocal estimate settings to IR
instructions and SDNodes rather than function attributes, but that's a multi-step job that
requires infrastructure improvements. I intend to work on that, but it's not clear how long
it will take to get all the pieces in place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25440
llvm-svn: 284495
In futher patches we shall have alignment field added to DIVariable family
and switching from uint64_t to uint32_t will save 4 bytes per variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25620
llvm-svn: 284482
This patch adds simplified support for tail calls on ARM with XRay instrumentation.
Known issue: compiled with generic flags: `-O3 -g -fxray-instrument -Wall
-std=c++14 -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections` (this list doesn't include my
specific flags like --target=armv7-linux-gnueabihf etc.), the following program
#include <cstdio>
#include <cassert>
#include <xray/xray_interface.h>
[[clang::xray_always_instrument]] void __attribute__ ((noinline)) fC() {
std::printf("In fC()\n");
}
[[clang::xray_always_instrument]] void __attribute__ ((noinline)) fB() {
std::printf("In fB()\n");
fC();
}
[[clang::xray_always_instrument]] void __attribute__ ((noinline)) fA() {
std::printf("In fA()\n");
fB();
}
// Avoid infinite recursion in case the logging function is instrumented (so calls logging
// function again).
[[clang::xray_never_instrument]] void simplyPrint(int32_t functionId, XRayEntryType xret)
{
printf("XRay: functionId=%d type=%d.\n", int(functionId), int(xret));
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
__xray_set_handler(simplyPrint);
printf("Patching...\n");
__xray_patch();
fA();
printf("Unpatching...\n");
__xray_unpatch();
fA();
return 0;
}
gives the following output:
Patching...
XRay: functionId=3 type=0.
In fA()
XRay: functionId=3 type=1.
XRay: functionId=2 type=0.
In fB()
XRay: functionId=2 type=1.
XRay: functionId=1 type=0.
XRay: functionId=1 type=1.
In fC()
Unpatching...
In fA()
In fB()
In fC()
So for function fC() the exit sled seems to be called too much before function
exit: before printing In fC().
Debugging shows that the above happens because printf from fC is also called as
a tail call. So first the exit sled of fC is executed, and only then printf is
jumped into. So it seems we can't do anything about this with the current
approach (i.e. within the simplification described in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23988 ).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25030
llvm-svn: 284456
Summary:
There are differences in codegen between Linux and Windows due to:
1. Using std::sort which uses quicksort which is a non-stable sort.
2. Iterating over Set data structure where the iteration order is
non deterministic.
Reviewers: arsenm, grosbach, junbuml, zinob, MatzeB
Subscribers: MatzeB, wdng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25695
llvm-svn: 284441
As noted in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D25685
This is the next-to-smallest step needed to enable the ComputeNumSignBits fix in that patch.
In a minor attempt to keep some structure, we're pulling the FP helper over along with its
integer sibling, but clearly we can and should do more refactoring of the similar helper
functions in DAGCombiner and SelectionDAG to simplify and not duplicate functionality.
llvm-svn: 284421
This came up as part of:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D25485
Note that the vector case is missed because ComputeNumSignBits() is deficient for vectors.
llvm-svn: 284395
SelectionDAG::getConstantPool will automatically determine an appropriate alignment if one is not specified. It does this by querying the type's preferred alignment. This can end up creating quite a lot of padding when the preferred alignment for vectors is 128.
In optimize-for-size mode, it makes sense to instead query the ABI type alignment which is often smaller and causes less padding.
llvm-svn: 284381
CodeGenPrepare knows how to move a zext of a load into the same basic block
where the load lives. The goal is to help ISel match a zero-extending load
instead of two separated instructions.
CGP attempts to move a zext computation even if it lives in a basic block that
does not post-dominate the load's basic block. That means, the hoisted zext may
be speculated. Preserving the zext location would hurt the debugging experience
and the quality of sample pgo.
With this patch, when moving a zext near to its associated load, CGP no longer
propagates the zext's debug location. Instead, CGP conservatively reuses the
same debug location for the load and the zext.
An alternative approach would be to assign an artificial line-0 location to the
zext. However we don't want to over-use the 'line-0' for this particular case
because it would have a size cost in the line-table section for no additional
benefit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25611
llvm-svn: 284377
The previous names were both misleading (the MachineLegalizer actually
contained the info tables) and inconsistent with the selector & translator (in
having a "Machine") prefix. This should make everything sensible again.
The only functional change is the name of a couple of command-line options.
llvm-svn: 284287
Eli noted this potential bug in the post-commit thread for:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284239
...but I'm not sure how to trigger it, so there's no test case yet.
llvm-svn: 284268
Summary:
The main purpose of this new helper is to enable simplifying operations that
have multiple uses. SimplifyDemandedBits does not handle multiple uses
currently, and this new function makes it possible to optimize:
and v1, v0, 0xffffff
mul24 v2, v1, v1 ; Multiply ignoring high 8-bits.
To:
mul24 v2, v0, v0
Where before this would not be optimized, because v1 has multiple uses.
Reviewers: bogner, arsenm
Subscribers: nhaehnle, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24964
llvm-svn: 284266
X86. The pass optimizes as a unit the entire wide load + shuffles pattern
produced by interleaved vectorization. This initial patch optimizes one pattern
(64-bit elements interleaved by a factor of 4). Future patches will generalize
to additional patterns.
Patch by Farhana Aleen
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24681
llvm-svn: 284260
This will be needed by a future commit to support sign/zero extending from v8i8 to v8i64 which requires a sign/zero_extend_vector_inreg to be created which requires v8i8 to be concatenated upto v64i8 and goes through this code.
llvm-svn: 284204
Summary:
This operation is promoted the same way was ISD::BSWAP. This will
prevent a regression in test/Target/AMDGOU/bitreverse.ll when i16
support is implemented.
Reviewers: bogner, hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25202
llvm-svn: 284163
the X86 subdirectory. Original commit message:
Requires a valid TargetMachine to be passed to the SafeStack pass.
Patch by Michael LeMay
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24896
llvm-svn: 284161
Relax the constraint for empty live-ranges while doing last chance
recoloring. Indeed, those live-ranges do not need an actual color to be
fond for the recoloring to work.
Empty live-range may happen as a result of splitting/spilling.
Unfortunately no test case for in-tree targets.
llvm-svn: 284152
Retrying after upstream changes.
Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search which only checks for parallel stores
through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner as the separation of
non-interfering loads/stores from the store-merging logic.
Whem merging stores, search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited. This improves the quality of the
output SelectionDAG and generally the output CodeGen (with some
exceptions).
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the the chain aggregation in the merged stores across
code paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seemed sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable. Some tests relying on the order were changed to use
volatile memory operations
Noteworthy tests:
CodeGen/AArch64/argument-blocks.ll -
It's not entirely clear what the test_varargs_stackalign test is
supposed to be asserting, but the new code looks right.
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-memset-inline.lli -
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-stur.ll -
CodeGen/ARM/memset-inline.ll -
The backend now generates *worse* code due to store merging
succeeding, as we do do a 16-byte constant-zero store efficiently.
CodeGen/AArch64/merge-store.ll -
Improved, but there still seems to be an extraneous vector insert
from an element to itself?
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll -
Worse code emitted in this case, due to the improved store->load
forwarding.
CodeGen/X86/dag-merge-fast-accesses.ll -
CodeGen/X86/MergeConsecutiveStores.ll -
CodeGen/X86/stores-merging.ll -
CodeGen/Mips/load-store-left-right.ll -
Restored correct merging of non-aligned stores
CodeGen/AMDGPU/promote-alloca-stored-pointer-value.ll -
Improved. Correctly merges buffer_store_dword calls
CodeGen/AMDGPU/si-triv-disjoint-mem-access.ll -
Improved. Sidesteps loading a stored value and
merges two stores
CodeGen/X86/pr18023.ll -
This test has been removed, as it was asserting incorrect
behavior. Non-volatile stores *CAN* be moved past volatile loads,
and now are.
CodeGen/X86/vector-idiv.ll -
CodeGen/X86/vector-lzcnt-128.ll -
It's basically impossible to tell what these tests are actually
testing. But, looks like the code got better due to the memory
operations being recognized as non-aliasing.
CodeGen/X86/win32-eh.ll -
Both loads of the securitycookie are now merged.
CodeGen/AMDGPU/vgpr-spill-emergency-stack-slot-compute.ll -
This test appears to work but no longer exhibits the spill behavior.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight, nhaehnle
Subscribers: wdng, nhaehnle, nemanjai, arsenm, weimingz, niravd, RKSimon, aemerson, qcolombet, dsanders, resistor, tstellarAMD, t.p.northover, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14834
llvm-svn: 284151
Summary: We need a new LLVM intrinsic to implement MS _AddressOfReturnAddress builtin on 64-bit Windows.
Reviewers: majnemer, rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25293
llvm-svn: 284061
Branch folder removes implicit defs if they are the only non-branching
instructions in a block, and the branches do not use the defined registers.
The problem is that in some cases these implicit defs are required for
the liveness information to be correct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25478
llvm-svn: 284036
Add a number of helper functions to match scalar or vector equivalent constant/splat values to allow most of the combine patterns to be used by vectors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25374
llvm-svn: 284015
This combiner breaks debug experience and should not be run when optimizations are disabled.
For example:
int main() {
int j = 0;
j += 2;
if (j == 2)
return 0;
return 5;
}
When debugging this code compiled in /O0, it should be valid to break at line "j+=2;" and edit the value of j. It should change the return value of the function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19268
llvm-svn: 284014
Fixes a crash in the build_vector -> vector_shuffle combine
when the first vector input is twice as wide as the output,
and the second input vector is even wider.
llvm-svn: 283953
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well. Issue was worklist/scheduling/taildup issue in layout.
Issue from 2nd rollback fixed, with 2 additional tests. Issue was
tail merging/loop info/tail-duplication causing issue with loops that share
a header block.
Issue with early tail-duplication of blocks that branch to a fallthrough
predecessor fixed with test case: tail-dup-branch-to-fallthrough.ll
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283934
The non-obvious motivation for adding this fold (which already happens in InstCombine)
is that we want to canonicalize IR towards select instructions and canonicalize DAG
nodes towards boolean math. So we need to recreate some folds in the DAG to handle that
change in direction.
An interesting implementation difference for cases like this is that InstCombine
generally works top-down while the DAG goes bottom-up. That means we need to detect
different patterns. In this case, the SimplifyDemandedBits fold prevents us from
performing a zext to sext fold that would then be recognized as a negation of a sext.
llvm-svn: 283900
This reverts commit r283842.
test/CodeGen/X86/tail-dup-repeat.ll causes and llc crash with our
internal testing. I'll share a link with you.
llvm-svn: 283857
This changes MachineRegisterInfo to be initializes after parsing all
instructions. This is in preparation for upcoming commits that allow the
register class specification on the operand or deduce them from the
MCInstrDesc.
This commit removes the unused feature of having nonsequential register
numbers. This was confusing anyway as the vreg numbers would be
different after parsing when you had "holes" in your numbering.
This patch also introduces the concept of an incomplete virtual
register. An incomplete virtual register may be used during .mir parsing
to construct MachineOperands without knowing the exact register class
(or register bank) yet.
NFC except for some error messages.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22397
llvm-svn: 283848
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well. Issue was worklist/scheduling/taildup issue in layout.
Issue from 2nd rollback fixed, with 2 additional tests. Issue was
tail merging/loop info/tail-duplication causing issue with loops that share
a header block.
Issue with early tail-duplication of blocks that branch to a fallthrough
predecessor fixed with test case: tail-dup-branch-to-fallthrough.ll
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283842
Summary:
Previously, when allocating unspillable live ranges, we would never
attempt to split. We would always bail out and try last ditch graph
recoloring.
This patch changes this by attempting to split all live intervals before
performing recoloring.
This fixes LLVM bug PR14879.
I can't add test cases for any backends other than AVR because none of
them have small enough register classes to trigger the bug.
Reviewers: qcolombet
Subscribers: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25070
llvm-svn: 283838
Add integer expansion for FLT_ROUNDS_ for targets where i32 is not a legal
type.
Patch by Edward Jones, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24459
llvm-svn: 283797
Masked-expand-load node represents load operation that loads a variable amount of elements from memory according to amount of "true" bits in the mask and expands the loaded elements according to their position in the mask vector.
Right now, the node is used in intrinsics for VEXPAND* instructions.
The work is done towards implementation of masked.expandload and masked.compressstore intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25322
llvm-svn: 283694
The core of the change is supposed to be NFC, however it also fixes
what I believe was an undefined behavior when calling:
va_start(ValueArgs, Desc);
with Desc being a StringRef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25342
llvm-svn: 283671
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well. Issue was worklist/scheduling/taildup issue in layout.
Issue from 2nd rollback fixed, with 2 additional tests. Issue was
tail merging/loop info/tail-duplication causing issue with loops that share
a header block.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283619
The code used llvm basic block predecessors to decided where to insert phi
nodes. Instruction selection can and will liberally insert new machine basic
block predecessors. There is not a guaranteed one-to-one mapping from pred.
llvm basic blocks and machine basic blocks.
Therefore the current approach does not work as it assumes we can mark
predecessor machine basic block as needing a copy, and needs to know the set of
all predecessor machine basic blocks to decide when to insert phis.
Instead of computing the swifterror vregs as we select instructions, propagate
them at the end of instruction selection when the MBB CFG is complete.
When an instruction needs a swifterror vreg and we don't know the value yet,
generate a new vreg and remember this "upward exposed" use, and reconcile this
at the end of instruction selection.
This will only happen if the target supports promoting swifterror parameters to
registers and the swifterror attribute is used.
rdar://28300923
llvm-svn: 283617
Summary: -fsample-profile needs discriminator, which will not be added if built with -g0. This patch makes sure the discriminator is added for sample-profile at -g0. A followup patch will be send out to update clang tests.
Reviewers: davidxl, dblaikie, echristo, dnovillo
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, probinson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25132
llvm-svn: 283565
Summary:
These nodes need legalization for 3-element vectors. This commit
handles the legalization and adds tests for zext and sext.
This fixes PR30614.
Reviewers: RKSimon, srhines
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25268
llvm-svn: 283496
This generalizes the build_vector -> vector_shuffle combine to support any
number of inputs. The idea is to create a binary tree of shuffles, where
the first layer performs pairwise shuffles of the input vectors placing each
input element into the correct lane, and the rest of the tree blends these
shuffles together.
This doesn't try to be smart and create any sort of "optimal" shuffles.
The assumption is that even a "poor" shuffle sequence is better than extracting
and inserting the elements one by one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24683
llvm-svn: 283480
If we don't truncate, LLVM asserts when the label difference doesn't fit
in a 16 bit field. This patch truncates two kinds of data: trailing null
terminated names in symbol records, and inline line tables. The inline
line table test that I have is too large (many MB), so I'm not checking
it in.
Hopefully fixes PR28264.
llvm-svn: 283403
Summary: This makes a change to the state used to maintain visited information for depth first iterator. We know assume a method "completed(...)" which is called after all children of a node have been visited. In all existing cases, this method does nothing so this patch has no functional changes. It will however allow a client to distinguish back from cross edges in a DFS tree.
Reviewers: nadav, mehdi_amini, dberlin
Subscribers: MatzeB, mzolotukhin, twoh, freik, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25191
llvm-svn: 283391
This allows LLVM to describe locations of aggregate variables that have
been split by SROA.
Fixes PR29141
Reviewers: amccarth, majnemer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25253
llvm-svn: 283388
Previously we would give up when we saw the bitpiece DWARF expression
and print "[complex expression]" when actually we handled bitpiece
expressions outside the loop.
llvm-svn: 283355
Summary: Both computeKnownBits and ComputeNumSignBits can now do a simple
look-through of EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT. It will compute the result based
on the known bits (or known sign bits) for the vector that the element
is extracted from.
Reviewers: bogner, tstellarAMD, mkuper
Subscribers: wdng, RKSimon, jyknight, llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25007
llvm-svn: 283347
This reverts commit 062ace9764953e9769142c1099281a345f9b6bdc.
Issue with loop info and block removal revealed by polly.
I have a fix for this issue already in another patch, I'll re-roll this
together with that fix, and a test case.
llvm-svn: 283292
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283274
The motivation for the change is that we can't have pseudo-global settings for
codegen living in TargetOptions because that doesn't work with LTO.
Ideally, these reciprocal attributes will be moved to the instruction-level via
FMF, metadata, or something else. But making them function attributes is at least
an improvement over the current state.
The ingredients of this patch are:
Remove the reciprocal estimate command-line debug option.
Add TargetRecip to TargetLowering.
Remove TargetRecip from TargetOptions.
Clean up the TargetRecip implementation to work with this new scheme.
Set the default reciprocal settings in TargetLoweringBase (everything is off).
Update the PowerPC defaults, users, and tests.
Update the x86 defaults, users, and tests.
Note that if this patch needs to be reverted, the related clang patch checked in
at r283251 should be reverted too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24816
llvm-svn: 283252
The SMULO/UMULO DAG nodes, when not directly supported by the target,
expand to a multiplication twice as wide. In case that the resulting
type is not legal, an __mul?i3 intrinsic is used. Since the type is
not legal, the legalizer cannot directly call the intrinsic with
the wide arguments; instead, it "pre-lowers" them by splitting them
in halves.
The "pre-lowering" code in essence made assumptions about
the calling convention, specifically that i(N*2) values will be
split into two iN values and passed in consecutive registers in
little-endian order. This, naturally, breaks on a big-endian system,
such as our OR1K out-of-tree backend.
Thanks to James Miller <james@aatch.net> for help in debugging.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25223
llvm-svn: 283203
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
llvm-svn: 283164
Summary:
Previously, when allocating unspillable live ranges, we would never
attempt to split. We would always bail out and try last ditch graph
recoloring.
This patch changes this by attempting to split all live intervals before
performing recoloring.
This fixes LLVM bug PR14879.
I can't add test cases for any backends other than AVR because none of
them have small enough register classes to trigger the bug.
Reviewers: qcolombet
Subscribers: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25070
llvm-svn: 282852
Instead of producing a mapping for all the operands, we only generate a
mapping for the definition. Indeed, the other operands are not
constrained by the instruction and thus, we should leave the choice to
the actual definition to do the right thing.
In pratice this is almost NFC, but with one advantage. We will have only
one instance of OperandsMapping for each copy and phi that map to one
register bank instead of one different instance for each different
number of operands for each copy and phi.
llvm-svn: 282756
The VS debugger doesn't appear to understand the 0x68 or 0x69 type
indices, which were probably intended for use on a platform where a C
'int' is 8 bits. So, use the character types instead. Clang was already
using the character types because '[u]int8_t' is usually defined in
terms of 'char'.
See the Rust issue for screenshots of what VS does:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/36646
Fixes PR30552
llvm-svn: 282739
This is a step toward statically allocate InstructionMapping. Like the
previous few commits, the goal is to move toward a TableGen'ed like
structure with no dynamic allocation at all.
This should already improve compile time by getting rid of a bunch of
memmove of SmallVectors.
llvm-svn: 282643
LiveDebugVariables doesn't propagate DBG_VALUEs accross basic block
boundaries any more; this functionality was split into LiveDebugValues.
We can thus drop the now dead references to LexicalScopes from LiveDebugVariables.
llvm-svn: 282638
Normally, if conversion would add implicit uses for redefined registers,
e.g. R0<def> = add_if ..., R0<imp-use>. However, if only subregisters of
R0 are known to be live but not R0 itself, such implicit uses will not be
added, causing prior definitions of such subregisters and R0 itself to
become dead.
llvm-svn: 282626
This addresses PR26055 LiveDebugValues is very slow.
Contrary to the old LiveDebugVariables pass LiveDebugValues currently
doesn't look at the lexical scopes before inserting a DBG_VALUE
intrinsic. This means that we often propagate DBG_VALUEs much further
down than necessary. This is especially noticeable in large C++
functions with many inlined method calls that all use the same
"this"-pointer.
For example, in the following code it makes no sense to propagate the
inlined variable a from the first inlined call to f() into any of the
subsequent basic blocks, because the variable will always be out of
scope:
void sink(int a);
void __attribute((always_inline)) f(int a) { sink(a); }
void foo(int i) {
f(i);
if (i)
f(i);
f(i);
}
This patch reuses the LexicalScopes infrastructure we have for
LiveDebugVariables to take this into account.
The effect on compile time and memory consumption is quite noticeable:
I tested a benchmark that is a large C++ source with an enormous
amount of inlined "this"-pointers that would previously eat >24GiB
(most of them for DBG_VALUE intrinsics) and whose compile time was
dominated by LiveDebugValues. With this patch applied the memory
consumption is 1GiB and 1.7% of the time is spent in LiveDebugValues.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24994
Thanks to Daniel Berlin and Keith Walker for reviewing!
llvm-svn: 282611
Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search which only checks for parallel stores
through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner as the separation of
non-interfering loads/stores from the store-merging logic.
Whem merging stores, search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited. This improves the quality of the
output SelectionDAG and generally the output CodeGen (with some
exceptions).
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the the chain aggregation in the merged stores across
code paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seemed sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable. Some tests relying on the order were changed to use
volatile memory operations
Noteworthy tests:
CodeGen/AArch64/argument-blocks.ll -
It's not entirely clear what the test_varargs_stackalign test is
supposed to be asserting, but the new code looks right.
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-memset-inline.lli -
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-stur.ll -
CodeGen/ARM/memset-inline.ll -
The backend now generates *worse* code due to store merging
succeeding, as we do do a 16-byte constant-zero store efficiently.
CodeGen/AArch64/merge-store.ll -
Improved, but there still seems to be an extraneous vector insert
from an element to itself?
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll -
Worse code emitted in this case, due to the improved store->load
forwarding.
CodeGen/X86/dag-merge-fast-accesses.ll -
CodeGen/X86/MergeConsecutiveStores.ll -
CodeGen/X86/stores-merging.ll -
CodeGen/Mips/load-store-left-right.ll -
Restored correct merging of non-aligned stores
CodeGen/AMDGPU/promote-alloca-stored-pointer-value.ll -
Improved. Correctly merges buffer_store_dword calls
CodeGen/AMDGPU/si-triv-disjoint-mem-access.ll -
Improved. Sidesteps loading a stored value and merges two stores
CodeGen/X86/pr18023.ll -
This test has been removed, as it was asserting incorrect
behavior. Non-volatile stores *CAN* be moved past volatile loads,
and now are.
CodeGen/X86/vector-idiv.ll -
CodeGen/X86/vector-lzcnt-128.ll -
It's basically impossible to tell what these tests are actually
testing. But, looks like the code got better due to the memory
operations being recognized as non-aliasing.
CodeGen/X86/win32-eh.ll -
Both loads of the securitycookie are now merged.
CodeGen/AMDGPU/vgpr-spill-emergency-stack-slot-compute.ll -
This test appears to work but no longer exhibits the spill
behavior.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, nhaehnle, jyknight
Subscribers: wdng, nhaehnle, nemanjai, arsenm, weimingz, niravd, RKSimon, aemerson, qcolombet, resistor, tstellarAMD, t.p.northover, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14834
llvm-svn: 282600
This check currently doesn't seem to do anything useful on any in-tree target:
On non-x86, it always evaluates to false, so we never hit the code path that
creates the shuffle with zero.
On x86, it just forwards to isShuffleMaskLegal(), which is a reasonable thing to
query in general, but doesn't make sense if only restricted to zero blends.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24625
llvm-svn: 282567
Summary:
The current implementation of isConstantPhysReg() checks for defs of
physical registers to determine if they are constant. Some
architectures (e.g. AArch64 XZR/WZR) have registers that are constant
and may be used as destinations to indicate the generated value is
discarded, preventing isConstantPhysReg() from returning true. This
change adds a TargetRegisterInfo hook that overrides the no defs check
for cases such as this.
Reviewers: MatzeB, qcolombet, t.p.northover, jmolloy
Subscribers: junbuml, aemerson, mcrosier, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24570
llvm-svn: 282543
Variables are sometimes missing their debug location information in
blocks in which the variables should be available. This would occur
when one or more predecessor blocks had not yet been visited by the
routine which propagated the information from predecessor blocks.
This is addressed by only considering predecessor blocks which have
already been visited.
The solution to this problem was suggested by Daniel Berlin on the
LLVM developer mailing list.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24927
llvm-svn: 282506
Many high-performance processors have a dedicated branch predictor for
indirect branches, commonly used with jump tables. As sophisticated as such
branch predictors are, they tend to have well defined limits beyond which
their effectiveness is hampered or even nullified. One such limit is the
number of possible destinations for a given indirect branches that such
branch predictors can handle.
This patch considers a limit that a target may set to the number of
destination addresses in a jump table.
Patch by: Evandro Menezes <e.menezes@samsung.com>, Aditya Kumar
<aditya.k7@samsung.com>, Sebastian Pop <s.pop@samsung.com>.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21940
llvm-svn: 282412
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
This recommit contains fixes for a nasty bug related to fast-isel fallback - because
fast-isel doesn't know about this optimization, if it runs and emits references to
a string that we inline (because fast-isel fell back to SDAG) we will end up
with an inlined string and also an out-of-line string, and we won't emit the
out-of-line string, causing backend failures.
It also contains fixes for emitting .text relocations which made the sanitizer
bots unhappy.
llvm-svn: 282387
This is a step toward statically allocate ValueMapping. Like the
previous few commits, the goal is to move toward a TableGen'ed like
structure with no dynamic allocation at all.
llvm-svn: 282324
Previously we were using the address of the unique instance of a partial
mapping in the related map to access this instance. However, when the
map grows, the whole set of instances may be moved elsewhere and the
previous addresses are not valid anymore.
Instead, keep the address of the unique heap allocated instance of a
partial mapping.
Note: I did not see any actual bugs for that problem as the number of
partial mappings dynamically allocated is small (<= 4).
llvm-svn: 282323
As the development of GlobalISel move forward, this statistic should
strictly decrease until it reaches zero. At this point, it would mean
GlobalISel can replace SDISel (at least on the tested inputs :P).
llvm-svn: 282275
Collect statistics about the number of partial mappings dynamically
allocated and accessed. Ultimately, when the whole TableGen
infrastructure is set, those numbers should be zero.
llvm-svn: 282274
In the verify method of the ValueMapping class we used to check that the
mapping exactly matches the bits of the input value. This is problematic
for statically allocated mappings because we would need a different
mapping for each different size of the value that maps on one
instruction. For instance, with such scheme, we would need a different
mapping for a value of size 1, 5, 23 whereas they all end up on a 32-bit
wide instruction.
Therefore, change the verifier to check that the meaningful bits are
covered by the mapping instead of matching them.
llvm-svn: 282214
This is another step toward TableGen'ed like structures. The BreakDown of
the mapping of the value will be statically computed by TableGen, thus
we only have to point to the right entry in the table instead of
dynamically allocate the mapping for each instruction.
We still support the dynamic allocation through a factory of
PartialMapping to ease the bring-up of the targets while the TableGen
backend is not available.
llvm-svn: 282213
Currently all nodes get added to the NextSU list when they are released,
so any candidate must be in that list, making the heuristic ineffective.
Remove it for now, we can add it back later in a working fashion if
necessary.
llvm-svn: 282200
According to MSDN (see the PR), functions which don't touch any callee-saved
registers (including %rsp) don't need any unwind info.
This patch makes LLVM not emit unwind info for such functions, to save
binary size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24748
llvm-svn: 282185
This commit is basically the first step toward what will
RegisterBankInfo look when it gets TableGen'ed.
It introduces a XXXGenRegisterBankInfo.def file that is what TableGen
will issue at some point. Moreover, the RegBanks field in
RegisterBankInfo changed to reflect the static (compile time) aspect of
the information.
llvm-svn: 282131
When initializing an instance of OperandsMapper, instead of using
SmallVector::resize followed by std::fill, use the function that
directly does that in SmallVector.
llvm-svn: 282130
We still don't really have an equivalent of "AssertXExt" in DAG, so we don't
exploit the guarantees on the receiving side yet, but this should produce
conservatively correct code on iOS ABIs.
llvm-svn: 282069
The only implementation that exists immediately looks it up anyway, and the
information is needed to handle various parameter attributes (stored on the
function itself).
llvm-svn: 282068
TargetMachine::getNameWithPrefix and inline the result into the singular
caller." and "Remove more guts of TargetMachine::getNameWithPrefix and
migrate one check to the TLOF mach-o version." temporarily until I can
get the whole call migrated out of the TargetMachine as we could hit
places where TLOF isn't valid.
This reverts commits r281981 and r281983.
llvm-svn: 282028
This check caused us to skip adding layout information for calls to
alloca in sspreq/sspstrong mode. We check properly for sspstrong later
on (and add the correct layout info when doing so), so removing this
shouldn't hurt.
No test is included, since testing this using lit seems to require
checking for exact offsets in asm, which is something that the lit tests
for this avoid. If someone cares deeply, I'm happy to write a unittest
or something to cover this, but that feels like overkill.
Patch by Daniel Micay.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22714
llvm-svn: 282022
Previously, such section would be marked as SHT_PROGBITS which
makes it impossible to use an initialized C variable declaration
to emit an (allocated) ELF note. The new behavior is also consistent
with ELF assembly parser.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24692
llvm-svn: 282010
CodeView has an S_COMPILE3 record to identify the compiler and source language of the compiland. This record comes first in the debug$S section for the compiland. The debuggers rely on this record to know the source language of the code.
There was a little test fallout from introducing a new record into the symbols subsection.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24317
llvm-svn: 281990
This should match the existing behaviour for passing complicated struct and
array types, in particular HFAs come through like that from Clang.
For C & C++ we still need to somehow support all the weird ABI flags, or at
least those that are present in the IR (signext, byval, ...), and stack-based
parameter passing.
llvm-svn: 281977
It is legal to merge instructions with different undef flags; However we
must drop the undef flag from the merged instruction if it isn't present
everywhere.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR30199
llvm-svn: 281957
The OperandsMapper class is used heavy in RegBankSelect and each
instantiation triggered a heap allocation for the array of operands.
Instead, use a SmallVector with a big enough size such that most of the
cases do not have to use dynamically allocated memory.
This improves the compile time of the RegBankSelect pass.
llvm-svn: 281916
Machine programs need a definition of each vreg before reaching a use
(the definition may come from an IMPLICIT_DEF instruction). This class
of errors is not detected by the MachineVerifier because of efficiency
concerns. LiveRangeCalc used to report these problems, make it do that
again (followup to r279625).
Also use report_fatal_error() instead of llvm_unreachable() as the error
reporting is only present in asserts build anyway.
llvm-svn: 281914
This is a port of XRay to ARM 32-bit, without Thumb support yet. The XRay instrumentation support is moving up to AsmPrinter.
This is one of 3 commits to different repositories of XRay ARM port. The other 2 are:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23932 (Clang test)
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23933 (compiler-rt)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23931
llvm-svn: 281878
With D24253 we can now use SelectionDAG::SignBitIsZero with vector operations.
This patch uses SelectionDAG::SignBitIsZero to recognise that a zero sign bit means that we can use a sitofp instead of a uitofp (which is not directly support on pre-AVX512 hardware).
While AVX512 does provide support for uitofp, the conversion to sitofp should not cause any regressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24343
llvm-svn: 281852
The ValueSymbolTable is used to detect name conflict and rename
instructions automatically. This is not needed when the value
names are automatically discarded by the LLVMContext.
No functional change intended, just saving a little bit of memory.
This is a recommit of r281806 after fixing the accessor to return
a pointer instead of a reference and updating all the call-sites.
llvm-svn: 281813
This is a fix for PR30318.
Clang may generate IR where an alloca is already live when entering a
BB with lifetime.start. In this case, conservatively extend the
alloca lifetime all the way back to the block entry.
llvm-svn: 281784
When trying to recolor a register we may split live-ranges in the
process. When we create new live-ranges we will have to process them,
but when we move a register from Assign to Split, the allocation is not
changed until the whole recoloring session is successful.
Therefore, only push the live-ranges that changed from Assign to
Split when the recoloring is successful.
Same as the previous commit, I was not able to produce a test case that
reproduce the problem with in-tree targets.
Note: The bug has been here since the recoloring scheme has been added
back in r200883 (Feb 2014).
llvm-svn: 281783
When last chance recoloring is used, the list of NewVRegs may not be
empty when calling selectOrSplitImpl. Indeed, another coloring may have
taken place with splitting/spilling in the same recoloring session.
Relax an assertion to take this into account and adapt a condition to
act as if the NewVRegs were local to this selectOrSplitImpl instance.
Unfortunately I am unable to produce a test case for this, I was only
able to reproduce the conditions on an out-of-tree target.
llvm-svn: 281782
When a phi node is finally lowered to a machine instruction it is
important that the lowered "load" instruction is placed before the
associated DEBUG_VALUE entry describing the value loaded.
Renamed the existing SkipPHIsAndLabels to SkipPHIsLabelsAndDebug to
more fully describe that it also skips debug entries. Then used the
"new" function SkipPHIsAndLabels when the debug information should not
be skipped when placing the lowered "load" instructions so that it is
placed before the debug entries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23760
llvm-svn: 281727
It was only really there as a sentinel when instructions had to have precisely
one type. Now that registers are typed, each register really has to have a type
that is sized.
llvm-svn: 281599
Otherwise everything that needs to work out what size they are has to keep a
DataLayout handy, which is a bit silly and very annoying.
llvm-svn: 281597
Summary:
It was previously not possible for tools to use solely the stackmap
information emitted to reconstruct the return addresses of callsites in
the map, which is necessary to use the information to walk a stack. This
patch adds per-function callsite counts when emitting the stackmap
section in order to resolve the problem. Note that this slightly alters
the stackmap format, so external tools parsing these maps will need to
be updated.
**Problem Details:**
Records only store their offset from the beginning of the function they
belong to. While these records and the functions are output in program
order, it is not possible to determine where the end of one function's
records are without the callsite count when processing the records to
compute return addresses.
Patch by Kavon Farvardin!
Reviewers: atrick, ributzka, sanjoy
Subscribers: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23487
llvm-svn: 281532
in order to make sure that its TargetMachine constructor is
registered.
This allows us to run the PEI machine pass with MIR input
(see PR30324).
llvm-svn: 281474
Summary: When expanding mul in type legalization make sure the type for shift amount can actually fit the value. This fixes PR30354 https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30354.
Reviewers: hfinkel, majnemer, RKSimon
Subscribers: RKSimon, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24478
llvm-svn: 281403
This allows us to, in some cases, create a vector_shuffle out of a build_vector, when
the inputs to the build are extract_elements from two different vectors, at least one
of which is wider than the output. (E.g. a <8 x i16> being constructed out of
elements from a <16 x i16> and a <8 x i16>).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24491
llvm-svn: 281402
To avoid assertion, we must ensure that the inner shift constant is within range before calling ConstantSDNode::getZExtValue(). We already know that the outer shift constant is in range.
Followup to D23007
llvm-svn: 281362
This patch reverses the edge from DIGlobalVariable to GlobalVariable.
This will allow us to more easily preserve debug info metadata when
manipulating global variables.
Fixes PR30362. A program for upgrading test cases is attached to that
bug.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20147
llvm-svn: 281284
This should make it easier to add cases that we currently don't cover,
like supporting more kinds of type mismatches and more than 2 input vectors.
llvm-svn: 281283
Summary: If consecutive select instructions are lowered separately in CGP, it will introduce redundant condition check and branches that cannot be removed by later optimization phases. This patch lowers all consecutive select instructions at the same to to avoid inefficent code as demonstrated in https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=29095
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: vsk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24147
llvm-svn: 281252
Unlike SDag, we use a separate G_GEP instruction (much simplified, only taking
a single byte offset) to preserve the pointer type information through
selection.
llvm-svn: 281205
Some generic instructions have multiple types. While in theory these always be
discovered by inspecting the single definition of each generic vreg, in
practice those definitions won't always be local and traipsing through a big
function to find them will not be fun.
So this changes MIRPrinter to print out the type of uses as well as defs, if
they're known to be different or not known to be the same.
On the parsing side, we're a little more flexible: provided each register is
given a type in at least one place it's mentioned (and all types are
consistent) we accept the MIR. This doesn't introduce ambiguity but makes
writing tests manually a bit less painful.
llvm-svn: 281204
Now that MachineBasicBlock::reverse_instr_iterator knows when it's at
the end (since r281168 and r281170), implement
MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator directly on top of an
ilist::reverse_iterator by adding an IsReverse template parameter to
MachineInstrBundleIterator. This replaces another hard-to-reason-about
use of std::reverse_iterator on list iterators, matching the changes for
ilist::reverse_iterator from r280032 (see the "out of scope" section at
the end of that commit message). MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator
now has a handle to the current node and has obvious invalidation
semantics.
r280032 has a more detailed explanation of how list-style reverse
iterators (invalidated when the pointed-at node is deleted) are
different from vector-style reverse iterators like std::reverse_iterator
(invalidated on every operation). A great motivating example is this
commit's changes to lib/CodeGen/DeadMachineInstructionElim.cpp.
Note: If your out-of-tree backend deletes instructions while iterating
on a MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator or converts between
MachineBasicBlock::iterator and MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator,
you'll need to update your code in similar ways to r280032. The
following table might help:
[Old] ==> [New]
delete &*RI, RE = end() delete &*RI++
RI->erase(), RE = end() RI++->erase()
reverse_iterator(I) std::prev(I).getReverse()
reverse_iterator(I) ++I.getReverse()
--reverse_iterator(I) I.getReverse()
reverse_iterator(std::next(I)) I.getReverse()
RI.base() std::prev(RI).getReverse()
RI.base() ++RI.getReverse()
--RI.base() RI.getReverse()
std::next(RI).base() RI.getReverse()
(For more details, have a look at r280032.)
llvm-svn: 281172
This is a prep commit before fixing MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator
invalidation semantics, ala r281167 for ilist::reverse_iterator. This
changes MachineBasicBlock::Instructions to track which node is the
sentinel regardless of LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS.
There's almost no functionality change (aside from ABI). However, in
the rare configuration:
#if !defined(NDEBUG) && !defined(LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS)
the isKnownSentinel() assertions in ilist_iterator<>::operator* suddenly
have teeth for MachineInstr. If these assertions start firing for your
out-of-tree backend, have a look at the suggestions in the commit
message for r279314, and at some of the commits leading up to it that
avoid dereferencing the end() iterator.
llvm-svn: 281168
Summary:
An IR load can be invariant, dereferenceable, neither, or both. But
currently, MI's notion of invariance is IR-invariant &&
IR-dereferenceable.
This patch splits up the notions of invariance and dereferenceability at
the MI level. It's NFC, so adds some probably-unnecessary
"is-dereferenceable" checks, which we can remove later if desired.
Reviewers: chandlerc, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23371
llvm-svn: 281151
Summary:
I want to separate out the notions of invariance and dereferenceability
at the MI level, so that they correspond to the equivalent concepts at
the IR level. (Currently an MI load is MI-invariant iff it's
IR-invariant and IR-dereferenceable.)
First step is renaming this function.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: MatzeB, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23370
llvm-svn: 281125
Move the target specific setup into the target specific lowering setup. As
pointed out by Anton, the initial change was moving this too high up the stack
resulting in a violation of the layering (the target generic code path setup
target specific bits). Sink this into the ARM specific setup. NFC.
llvm-svn: 281088
This writes the full sequence of type records described in
Yaml to the TPI stream of the PDB file.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24316
llvm-svn: 281063
This can happen when the frontend knows the debug info will be emitted
somewhere else. Usually this happens for dynamic classes with out of
line constructors or key functions, but it can also happen when modules
are enabled.
llvm-svn: 281060
These instructions were only necessary when type information was stored in the
MachineInstr (because only generic MachineInstrs possessed a type). Now that
it's in MachineRegisterInfo, COPY and PHI work fine.
llvm-svn: 281037