Add a pass to remove redundant S_OR_B64 instructions enabling lanes in
the exec. If two SI_END_CF (lowered as S_OR_B64) come together without any
vector instructions between them we can only keep outer SI_END_CF, given
that CFG is structured and exec bits of the outer end statement are always
not less than exec bit of the inner one.
This needs to be done before the RA to eliminate saved exec bits registers
but after register coalescer to have no vector registers copies in between
of different end cf statements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35967
llvm-svn: 309762
The src0 register must match src1 or src2, but if these
were undefined they could end up using different implicit_defed
virtual registers. Force these to use one undef vreg or pick the
defined other register.
Also fixes producing invalid nodes without the right number of
inputs when src2 is undef.
llvm-svn: 309743
Includes a hack to fix the type selected for
the GlobalAddress of the function, which will be
fixed by changing the default datalayout to use
generic pointers for 0.
llvm-svn: 309732
Also refine the flat check to respect flat-for-global feature,
and constant fallback should check global handling, not
specifically MUBUF.
llvm-svn: 309471
This allows handling of a lot more of the interesting
cases in Blender. Most of the large functions unlikely
to be inlined have this pattern.
This is a special case for what clang emits for OpenCL 3
element vectors. Annoyingly, these are emitted as
<3 x elt>* pointers, but accessed as <4 x elt>* operations.
This also needs to handle cases where a struct containing
a single vector is used.
llvm-svn: 309419
It is better to return arguments directly in registers
if we are making a call rather than introducing expensive
stack usage. In one of sample compile from one of
Blender's many kernel variants, this fires on about
~20 different functions. Future improvements may be to
recognize simple cases where the pointer is indexing a small
array. This also fails when the store to the out argument
is in a separate block from the return, which happens in
a few of the Blender functions. This should also probably
be using MemorySSA which might help with that.
I'm not sure this is correct as a FunctionPass, but
MemoryDependenceAnalysis seems to not work with
a ModulePass.
I'm also not sure where it should run.I think it should
run before DeadArgumentElimination, so maybe either
EP_CGSCCOptimizerLate or EP_ScalarOptimizerLate.
llvm-svn: 309416
We need to pass something to functions for this to work.
It isn't derivable just from the kernarg segment pointer
because the implicit arguments are placed after the
kernel arguments.
Also fixes missing test for the intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 309398
Currently SI_IF results in a s_and_saveexec_b64 followed by s_xor_b64.
The xor is used to extract only the changed bits. In case of a simple
if region where the only use of that value is in the SI_END_CF to
restore the old exec mask, we can omit the xor and perform an or of
the exec mask with the original exec value saved by the
s_and_saveexec_b64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35861
llvm-svn: 309185
Check the actual memory type stored and not the extended value size
when considering if truncated store merge is worthwhile.
Reviewers: efriedma, RKSimon, spatel, jyknight
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35623
llvm-svn: 308833
On AMDGPU SGPR spills are really spilled to another register.
The spiller creates the spills to new frame index objects,
which is used as a placeholder.
This will eventually be replaced with a reference to a position
in a VGPR to write to and the frame index deleted. It is
most likely not a real stack location that can be shared
with another stack object.
This is a problem when StackSlotColoring decides it should
combine a frame index used for a normal VGPR spill with
a real stack location and a frame index used for an SGPR.
Add an ID field so that StackSlotColoring has a way
of knowing the different frame index types are
incompatible.
llvm-svn: 308673
As an approximation of the existing handling to avoid
regressions. Fixes using too many registers with calls
on subtargets with the SGPR allocation bug.
llvm-svn: 308326
Introduce pseudo-registers for registers needed for stack
access, which are replaced during finalizeLowering.
Note these pseudo-registers are currently only used for the
used register location, and not for determining their
input argument register.
This is better because it avoids the need to try to predict
whether a call will be emitted from the IR, and also
detects stack objects introduced by legalization.
Test changes are from the HasStackObjects check being more
accurate since stack objects introduced during legalization
are now known.
llvm-svn: 308325
This wasn't necessary before since they are always enabled
for kernels, but this is necessary if they need to be
forwarded to a callable function.
llvm-svn: 308226
Summary:
Previously, CodeGen checked first src operand type to determine if omod is supported by instruction. This isn't correct for some instructions: e.g. V_CMP_EQ_F32 has floating-point src operands but desn't support omod.
Changed .td files to check if dst operand instead of src operand.
Reviewers: arsenm, vpykhtin
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35350
llvm-svn: 308179
The type needs to be casted back to the original argument type.
Fixes an assert that for some reason is only run when
using -debug.
Includes an additional combine to avoid test regressions
from having conversions mixed with multiple Assert[SZ]ext
nodes. On subtargets where i16 is legal, this was producing an i32
register with an i16 AssertZExt, truncated to i16 with another i8
AssertZExt.
t2: i32,ch = CopyFromReg t0, Register:i32 %vreg0
t3: i16 = truncate t2
t5: i16 = AssertZext t3, ValueType:ch:i8
t6: i8 = truncate t5
t7: i32 = zero_extend t6
llvm-svn: 308082
In moveToVALU(), move to vector ALU is performed, all instrs in
the use chain will be visited. We do not want the same node to be
pushed to the visit worklist more than once.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34726
llvm-svn: 308039
Since GFX9 supports denorm modes for v_min_f32/v_max_f32 that
is possible to further optimize fcanonicalize and remove it
if applied to min/max given their operands are known not to be
an sNaN or that sNaNs are not supported.
Additionally we can remove fcanonicalize if denorms are supported
for the VT and we know that its argument is never a NaN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35335
llvm-svn: 307976
We are using multiplication by 1.0 to flush denormals and quiet sNaNs.
That is possible to omit this multiplication if source of the
fcanonicalize instruction is known to be flushed/quieted, i.e.
if it comes from another instruction known to do the normalization
and we are using IEEE mode to quiet sNaNs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35218
llvm-svn: 307848
OpenCL 2.0 introduces the notion of memory scopes in atomic operations to
global and local memory. These scopes restrict how synchronization is
achieved, which can result in improved performance.
This change extends existing notion of synchronization scopes in LLVM to
support arbitrary scopes expressed as target-specific strings, in addition to
the already defined scopes (single thread, system).
The LLVM IR and MIR syntax for expressing synchronization scopes has changed
to use *syncscope("<scope>")*, where <scope> can be "singlethread" (this
replaces *singlethread* keyword), or a target-specific name. As before, if
the scope is not specified, it defaults to CrossThread/System scope.
Implementation details:
- Mapping from synchronization scope name/string to synchronization scope id
is stored in LLVM context;
- CrossThread/System and SingleThread scopes are pre-defined to efficiently
check for known scopes without comparing strings;
- Synchronization scope names are stored in SYNC_SCOPE_NAMES_BLOCK in
the bitcode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21723
llvm-svn: 307722
Adds loop expansions for known-size and unknown-sized memcpy calls, allowing the
target to provide the operand types through TTI callbacks. The default values
for the TTI callbacks use int8 operand types and matches the existing behaviour
if they aren't overridden by the target.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32536
llvm-svn: 307346
Regardless of relaxation options such as -cl-fast-relaxed-math
we are producing rather long code for fdiv via amdgcn_fdiv_fast
intrinsic. This intrinsic is used to replace fdiv with 2.5ulp
metadata and does not handle denormals, thus believed to be fast.
An fdiv instruction can also have fast math flag either by itself
or together with fpmath metadata. Clang used with a relaxation flag
always produces both metadata and fast flag:
%div = fdiv fast float %v, %0, !fpmath !12!12 = !{float 2.500000e+00}
Current implementation ignores fast flag and favors metadata. An
instruction with just fast flag would be lowered to a fastest rcp +
mul, but that never happen on practice because of described mutual
clang and BE behavior.
This change allows an "fdiv fast" to be always lowered as rcp + mul.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34844
llvm-svn: 307308
Summary:
During remat, some subranges might end up having invalid segments which caused problems for later
coalescing.
Added in a check to remove segments that are invalidated as part of the remat.
See http://llvm.org/PR33524
Subscribers: MatzeB, qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34391
llvm-svn: 307247
This is a short-term fix for PR33650 aimed to get the modules build bots green again.
Remove all the places where we use the LLVM_YAML_IS_(FLOW_)?SEQUENCE_VECTOR
macros to try to locally specialize a global template for a global type. That's
not how C++ works.
Instead, we now centrally define how to format vectors of fundamental types and
of string (std::string and StringRef). We use flow formatting for the former
cases, since that's the obvious right thing to do; in the latter case, it's
less clear what the right choice is, but flow formatting is really bad for some
cases (due to very long strings), so we pick block formatting. (Many of the
cases that were using flow formatting for strings are improved by this change.)
Other than the flow -> block formatting change for some vectors of strings,
this should result in no functionality change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34907
Corresponding updates to clang, clang-tools-extra, and lld to follow.
llvm-svn: 306878
Given no NaNs and no signed zeroes it folds:
(fmul X, (select (fcmp X > 0.0), -1.0, 1.0)) -> (fneg (fabs X))
(fmul X, (select (fcmp X > 0.0), 1.0, -1.0)) -> (fabs X)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34579
llvm-svn: 306592