We were failing to compute trip counts (both exact and maximum) for any loop which involved a comparison against either an umin or smin. It looks like this simply got missed when we added smin/umin to SCEV. (Note: umin was submitted separately earlier today. Turned out two folks hit this at the same time.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67514
llvm-svn: 371776
Expanding the folding of `nearbyint()`, `rint()` and `trunc()` to library
functions, in addition to the current support for intrinsics.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67468
llvm-svn: 371774
Implement a TODO from rL371452, and handle loop invariant addresses in predicated blocks. If we can prove that the load is safe to speculate into the header, then we can avoid using a masked.load in favour of a normal load.
This is mostly about vectorization robustness. In the common case, it's generally expected that LICM/LoadStorePromotion would have eliminated such loads entirely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67372
llvm-svn: 371745
In MVE, as of rL371218, we are attempting to sink chains of instructions such as:
%l1 = insertelement <8 x i8> undef, i8 %l0, i32 0
%broadcast.splat26 = shufflevector <8 x i8> %l1, <8 x i8> undef, <8 x i32> zeroinitializer
In certain situations though, we can end up breaking the dominance relations of
instructions. This happens when we sink the instruction into a loop, but cannot
remove the originals. The Use is updated, which might in fact be a Use from the
second instruction to the first.
This attempts to fix that by reversing the order of instruction that are sunk,
and ensuring that we update the uses on new instructions if they have already
been sunk, not the old ones.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67366
llvm-svn: 371743
Folding for fma/fmuladd was added here:
rL202914
...and as seen in existing/unchanged tests, that works to propagate NaN
if it's already an input, but we should fold an fma() that creates NaN too.
From IEEE-754-2008 7.2 "Invalid Operation", there are 2 clauses that apply
to fma, so I added tests for those patterns:
c) fusedMultiplyAdd: fusedMultiplyAdd(0, ∞, c) or fusedMultiplyAdd(∞, 0, c)
unless c is a quiet NaN; if c is a quiet NaN then it is implementation
defined whether the invalid operation exception is signaled
d) addition or subtraction or fusedMultiplyAdd: magnitude subtraction of
infinities, such as: addition(+∞, −∞)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67446
llvm-svn: 371735
Summary:
I don't have a direct motivational case for this,
but it would be good to have this for completeness/symmetry.
This pattern is basically the motivational pattern from
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43251
but with different predicate that requires that the offset is non-zero.
The completeness bit comes from the fact that a similar pattern (offset != zero)
will be needed for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43259,
so it'd seem to be good to not overlook very similar patterns..
Proofs: https://rise4fun.com/Alive/21b
Also, there is something odd with `isKnownNonZero()`, if the non-zero
knowledge was specified as an assumption, it didn't pick it up (PR43267)
Reviewers: spatel, nikic, xbolva00
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67411
llvm-svn: 371718
This patch contains the basic functionality for reporting potentially
incorrect usage of __builtin_expect() by comparing the developer's
annotation against a collected PGO profile. A more detailed proposal and
discussion appears on the CFE-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-July/062971.html) and a
prototype of the initial frontend changes appear here in D65300
We revised the work in D65300 by moving the misexpect check into the
LLVM backend, and adding support for IR and sampling based profiles, in
addition to frontend instrumentation.
We add new misexpect metadata tags to those instructions directly
influenced by the llvm.expect intrinsic (branch, switch, and select)
when lowering the intrinsics. The misexpect metadata contains
information about the expected target of the intrinsic so that we can
check against the correct PGO counter when emitting diagnostics, and the
compiler's values for the LikelyBranchWeight and UnlikelyBranchWeight.
We use these branch weight values to determine when to emit the
diagnostic to the user.
A future patch should address the comment at the top of
LowerExpectIntrisic.cpp to hoist the LikelyBranchWeight and
UnlikelyBranchWeight values into a shared space that can be accessed
outside of the LowerExpectIntrinsic pass. Once that is done, the
misexpect metadata can be updated to be smaller.
In the long term, it is possible to reconstruct portions of the
misexpect metadata from the existing profile data. However, we have
avoided this to keep the code simple, and because some kind of metadata
tag will be required to identify which branch/switch/select instructions
are influenced by the use of llvm.expect
Patch By: paulkirth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66324
llvm-svn: 371635
This was actually the original intention in D67332,
but i messed up and forgot about it.
This patch was originally part of D67411, but precommitting this.
llvm-svn: 371630
adding new read attribute to an argument
Summary: Update optimization pass to prevent adding read-attribute to an
argument without removing its conflicting attribute.
A read attribute, based on the result of the attribute deduction
process, might be added to an argument. The attribute might be in
conflict with other read/write attribute currently associated with the
argument. To ensure the compatibility of attributes, conflicting
attribute, if any, must be removed before a new one is added.
The following snippet shows the current behavior of the compiler, where
the compilation process is aborted due to incompatible attributes.
$ cat x.ll
; ModuleID = 'x.bc'
%_type_of_d-ccc = type <{ i8*, i8, i8, i8, i8 }>
@d-ccc = internal global %_type_of_d-ccc <{ i8* null, i8 1, i8 13, i8 0,
i8 -127 }>, align 8
define void @foo(i32* writeonly %.aaa) {
foo_entry:
%_param_.aaa = alloca i32*, align 8
store i32* %.aaa, i32** %_param_.aaa, align 8
store i8 0, i8* getelementptr inbounds (%_type_of_d-ccc,
%_type_of_d-ccc* @d-ccc, i32 0, i32 3)
ret void
}
$ opt -O3 x.ll
Attributes 'readnone and writeonly' are incompatible!
void (i32*)* @foo
in function foo
LLVM ERROR: Broken function found, compilation aborted!
The purpose of this changeset is to fix the above error. This fix is
based on a suggestion from Johannes @jdoerfert (many thanks!!!)
Authored By: anhtuyen
Reviewer: nicholas, rnk, chandlerc, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, jdoerfert, llvm-commits, anhtuyen, LLVM
Tag: LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58694
llvm-svn: 371622
(srem X, pow2C) sgt/slt 0 can be reduced using bit hacks by masking
off the sign bit and the module (low) bits:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/jSO
A '2' divisor allows slightly more folding:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/tDBM
Any chance to remove an 'srem' use is probably worthwhile, but this is limited
to the one-use improvement case because doing more may expose other missing
folds. That means it does nothing for PR21929 yet:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21929
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67334
llvm-svn: 371610
This reverts commit r371584. It introduced a dependency from compiler-rt
to llvm/include/ADT, which is problematic for multiple reasons.
One is that it is a novel dependency edge, which needs cross-compliation
machinery for llvm/include/ADT (yes, it is true that right now
compiler-rt included only header-only libraries, however, if we allow
compiler-rt to depend on anything from ADT, other libraries will
eventually get used).
Secondly, depending on ADT from compiler-rt exposes ADT symbols from
compiler-rt, which would cause ODR violations when Clang is built with
the profile library.
llvm-svn: 371598
Currently we only rely on the induction increment to come before the
condition to ensure the required instructions get moved to the new
latch.
This patch duplicates and moves the required instructions to the
newly created latch. We move the condition to the end of the new block,
then process its operands. We stop at operands that are defined
outside the loop, or are the induction PHI.
We duplicate the instructions and update the uses in the moved
instructions, to ensure other users remain intact. See the added
test2 for such an example.
Reviewers: efriedma, mcrosier
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67367
llvm-svn: 371595
Configure TLI to say that r600/amdgpu does not have any library
functions, such that InstCombine does not do anything like turn sin/cos
into the library function @tan with sufficient fast math flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67406
Change-Id: I02f907d3e64832117ea9800e9f9285282856e5df
llvm-svn: 371592
TryToSinkInstruction() has a bug: While updating debug info for
sunk instruction, it could clone dbg.declare intrinsic.
That is wrong. There could be only one dbg.declare.
The fix is to not clone dbg.declare intrinsic and to update
it`s arguments, to not to point to sunk instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67217
llvm-svn: 371587
This patch contains the basic functionality for reporting potentially
incorrect usage of __builtin_expect() by comparing the developer's
annotation against a collected PGO profile. A more detailed proposal and
discussion appears on the CFE-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-July/062971.html) and a
prototype of the initial frontend changes appear here in D65300
We revised the work in D65300 by moving the misexpect check into the
LLVM backend, and adding support for IR and sampling based profiles, in
addition to frontend instrumentation.
We add new misexpect metadata tags to those instructions directly
influenced by the llvm.expect intrinsic (branch, switch, and select)
when lowering the intrinsics. The misexpect metadata contains
information about the expected target of the intrinsic so that we can
check against the correct PGO counter when emitting diagnostics, and the
compiler's values for the LikelyBranchWeight and UnlikelyBranchWeight.
We use these branch weight values to determine when to emit the
diagnostic to the user.
A future patch should address the comment at the top of
LowerExpectIntrisic.cpp to hoist the LikelyBranchWeight and
UnlikelyBranchWeight values into a shared space that can be accessed
outside of the LowerExpectIntrinsic pass. Once that is done, the
misexpect metadata can be updated to be smaller.
In the long term, it is possible to reconstruct portions of the
misexpect metadata from the existing profile data. However, we have
avoided this to keep the code simple, and because some kind of metadata
tag will be required to identify which branch/switch/select instructions
are influenced by the use of llvm.expect
Patch By: paulkirth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66324
llvm-svn: 371584
I only want to ensure that %offset is non-zero there,
it doesn't matter how that info is conveyed.
As filed in PR43267, the assumption way does not work.
llvm-svn: 371550
I only want to ensure that %offset is non-zero there,
it doesn't matter how that info is conveyed.
As filed in PR43267, the assumption way does not work.
llvm-svn: 371546
This allows us to fold fma's that multiply with 0.0. Also, the
multiply by 1.0 case is handled there as well. The fneg/fabs cases
are not handled by SimplifyFMulInst, so we need to keep them.
Reviewers: spatel, anemet, lebedev.ri
Reviewed By: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67351
llvm-svn: 371518
To prevent AArch64 tests from running when the target is not compiled.
Fixes r371502:
/home/buildslave/ps4-buildslave4/llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-ubuntu-fast/llvm.src/test/Transforms/ExpandMemCmp/AArch64/memcmp.ll:11:15: error: CHECK-NEXT: expected string not found in input
; CHECK-NEXT: [[TMP0:%.*]] = bitcast i8* [[S1:%.*]] to i64*
llvm-svn: 371503
This patch contains the basic functionality for reporting potentially
incorrect usage of __builtin_expect() by comparing the developer's
annotation against a collected PGO profile. A more detailed proposal and
discussion appears on the CFE-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-July/062971.html) and a
prototype of the initial frontend changes appear here in D65300
We revised the work in D65300 by moving the misexpect check into the
LLVM backend, and adding support for IR and sampling based profiles, in
addition to frontend instrumentation.
We add new misexpect metadata tags to those instructions directly
influenced by the llvm.expect intrinsic (branch, switch, and select)
when lowering the intrinsics. The misexpect metadata contains
information about the expected target of the intrinsic so that we can
check against the correct PGO counter when emitting diagnostics, and the
compiler's values for the LikelyBranchWeight and UnlikelyBranchWeight.
We use these branch weight values to determine when to emit the
diagnostic to the user.
A future patch should address the comment at the top of
LowerExpectIntrisic.cpp to hoist the LikelyBranchWeight and
UnlikelyBranchWeight values into a shared space that can be accessed
outside of the LowerExpectIntrinsic pass. Once that is done, the
misexpect metadata can be updated to be smaller.
In the long term, it is possible to reconstruct portions of the
misexpect metadata from the existing profile data. However, we have
avoided this to keep the code simple, and because some kind of metadata
tag will be required to identify which branch/switch/select instructions
are influenced by the use of llvm.expect
Patch By: paulkirth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66324
llvm-svn: 371484
If we're vectorizing a load in a predicated block, check to see if the load can be speculated rather than predicated. This allows us to generate a normal vector load instead of a masked.load.
To do so, we must prove that all bytes accessed on any iteration of the original loop are dereferenceable, and that all loads (across all iterations) are properly aligned. This is equivelent to proving that hoisting the load into the loop header in the original scalar loop is safe.
Note: There are a couple of code motion todos in the code. My intention is to wait about a day - to be sure this sticks - and then perform the NFC motion without furthe review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66688
llvm-svn: 371452
Summary:
This tests inlining size thresholds, but relies on the output of running
the full O2 pipeline, making it brittle against changes in unrelated
passes.
Only run the inlining pass and set thresholds on the test RUN line
instead.
Found while investigating D60318.
Reviewers: RKSimon, qcolombet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67349
llvm-svn: 371397