Commit Graph

10901 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 6a62cd3538 [x86] Rework all of the 128-bit vector shuffle tests with my handy test
updating script so that they are more thorough and consistent.

Specific fixes here include:
- Actually test VEX-encoded AVX mnemonics.
- Actually use an SSE 4.1 run to test SSE 4.1 features!
- Correctly check instructions sequences from the start of the function.
- Elide the shuffle operands and comment designator in a consistent way.
- Test all of the architectures instead of just the ones I was motivated
  to manually author.

I've gone back through and fixed up any egregious issues I spotted. Let
me know if I missed something you really dislike.

One downside to this is that we're now not as diligently using FileCheck
variables for registers. I would be much more concerned with this if we
had larger register usage, but there just aren't that interesting of
register choices here and most of the registers are constrained by the
ABI. Ultimately, I don't think this is likely to be the maintenance
burden for these tests and updating them again should be staright
forward.

llvm-svn: 218707
2014-09-30 21:44:34 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka c110c0b99a Recommit r218010 [FastISel][AArch64] Fold bit test and branch into TBZ and TBNZ.
Note: This version fixed an issue with the TBZ/TBNZ instructions that were
generated in FastISel. The issue was that the 64bit version of TBZ (TBZX)
automagically sets the upper bit of the immediate field that is used to specify
the bit we want to test. To test for any of the lower 32bits we have to first
extract the subregister and use the 32bit version of the TBZ instruction (TBZW).

Original commit message:
Teach selectBranch to fold bit test and branch into a single instruction (TBZ or
TBNZ).

llvm-svn: 218693
2014-09-30 19:59:35 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 9706978077 R600/SI: Fix printing of clamp and omod
No tests for omod since nothing uses it yet, but
this should get rid of the remaining annoying trailing
zeros after some instructions.

llvm-svn: 218692
2014-09-30 19:49:48 +00:00
Reed Kotler 3ebdcc9ea7 Add numeric extend, trunctate to mips fast-isel
Summary:
 Add numeric extend, trunctate to mips fast-isel

 Reactivates D4827



Test Plan:
fpext.ll
loadstoreconv.ll

Reviewers: dsanders

Subscribers: mcrosier

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5251

llvm-svn: 218681
2014-09-30 16:30:13 +00:00
Robert Khasanov 28a7df0b5f [AVX512] Added intrinsics for 128-, 256- and 512-bit versions of VCMPGT{BWDQ}.
Patch by Sergey Lisitsyn <sergey.lisitsyn@intel.com>

llvm-svn: 218670
2014-09-30 12:15:52 +00:00
Robert Khasanov 5aa4445bde [AVX512] Added intrinsics for 128- and 256-bit versions of VCMPEQ{BWDQ}
Fixed lowering of this intrinsics in case when mask is v2i1 and v4i1.
Now cmp intrinsics lower in the following way:
 (i8 (int_x86_avx512_mask_pcmpeq_q_128
             (v2i64 %a), (v2i64 %b), (i8 %mask))) ->
 (i8 (bitcast
   (v8i1 (insert_subvector undef,
           (v2i1 (and (PCMPEQM %a, %b),
                      (extract_subvector
                         (v8i1 (bitcast %mask)), 0))), 0))))

llvm-svn: 218669
2014-09-30 11:41:54 +00:00
Robert Khasanov b25e562d14 [AVX512] Added intrinsics for VPCMPEQB and VPCMPEQW.
Added new operand type for intrinsics (IIT_V64)

llvm-svn: 218668
2014-09-30 11:32:22 +00:00
Robert Khasanov a27c8e0fd9 [AVX512] Enabled intrinsics for VPCMPEQD and VPCMPEQQ.
Added CMP_MASK intrinsic type

llvm-svn: 218667
2014-09-30 11:19:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aaf8e03d92 [x86] Revert r218588, r218589, and r218600. These patches were pursuing
a flawed direction and causing miscompiles. Read on for details.

Fundamentally, the premise of this patch series was to map
VECTOR_SHUFFLE DAG nodes into VSELECT DAG nodes for all blends because
we are going to *have* to lower to VSELECT nodes for some blends to
trigger the instruction selection patterns of variable blend
instructions. This doesn't actually work out so well.

In order to match performance with the existing VECTOR_SHUFFLE
lowering code, we would need to re-slice the blend in order to fit it
into either the integer or floating point blends available on the ISA.
When coming from VECTOR_SHUFFLE (or other vNi1 style VSELECT sources)
this works well because the X86 backend ensures that these types of
operands to VSELECT get sign extended into '-1' and '0' for true and
false, allowing us to re-slice the bits in whatever granularity without
changing semantics.

However, if the VSELECT condition comes from some other source, for
example code lowering vector comparisons, it will likely only have the
required bit set -- the high bit. We can't blindly slice up this style
of VSELECT. Reid found some code using Halide that triggers this and I'm
hopeful to eventually get a test case, but I don't need it to understand
why this is A Bad Idea.

There is another aspect that makes this approach flawed. When in
VECTOR_SHUFFLE form, we have very distilled information that represents
the *constant* blend mask. Converting back to a VSELECT form actually
can lose this information, and so I think now that it is better to treat
this as VECTOR_SHUFFLE until the very last moment and only use VSELECT
nodes for instruction selection purposes.

My plan is to:
1) Clean up and formalize the target pre-legalization DAG combine that
   converts a VSELECT with a constant condition operand into
   a VECTOR_SHUFFLE.
2) Remove any fancy lowering from VSELECT during *legalization* relying
   entirely on the DAG combine to catch cases where we can match to an
   immediate-controlled blend instruction.

One additional step that I'm not planning on but would be interested in
others' opinions on: we could add an X86ISD::VSELECT or X86ISD::BLENDV
which encodes a fully legalized VSELECT node. Then it would be easy to
write isel patterns only in terms of this to ensure VECTOR_SHUFFLE
legalization only ever forms the fully legalized construct and we can't
cycle between it and VSELECT combining.

llvm-svn: 218658
2014-09-30 02:52:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 964747adcf [x86] Add some vector-register broadcast operations to the 256-bit v4
tests which were missing them.

llvm-svn: 218657
2014-09-30 02:32:36 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 1c4571e0fd R600: Fix broken check lines, missing scalar case.
llvm-svn: 218655
2014-09-30 01:05:29 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 6ac12439d0 [FastISel][AArch64] Fold sign-/zero-extends into the load instruction.
The sign-/zero-extension of the loaded value can be performed by the memory
instruction for free. If the result of the load has only one use and the use is
a sign-/zero-extend, then we emit the proper load instruction. The extend is
only a register copy and will be optimized away later on.

Other instructions that consume the sign-/zero-extended value are also made
aware of this fact, so they don't fold the extend too.

This fixes rdar://problem/18495928.

llvm-svn: 218653
2014-09-30 00:49:58 +00:00
Eric Christopher 6a0551e43a Add soft-float to the key for the subtarget lookup in the TargetMachine
map, this makes sure that we can compile the same code for two different
ABIs (hard and soft float) in the same module.

Update one testcase accordingly (and fix some confusing naming) and
add a new testcase as well with the ordering swapped which would
highlight the problem.

llvm-svn: 218632
2014-09-29 21:57:54 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 3d4233fe48 R600/SI: Also fix fsub + fadd a, a to mad combines
llvm-svn: 218609
2014-09-29 14:59:38 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 02cb0ff7db R600/SI: Fix using mad with multiplies by 2
These turn into fadds, so combine them into the target
mad node.

fadd (fadd (a, a), b) -> mad 2.0, a, b

llvm-svn: 218608
2014-09-29 14:59:34 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6cbf43167b [x86] Make the new vector shuffle lowering lower blends as VSELECT
nodes, and rely exclusively on its logic. This removes a ton of
duplication from the blend lowering and centralizes it in one place.

One downside is that it requires a bunch of hacks to make this work with
the current legalization framework. We have to manually speculate one
aspect of legalizing VSELECT nodes to get everything to work nicely
because the existing legalization framework isn't *actually* bottom-up.

The other grossness is that we somewhat duplicate the analysis of
constant blends. I'm on the fence here. If reviewers thing this would
look better with VSELECT when it has constant operands dumping over tho
VECTOR_SHUFFLE, we could go that way. But it would be a substantial
change because currently all of the actual blend instructions are
matched via patterns in the TD files based around VSELECT nodes (despite
them not being perfect fits for that). Suggestions welcome, but at least
this removes the rampant duplication in the backend.

llvm-svn: 218600
2014-09-29 09:57:07 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b1cc7a8542 [x86] Delete a bunch of really bad and totally unnecessary code in the
X86 target-specific DAG combining that tried to convert VSELECT nodes
into VECTOR_SHUFFLE nodes that it "knew" would lower into
immediate-controlled blend nodes.

Turns out, we have perfectly good lowering of all these VSELECT nodes,
and indeed that lowering already knows how to handle lowering through
BLENDI to immediate-controlled blend nodes. The code just wasn't getting
used much because this thing forced the world to go through the vector
shuffle lowering. Yuck.

This also exposes that I was too aggressive in avoiding domain crossing
in v218588 with that lowering -- when the other option is to expand into
two 128-bit vectors, it is worth domain crossing. Restore that behavior
now that we have nice tests covering it.

The test updates here fall into two camps. One is where previously we
ended up with an unsigned encoding of the blend operand and now we get
a signed encoding. In most of those places there were elaborate comments
explaining exactly what these operands really mean. Rather than that,
just switch these tests to use the nicely decoded comments that make it
obvious that the final shuffle matches.

The other updates are just removing pointless domain crossing by
blending integers with PBLENDW rather than BLENDPS.

llvm-svn: 218589
2014-09-29 02:01:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c7129276cd [x86] Add the dispatch skeleton to the new vector shuffle lowering for
AVX-512.

There is no interesting logic yet. Everything ends up eventually
delegating to the generic code to split the vector and shuffle the
halves. Interestingly, that logic does a significantly better job of
lowering all of these types than the generic vector expansion code does.
Mostly, it lets most of the cases fall back to nice AVX2 code rather
than all the way back to SSE code paths.

Step 2 of basic AVX-512 support in the new vector shuffle lowering. Next
up will be to incrementally add direct support for the basic instruction
set to each type (adding tests first).

llvm-svn: 218585
2014-09-29 00:37:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 24e3b69cbd [x86] Teach the new vector shuffle lowering to fall back on AVX-512
vectors.

Someone will need to build the AVX512 lowering, which should follow
AVX1 and AVX2 *very* closely for AVX512F and AVX512BW resp. I've added
a dummy test which is a port of the v8f32 and v8i32 tests from AVX and
AVX2 to v8f64 and v8i64 tests for AVX512F and AVX512BW. Hopefully this
is enough information for someone to implement proper lowering here. If
not, I'll be happy to help, but right now the AVX-512 support isn't
a priority for me.

llvm-svn: 218583
2014-09-28 23:53:10 +00:00
Chandler Carruth abe742e8fb [x86] Fix the new vector shuffle lowering's use of VSELECT for AVX2
lowerings.

This was hopelessly broken. First, the x86 backend wants '-1' to be the
element value representing true in a boolean vector, and second the
operand order for VSELECT is backwards from the actual x86 instructions.
To make matters worse, the backend is just using '-1' as the true value
to get the high bit to be set. It doesn't actually symbolically map the
'-1' to anything. But on x86 this isn't quite how it works: there *only*
the high bit is relevant. As a consequence weird non-'-1' values like
0x80 actually "work" once you flip the operands to be backwards.

Anyways, thanks to Hal for helping me sort out what these *should* be.

llvm-svn: 218582
2014-09-28 23:23:55 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6578f9208b [x86] Fix a really silly bug that I introduced fixing another bug in the
new vector shuffle target DAG combines -- it helps to actually test for
the value you want rather than just using an integer in a boolean
context.

Have I mentioned that I loathe implicit conversions recently? :: sigh ::

llvm-svn: 218576
2014-09-28 06:11:04 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b10c6b8e9e [x86] Fix yet another bug in the new vector shuffle lowering's handling
of widening masks.

We can't widen a zeroing mask unless both elements that would be merged
are either zeroed or undef. This is the only way to widen a mask if it
has a zeroed element.

Also clean up the code here by ordering the checks in a more logical way
and by using the symoblic values for undef and zero. I'm actually torn
on using the symbolic values because the existing code is littered with
the assumption that -1 is undef, and moreover that entries '< 0' are the
special entries. While that works with the values given to these
constants, using the symbolic constants actually makes it a bit more
opaque why this is the case.

llvm-svn: 218575
2014-09-28 03:30:25 +00:00
James Molloy 463db9a77c [AArch64] Redundant store instructions should be removed as dead code
If there is a store followed by a store with the same value to the same location, then the store is dead/noop. It can be removed.

This problem is found in spec2006-197.parser.

For example,
  stur    w10, [x11, #-4]
  stur    w10, [x11, #-4]
Then one of the two stur instructions can be removed.

Patch by David Xu!

llvm-svn: 218569
2014-09-27 17:02:54 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4d03be1717 [x86] Fix terrible bugs everywhere in the new vector shuffle lowering
and in the target shuffle combining when trying to widen vector
elements.

Previously only one of these was correct, and we didn't correctly
propagate zeroing target shuffle masks (which have a different sentinel
value from undef in non- target shuffle masks now). This isn't just
a missed optimization, this caused us to drop zeroing shuffles on the
floor and miscompile code. The added test case is one example of that.

There are other fixes to the test suite as a consequence of this as well
as restoring the undef elements in some of the masks that were lost when
I brought sanity to the actual *value* of the undef and zero sentinels.

I've also just cleaned up some of the PSHUFD and PSHUFLW and PSHUFHW
combining code, but that code really needs to go. It was a nice initial
attempt, but it isn't very principled and the recursive shuffle combiner
is much more powerful.

llvm-svn: 218562
2014-09-27 04:42:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 81e6b29f03 [x86] Flip the sentinel values used in the target shuffle mask decoding
to significantly more sane sentinels. Notably, everywhere else in the
backend's representation of shuffles uses '-1' to represent undef. The
target shuffle masks really shouldn't diverge from that, especially as
in a few places they are manipulated by shared code.

This causes us to lose some undef lanes in various test masks. I want to
get these back, but technically it isn't invalid and there are a *lot*
of bugs here so I want to try to establish a saner baseline for fixing
some of the bugs by aligning the specific senitnel values used.

llvm-svn: 218561
2014-09-27 04:42:39 +00:00
Sanjay Patel bdf1e38856 Refactor reciprocal and reciprocal square root estimate into target-independent functions (part 2).
This is purely refactoring. No functional changes intended. PowerPC is the only target
that is currently using this interface.

The ultimate goal is to allow targets other than PowerPC (certainly X86 and Aarch64) to turn this:

z = y / sqrt(x)

into:

z = y * rsqrte(x)

And:

z = y / x

into:

z = y * rcpe(x)

using whatever HW magic they can use. See http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20900 .

There is one hook in TargetLowering to get the target-specific opcode for an estimate instruction
along with the number of refinement steps needed to make the estimate usable.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5484

llvm-svn: 218553
2014-09-26 23:01:47 +00:00
Chandler Carruth f572f3b2c0 [x86] Fix a moderately terrifying bug in the new 128-bit shuffle logic
that managed to elude all of my fuzz testing historically. =/

Something changed to allow this code path to actually be exercised and
it was doing bad things. It is especially heavily exercised by the
patterns that emerge when doing AVX shuffles that end up lowered through
the 128-bit code path.

llvm-svn: 218540
2014-09-26 20:41:45 +00:00
Matt Arsenault ed8a3e0a08 R600/SI: Add strict check lines to div_scale tests.
This has weird operand requirements so it's worthwhile
to have very strict checks for its operands.

Add different combinations of SGPR operands.

llvm-svn: 218535
2014-09-26 17:55:11 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 6a0919fb9b R600/SI Allow same SGPR to be used for multiple operands
Instead of moving the first SGPR that is different than the first,
legalize the operand that requires the fewest moves if one
SGPR is used for multiple operands.

This saves extra moves and is also required for some instructions
which require that the same operand be used for multiple operands.

llvm-svn: 218532
2014-09-26 17:55:03 +00:00
Matt Arsenault cb0ac3d1fb R600/SI: Partially move operand legalization to post-isel hook.
Disable the SGPR usage restriction parts of the DAG legalizeOperands.
It now should only be doing immediate folding until it can be replaced
later. The real legalization work is now done by the other
SIInstrInfo::legalizeOperands

llvm-svn: 218531
2014-09-26 17:54:59 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 5885bef6cf R600/SI: Don't move operands that are required to be SGPRs
e.g. v_cndmask_b32 requires the condition operand be an SGPR.
If one of the source operands were an SGPR, that would be considered
the one SGPR use and the condition operand would be illegally moved.

llvm-svn: 218529
2014-09-26 17:54:52 +00:00
Matt Arsenault aff65fbca5 R600/SI: Fix using wrong operand indices when commuting
No test since the current SIISelLowering::legalizeOperands
effectively hides this, and the general uses seem to only fire
on SALU instructions which don't have modifiers between
the operands.

When trying to use legalizeOperands immediately after
instruction selection, it now sees a lot more patterns
it did not see before which break on this.

llvm-svn: 218527
2014-09-26 17:54:43 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0c9ee10d01 [x86] In the new vector shuffle lowering, when trying to do another
layer of tie-breaking sorting, it really helps to check that you're in
a tie first. =] Otherwise the whole thing cycles infinitely. Test case
added, another one found through fuzz testing.

llvm-svn: 218523
2014-09-26 17:24:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5afd4c2603 [x86] Fix a large collection of bugs that crept in as I fleshed out the
AVX support.

New test cases included. Note that none of the existing test cases
covered these buggy code paths. =/ Also, it is clear from this that
SHUFPS and SHUFPD are the most bug prone shuffle instructions in x86. =[

These were all detected by fuzz-testing. (I <3 fuzz testing.)

llvm-svn: 218522
2014-09-26 17:11:02 +00:00
Robert Khasanov 6d62c0202b [AVX512] Added load/store from BW/VL subsets to Register2Memory opcode tables.
Added lowering tests for these instructions.

llvm-svn: 218508
2014-09-26 09:48:50 +00:00
David Xu beff8bf746 Revert patch of r218493, delete the test case
llvm-svn: 218495
2014-09-26 02:40:54 +00:00
David Xu 64f661ee0b Redundant store instructions should be removed as dead code
llvm-svn: 218493
2014-09-26 02:02:09 +00:00
Eric Christopher a9353d1798 Add the first backend support for on demand subtarget creation
based on the Function. This is currently used to implement
mips16 support in the mips backend via the existing module
pass resetting the subtarget.

Things to note:

a) This involved running resetTargetOptions before creating a
new subtarget so that code generation options like soft-float
could be recognized when creating the new subtarget. This is
to deal with initialization code in isel lowering that only
paid attention to the initial value.

b) Many of the existing testcases weren't using the soft-float
feature correctly. I've corrected these based on the check
values assuming that was the desired behavior.

c) The mips port now pays attention to the target-cpu and
target-features strings when generating code for a particular
function. I've removed these from one function where the
requested cpu and features didn't match the check lines in
the testcase.

llvm-svn: 218492
2014-09-26 01:44:08 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 0c652c3fbc R600: Avoid repeated check lines
llvm-svn: 218487
2014-09-26 01:12:36 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 3a99759498 R600/SI: Fix emitting trailing whitespace after s_waitcnt
llvm-svn: 218486
2014-09-26 01:09:46 +00:00
Adam Nemet 8d5354eaa2 [AVX512] Make vextract*x4/vinsert*x4 tests check for the index as well
Extend test so that it provides coverage for the next commit.

llvm-svn: 218479
2014-09-25 23:48:47 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 42d1565844 R600: Fix some missing conversion testcases
llvm-svn: 218474
2014-09-25 23:16:18 +00:00
Matt Arsenault c16fafb24d Remove duplicated RUN lines in middle of test
llvm-svn: 218473
2014-09-25 23:16:14 +00:00
Bruno Cardoso Lopes d04f7596e7 [MachineSink+PGO] Teach MachineSink to use BlockFrequencyInfo
Machine Sink uses loop depth information to select between successors BBs to
sink machine instructions into, where BBs within smaller loop depths are
preferable.  This patch adds support for choosing between successors by using
profile information from BlockFrequencyInfo instead, whenever the information
is available.

Tested it under SPEC2006 train (average of 30 runs for each program); ~1.5%
execution speedup in average on x86-64 darwin.

<rdar://problem/18021659>

llvm-svn: 218472
2014-09-25 23:14:26 +00:00
Tom Stellard 7980fc8562 R600/SI: Add support for global atomic add
llvm-svn: 218457
2014-09-25 18:30:26 +00:00
Robin Morisset 810739d174 Lower idempotent RMWs to fence+load
Summary:
I originally tried doing this specifically for X86 in the backend in D5091,
but it was rather brittle and generally running too late to be general.
Furthermore, other targets may want to implement similar optimizations.
So I reimplemented it at the IR-level, fitting it into AtomicExpandPass
as it interacts with that pass (which could not be cleanly done before
at the backend level).

This optimization relies on a new target hook, which is only used by X86
for now, as the correctness of the optimization on other targets remains
an open question. If it is found correct on other targets, it should be
trivial to enable for them.

Details of the optimization are discussed in D5091.

Test Plan: make check-all + a new test

Reviewers: jfb

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5422

llvm-svn: 218455
2014-09-25 17:27:43 +00:00
Sid Manning 31f7125562 Add missing attributes !cmp.[eq,gt,gtu] instructions.
These instructions do not indicate they are extendable or the
number of bits in the extendable operand.  Rename to match
architected names.  Add a testcase for the intrinsics.

llvm-svn: 218453
2014-09-25 13:09:54 +00:00
Daniel Sanders ae275e38a2 [mips] Add CCValAssign::[ASZ]ExtUpper and CCPromoteToUpperBitsInType and handle struct's correctly on big-endian N32/N64 return values.
Summary:
The N32/N64 ABI's require that structs passed in registers are laid out
such that spilling the register with 'sd' places the struct at the lowest
address. For little endian this is trivial but for big-endian it requires
that structs are shifted into the upper bits of the register.

We also require that structs passed in registers have the 'inreg'
attribute for big-endian N32/N64 to work correctly. This is because the
tablegen-erated calling convention implementation only has access to the
lowered form of struct arguments (one or more integers of up to 64-bits
each) and is unable to determine the original type.

Reviewers: vmedic

Reviewed By: vmedic

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5286

llvm-svn: 218451
2014-09-25 12:15:05 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0a6e961efd [x86] Teach the new vector shuffle lowering to use AVX2 instructions for
v4f64 and v8f32 shuffles when they are lane-crossing. We have fully
general lane-crossing permutation functions in AVX2 that make this easy.

Part of this also changes exactly when and how these vectors are split
up when we don't have AVX2. This isn't always a win but it usually is
a win, so on the balance I think its better. The primary regressions are
all things that just need to be fixed anyways such as modeling when
a blend can be completely accomplished via VINSERTF128, etc.

Also, this highlights one of the few remaining big features: we do
a really poor job of inserting elements into AVX registers efficiently.

This completes almost all of the big tricks I have in mind for AVX2. The
only things left that I plan to add:

1) element insertion smarts
2) palignr and other fairly specialized lowerings when they happen to
   apply

llvm-svn: 218449
2014-09-25 11:03:55 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e91d68c475 [x86] Teach the new vector shuffle lowering a fancier way to lower
256-bit vectors with lane-crossing.

Rather than immediately decomposing to 128-bit vectors, try flipping the
256-bit vector lanes, shuffling them and blending them together. This
reduces our worst case shuffle by a pretty significant margin across the
board.

llvm-svn: 218446
2014-09-25 10:21:15 +00:00