Summary:
- HIP uses an unsized extern array `extern __shared__ T s[]` to declare
the dynamic shared memory, which size is not known at the
compile time.
Reviewers: arsenm, yaxunl, kpyzhov, b-sumner
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, hiraditya, kerbowa, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82496
Assuming this is used to split a memory access into smaller pieces,
the new access should still have the same aliasing properties as the
original memory access. As far as I can tell, this wasn't
intentionally dropped. It may be necessary to drop this if you are
moving the operand outside of the bounds of the original object in
such a way that it may alias another IR object, but I don't think any
of the existing users are doing this. Some of the uses widen into
unused alignment padding, which I think is OK.
Custom lower and widen odd sized loads up to the alignment. The
default set of legalization actions doesn't have a way to represent
this. This fixes naturally aligned <3 x s8> and <3 x s16> loads.
This also starts moving towards eliminating the buggy and
overcomplicated legalization rules for narrowing. All the memory size
changes should be done in the lower or custom action, not NarrowScalar
/ FewerElements. These currently have redundant and ambiguous code
with the lower action.
This mirrors the support for the equivalent extracts. This also
creates a huge mess that would be greatly improved if we had any bit
operation combines.
Use the same basic strategy as LegalizeVectorTypes. Try to index into
smaller pieces if there's a constant index, and otherwise fall back to
a stack temporary.
If we were to have an operation with an s16 def that needs to be
executed in a waterfall loop, not having s16 legal would place an
avoidable burden on RegBankSelect to widen it.
Get the argument register and ensure there's a copy to the virtual
register. AMDGPU and AArch64 have similarish code to get the livein
value, and I also want to use this in multiple places.
This is a bit more aggressive about setting the register class than
the original function, but that's probably OK.
I think we're missing a few verifier checks for function live ins. I
noticed AArch64's calling convention code is not actually adding
liveins to functions, only the entry block (which apparently might not
matter that much?). There should probably be a verifier check that
entry block live ins are also live into the function. We also might
need a verifier check that the copy to the livein virtual register is
in the entry block.
For AMDGPU, vectors with elements < 32 bits should be indexed in
32-bit elements and the desired bits extracted from there. For
elements > 64-bits, these should be reduce to 64/32 elements to enable
the normal dynamic indexing paths.
In the dynamic index cases, this produces shorter code most of the
time. This does immediately regress the constant index cases, but this
should be fixed once we have the most basic of shift combines.
The element size > 64 case is pretty much ported from the exisiting
DAG implementation for extract element promote. The increasing element
size case is new.
I still think it's highly questionable that we have two intrinsics
with identical behavior and only vary by the name of the libcall used
if it happens to be lowered that way, but try to reduce the feature
delta between SDAG and GlobalISel for recently added intrinsics. I'm
not sure which opcode should be considered the canonical one, but
lower roundeven back to round.
These aren't implemented and we're still relying on the AtomicExpand
pass, but mark these as lower to eliminate a few of the few remaining
no rules defined cases.
We don't really need these asserts. The LegalizerInfo is also
overly-aggressivly constructed, even when not in use. It needs to not
assert on dummy targets that have manually specified, unrelated
features.
Widen or narrow a type to a type with the same scalar size as
another. This can be used to force G_PTR_ADD/G_PTRMASK's scalar
operand to match the bitwidth of the pointer type. Use this to
disallow narrower types for G_PTRMASK.
Add support in LegalizerHelper for lowering G_SADDSAT etc. either
using add/subtract-with-overflow or using max/min instructions.
Enable this lowering for AMDGPU so it can be tested. The legalization
rules are still approximate and skips out on using the clamp bit to
treat these as legal, which has never been used before. This also
doesn't yet try to deal with expanding SALU cases.
Add narrowScalarFor action.
Add narrow scalar for typeIndex == 0 for G_FPTOSI/G_FPTOUI.
Legalize using narrowScalarFor as s16->s32 G_FPTOSI/G_FPTOUI
followed by s32->s64 G_SEXT/G_ZEXT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84010
Add widenScalar for TypeIdx == 0 for G_SITOFP/G_UITOFP.
Legailize, using widenScalar, as s64->s32 G_SITOFP/G_UITOFP
followed by s32->s16 G_FPTRUNC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83880
This avoids many instances of failing to legalize a vector truncstore
of <4 x s8> to 2 bytes. We don't perfectly handle every truncstore
yet, largely because the given set of legalization actions can't
actually differentiate between changing the result type and changing
the memory type.
This function is deceptive at best: it doesn't return what you'd expect.
If you have an arbitrary GlobalValue and you want to determine the
alignment of that pointer, Value::getPointerAlignment() returns the
correct value. If you want the actual declared alignment of a function
or variable, GlobalObject::getAlignment() returns that.
This patch switches all the users of GlobalValue::getAlignment to an
appropriate alternative.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80368