If we have a type 'int a[1]' and a type 'int b[0]', the generated DWARF is the
same for both of them because we use the 'upper_bound' attribute. Instead use
the 'count' attrbute, which gives the correct number of elements in the array.
<rdar://problem/12566646>
llvm-svn: 167806
getNumContainedPasses() used to compute the size of the vector on demand. It is
called repeated in loops (such as runOnFunction()) and it can be updated while
inside the loop.
llvm-svn: 167759
Uses the infrastructure from r167742 to support clustering instructure
that the target processor can "fuse". e.g. cmp+jmp.
Next step: target hook implementations with test cases, and enable.
llvm-svn: 167744
This infrastructure is generally useful for any target that wants to
strongly prefer two instructions to be adjacent after scheduling.
A following checkin will add target-specific hooks with unit
tests. Then this feature will be enabled by default with misched.
llvm-svn: 167742
This adds support for weak DAG edges to the general scheduling
infrastructure in preparation for MachineScheduler support for
heuristics based on weak edges.
llvm-svn: 167738
In some cases the library call simplifier may need to replace instructions
other than the library call being simplified. In those cases it may be
necessary for clients of the simplifier to override how the replacements
are actually done. As such, a new overrideable method for replacing
instructions was added to LibCallSimplifier.
A new subclass of LibCallSimplifier is also defined which overrides
the instruction replacement method. This is because the instruction
combiner defines its own replacement method which updates the worklist
when instructions are replaced.
llvm-svn: 167681
In the process of migrating optimizations from the simplify-libcalls pass
to the instcombine pass I noticed that a few functions are missing from
the target library information. These functions need to be available for
querying in the instcombine library call simplifiers. More functions will
probably be added in the future as more simplifiers are migrated to
instcombine.
llvm-svn: 167659
- Add RTM code generation support throught 3 X86 intrinsics:
xbegin()/xend() to start/end a transaction region, and xabort() to abort a
tranaction region
llvm-svn: 167573
misched is disabled by default. With -enable-misched, these heuristics
balance the schedule to simultaneously avoid saturating processor
resources, expose ILP, and minimize register pressure. I've been
analyzing the performance of these heuristics on everything in the
llvm test suite in addition to a few other benchmarks. I would like
each heuristic check to be verified by a unit test, but I'm still
trying to figure out the best way to do that. The heuristics are still
in considerable flux, but as they are refined we should be rigorous
about unit testing the improvements.
llvm-svn: 167527
This patch adds the interface to expose events from MCJIT when an object is emitted or freed and implements the MCJIT functionality to send those events. The IntelJITEventListener implementation is left empty for now. It will be fleshed out in a future patch.
llvm-svn: 167475
Expose the processor resources defined by the machine model to the
scheduler and other clients through the TargetSchedule interface.
Normalize each resource count with respect to other kinds of
resources. This allows scheduling heuristics to balance resources
against other kinds of resources and latency.
llvm-svn: 167444
Prior to this patch RuntimeDyld attempted to re-apply relocations every time reassignSectionAddress was called (via MCJIT::mapSectionAddress). In addition to being inefficient and redundant, this led to a problem when a section was temporarily moved too far away from another section with a relative relocation referencing the section being moved. To fix this, I'm adding a new method (finalizeObject) which the client can call to indicate that it is finished rearranging section addresses so the relocations can safely be applied.
llvm-svn: 167400
is that the unit test doesn't have IntTy equal to APInt, instead it uses a class
derived from APInt. When, as in these lines, an IntTy& reference is returned
but is assigned to an APInt&, the compiler destroys the temporary the IntTy& was
referring to, leaving the APInt& referring to garbage. This causes the unittest
to fail systematically on my machine; it can also be caught by running the test
under valgrind.
llvm-svn: 167356
the inttoptr instruction. The conceptual model here is that
'getAddressSpace' refers to the address space of this instruction's
type. It just happens that for GEPs, that is always the same as the
pointer operand's address space. We want both names so that access
patterns can be consistent between different instruction types.
llvm-svn: 167229
compute the address space in the one place it was used.
Also write the getPointerAddressSpace member in terms of the
getPointerOperandType member.
llvm-svn: 167226
'@brief' doxygen markup to the now standard '\brief' markup form, in
conformance with the coding standards. This will let me continue to
write new comments in this form without making things inconsistent.
llvm-svn: 167225
politely and document this feature.
This simple API extension then allows us to write all of the
Instructions' address space query methods much more simply. No
functionality change intended here.
llvm-svn: 167223
r165941: Resubmit the changes to llvm core to update the functions to
support different pointer sizes on a per address space basis.
Despite this commit log, this change primarily changed stuff outside of
VMCore, and those changes do not carry any tests for correctness (or
even plausibility), and we have consistently found questionable or flat
out incorrect cases in these changes. Most of them are probably correct,
but we need to devise a system that makes it more clear when we have
handled the address space concerns correctly, and ideally each pass that
gets updated would receive an accompanying test case that exercises that
pass specificaly w.r.t. alternate address spaces.
However, from this commit, I have retained the new C API entry points.
Those were an orthogonal change that probably should have been split
apart, but they seem entirely good.
In several places the changes were very obvious cleanups with no actual
multiple address space code added; these I have not reverted when
I spotted them.
In a few other places there were merge conflicts due to a cleaner
solution being implemented later, often not using address spaces at all.
In those cases, I've preserved the new code which isn't address space
dependent.
This is part of my ongoing effort to clean out the partial address space
code which carries high risk and low test coverage, and not likely to be
finished before the 3.2 release looms closer. Duncan and I would both
like to see the above issues addressed before we return to these
changes.
llvm-svn: 167222
getIntPtrType support for multiple address spaces via a pointer type,
and also introduced a crasher bug in the constant folder reported in
PR14233.
These commits also contained several problems that should really be
addressed before they are re-committed. I have avoided reverting various
cleanups to the DataLayout APIs that are reasonable to have moving
forward in order to reduce the amount of churn, and minimize the number
of commits that were reverted. I've also manually updated merge
conflicts and manually arranged for the getIntPtrType function to stay
in DataLayout and to be defined in a plausible way after this revert.
Thanks to Duncan for working through this exact strategy with me, and
Nick Lewycky for tracking down the really annoying crasher this
triggered. (Test case to follow in its own commit.)
After discussing with Duncan extensively, and based on a note from
Micah, I'm going to continue to back out some more of the more
problematic patches in this series in order to ensure we go into the
LLVM 3.2 branch with a reasonable story here. I'll send a note to
llvmdev explaining what's going on and why.
Summary of reverted revisions:
r166634: Fix a compiler warning with an unused variable.
r166607: Add some cleanup to the DataLayout changes requested by
Chandler.
r166596: Revert "Back out r166591, not sure why this made it through
since I cancelled the command. Bleh, sorry about this!
r166591: Delete a directory that wasn't supposed to be checked in yet.
r166578: Add in support for getIntPtrType to get the pointer type based
on the address space.
llvm-svn: 167221
Explicitly allow composition of null sub-register indices, and handle
that common case in an inlinable stub.
Use a compressed table implementation instead of the previous nested
switches which generated pretty bad code.
llvm-svn: 167190
the MachineInstr MayLoad/MayLoad flags are based on the tablegen implementation.
For inline assembly, however, we need to compute these based on the constraints.
Revert r166929 as this is no longer needed, but leave the test case in place.
rdar://12033048 and PR13504
llvm-svn: 167040
When the switch-to-lookup tables transform landed in SimplifyCFG, it
was pointed out that this could be inappropriate for some targets.
Since there was no way at the time for the pass to know anything about
the target, an awkward reverse-transform was added in CodeGenPrepare
that turned lookup tables back into switches for some targets.
This patch uses the new TargetTransformInfo to determine if a
switch should be transformed, and removes
CodeGenPrepare::ConvertLoadToSwitch.
llvm-svn: 167011
checks to avoid performing compile-time arithmetic on PPCDoubleDouble.
Now that APFloat supports arithmetic on PPCDoubleDouble, those checks
are no longer needed, and we can treat the type like any other.
llvm-svn: 166958
wrapper returns a vector of integers when passed a vector of pointers) by having
getIntPtrType itself return a vector of integers in this case. Outside of this
wrapper, I didn't find anywhere in the codebase that was relying on the old
behaviour for vectors of pointers, so give this a whirl through the buildbots.
llvm-svn: 166939
We may need to change the way profile counter values are stored, but
saturation is the wrong thing to do. Just remove it for now.
Patch by Alastair Murray!
llvm-svn: 166938
Add getCostXXX calls for different families of opcodes, such as casts, arithmetic, cmp, etc.
Port the LoopVectorizer to the new API.
The LoopVectorizer now finds instructions which will remain uniform after vectorization. It uses this information when calculating the cost of these instructions.
llvm-svn: 166836
APInt::shl generated llvm.trap to guard against shifts greater than bit-width.
This was already checked with an assert, and there was a special case for
shifts equal to bit-width. Modify this check to catch shifts greater than or
equal to bit-width, so llvm.trap isn't generated.
Patch contributed by JF Bastien
llvm-svn: 166803
Enabled with -verify-scev. This could be extended significantly but hopefully
catches the common cases now. Note that it's not enabled by default in any
configuration because the way it tries to distinguish SCEVs is still fragile and
may produce false positives. Also the test-suite isn't clean yet, one example
is that it fails if a pass drops an NSW bit but it's still present in SCEV's
cached. Cleaning up all those cases will take some time.
llvm-svn: 166786
As discussed on IRC, add VectorTargetTransform::getNumberOfParts
to provide a stable interface to the vector legalization splitting factor.
llvm-svn: 166751
include/llvm/MC/MCTargetAsmParser.h:46:8: error: 'llvm::ParseInstructionInfo' has a field 'llvm::ParseInstructionInfo::AsmRewrites' whose type uses the anonymous namespace [-Werror]
llvm-svn: 166729
Most places can use PrintFatalError as the unwinding mechanism was not
used for anything other than printing the error. The single exception
was CodeGenDAGPatterns.cpp, where intermediate errors during type
resolution were ignored to simplify incremental platform development.
This use is replaced by an error flag in TreePattern and bailout earlier
in various places if it is set.
llvm-svn: 166712
Relationship maps are represented as InstrMapping records which are parsed by
TableGen and the information is used to construct mapping tables to represent
appropriate relations between instructions. These tables are emitted into
XXXGenInstrInfo.inc file along with the functions to query them.
Patch by Jyotsna Verma <jverma@codeaurora.org>.
llvm-svn: 166685
This patch adds initial PPC64 TOC MC object creation using the small mcmodel
(a single 64K TOC) adding the some TOC relocations (R_PPC64_TOC,
R_PPC64_TOC16, and R_PPC64_TOC16DS).
The addition of 'undefinedExplicitRelSym' hook on 'MCELFObjectTargetWriter'
is meant to avoid the creation of an unreferenced ".TOC." symbol (used in
the .odp creation) as well to set the R_PPC64_TOC relocation target as the
temporary ".TOC." symbol. On PPC64 ABI, the R_PPC64_TOC relocation should
not point to any symbol.
llvm-svn: 166677
a bunch of errors for all the Operator subclasses such as:
include/llvm/Operator.h:76:7: error: deleted function 'virtual llvm::OverflowingBinaryOperator::~OverflowingBinaryOperator()'
include/llvm/Operator.h:43:3: error: overriding non-deleted function 'virtual llvm::Operator::~Operator()'
include/llvm/Operator.h:76:7: error: 'virtual llvm::OverflowingBinaryOperator::~OverflowingBinaryOperator()' is implicitly deleted because the default definition would be ill-formed:
include/llvm/Operator.h:43:3: error: 'virtual llvm::Operator::~Operator()' is private
include/llvm/Operator.h:76:7: error: within this context
llvm-svn: 166611
called. Provide an (asserting) definition of Operator's private destructor.
Remove destructors from all classes derived from Operator. We don't need them
for safety, because their implicit definitions would be ill-formed (they'd call
Operator's private destructor), and we don't need them to avoid emitting
vtables, because we don't do anything with Operator subclasses which would
trigger vtable instantiation.
The Operator hierarchy is still a complete disaster with regard to undefined
behavior, but this at least allows LLVM to link when using Clang's
-fcatch-undefined-behavior with a new vptr-based type checking mechanism.
llvm-svn: 166530
Per the October 12, 2012 Proposal for annotated disassembly output sent out by
Jim Grosbach this set of changes implements this for X86 and arm. The llvm-mc
tool now has a -mdis option to produced the marked up disassembly and a couple
of small example test cases have been added.
rdar://11764962
llvm-svn: 166445
Patch by Quentin Colombet <qcolombet@apple.com>
Original description:
"""
The attached patch is the first step to have a better control on Oz related optimizations.
The Oz optimization level focuses on code size, thus I propose to add an attribute called ForceSizeOpt.
"""
llvm-svn: 166422
a memory operand. Retain this information and then add the sizing directives
to the IR. This allows the backend to do proper instruction selection.
llvm-svn: 166316
which is supposed to consistently raise SIGTRAP across all systems. In contrast,
__builtin_trap() behave differently on different systems. e.g. it raises SIGTRAP on ARM, and
SIGILL on X86. The purpose of __builtin_debugtrap() is to consistently provide "trap"
functionality, in the mean time preserve the compatibility with on gcc on __builtin_trap().
The X86 backend is already able to handle debugtrap(). This patch is to:
1) make front-end recognize "__builtin_debugtrap()" (emboddied in the one-line change to Clang).
2) In DAG legalization phase, by default, "debugtrap" will be replaced with "trap", which
make the __builtin_debugtrap() "available" to all existing ports without the hassle of
changing their code.
3) If trap-function is specified (via -trap-func=xyz to llc), both __builtin_debugtrap() and
__builtin_trap() will be expanded into the function call of the specified trap function.
This behavior may need change in the future.
The provided testing-case is to make sure 2) and 3) are working for ARM port, and we
already have a testing case for x86.
llvm-svn: 166300
This allows llvm::Optional to be used with movable-but-not-copyable types.
While LLVM itself is still C++03, there's no reason why tools built on
top of it can't use C++11 features.
llvm-svn: 166241
This more accurately reflects what is actually being stored in the
field.
No functionality change intended.
Author: Matthew Curtis <mcurtis@codeaurora.org>
llvm-svn: 166215
layer. Add the ParseMSInlineAsm() function, which is the new interface to
clang. Also expose the new MCAsmParserSemaCallback interface, which is used
by the back-end to do name lookup in Sema. Finally, remove the now defunct
APIs introduced in r165946.
llvm-svn: 166183
over the implicitly-formed-and-nesting CGSCC pass manager and function
pass managers, especially when using them on the opt commandline or
using extension points in the module builder. The '-barrier' opt flag
(or the pass itself) will create a no-op module pass in the pipeline,
resetting the pass manager stack, and allowing the creation of a new
pipeline of function passes or CGSCC passes to be created that is
independent from any previous pipelines.
For example, this can be used to test running two CGSCC passes in
independent CGSCC pass managers as opposed to in the same CGSCC pass
manager. It also allows us to introduce a further hack into the
PassManagerBuilder to separate the O0 pipeline extension passes from the
always-inliner's CGSCC pass manager, which they likely do not want to
participate in... At the very least none of the Sanitizer passes want
this behavior.
This fixes a bug with ASan at O0 currently, and I'll commit the ASan
test which covers this pass. I'm happy to add a test case that this pass
exists and works, but not sure how much time folks would like me to
spend adding test cases for the details of its behavior of partition
pass managers.... The whole thing is just vile, and mostly intended to
unblock ASan, so I'm hoping to rip this all out in a brave new pass
manager world.
llvm-svn: 166172
The TargetTransform changes are breaking LTO bootstraps of clang. I am
working with Nadav to figure out the problem, but I am reverting it for now
to get our buildbots working.
This reverts svn commits: 165665 165669 165670 165786 165787 165997
and I have also reverted clang svn 165741
llvm-svn: 166168
any scheduling heuristics nor does it build up any scheduling data structure
that other heuristics use. It essentially linearize by doing a DFA walk but
it does handle glues correctly.
IMPORTANT: it probably can't handle all the physical register dependencies so
it's not suitable for x86. It also doesn't deal with dbg_value nodes right now
so it's definitely is still WIP.
rdar://12474515
llvm-svn: 166122
All callers of these functions really want the isPhysRegOrOverlapUsed()
functionality which also checks aliases. For historical reasons, targets
without register aliases were calling isPhysRegUsed() instead.
Change isPhysRegUsed() to also check aliases, and switch all
isPhysRegOrOverlapUsed() callers to isPhysRegUsed().
llvm-svn: 166117
This is just as fast, and it makes it possible to avoid leaking the
UsedPhysRegs BitVector implementation through
MachineRegisterInfo::addPhysRegsUsed().
llvm-svn: 166083
Stack is formed improperly for long structures passed as byval arguments for
EABI mode.
If we took AAPCS reference, we can found the next statements:
A: "If the argument requires double-word alignment (8-byte), the NCRN (Next
Core Register Number) is rounded up to the next even register number." (5.5
Parameter Passing, Stage C, C.3).
B: "The alignment of an aggregate shall be the alignment of its most-aligned
component." (4.3 Composite Types, 4.3.1 Aggregates).
So if we have structure with doubles (9 double fields) and 3 Core unused
registers (r1, r2, r3): caller should use r2 and r3 registers only.
Currently r1,r2,r3 set is used, but it is invalid.
Callee VA routine should also use r2 and r3 regs only. All is ok here. This
behaviour is guessed by rounding up SP address with ADD+BFC operations.
Fix:
Main fix is in ARMTargetLowering::HandleByVal. If we detected AAPCS mode and
8 byte alignment, we waste odd registers then.
P.S.:
I also improved LDRB_POST_IMM regression test. Since ldrb instruction will
not generated by current regression test after this patch.
llvm-svn: 166018
Also provide an MRI::getReservedRegs() function to access the frozen
register set, and isReserved() and isAllocatable() methods to test
individual registers.
The various implementations of TRI::getReservedRegs() are quite
complicated, and many passes need to look at the reserved register set.
This patch makes it possible for these passes to use the cached copy in
MRI, avoiding a lot of malloc traffic and repeated calculations.
llvm-svn: 165982
inline assembly. For the time being, these will be called directly by clang.
However, in the near future I expect these to be sunk back into the MC layer
and more basic APIs (e.g., getClobbers(), getConstraints(), etc.) will be called
by clang.
llvm-svn: 165946
Convert the internal representation of the Attributes class into a pointer to an
opaque object that's uniqued by and stored in the LLVMContext object. The
Attributes class then becomes a thin wrapper around this opaque
object. Eventually, the internal representation will be expanded to include
attributes that represent code generation options, etc.
llvm-svn: 165917
This patch implements the new LibCallSimplifier class as outlined in [1].
In addition to providing the new base library simplification infrastructure,
all the fortified library call simplifications were moved over to the new
infrastructure. The rest of the library simplification optimizations will
be moved over with follow up patches.
NOTE: The original fortified library call simplifier located in the
SimplifyFortifiedLibCalls class was not removed because it is still
used by CodeGenPrepare. This class will eventually go away too.
[1] http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-August/052283.html
llvm-svn: 165873
the interface between the front-end and the MC layer when parsing inline
assembly. Unfortunately, this is too deep into the parsing stack. Specifically,
we're unable to handle target-independent assembly (i.e., assembly directives,
labels, etc.). Note the MatchAndEmitInstruction() isn't the correct
abstraction either. I'll be exposing target-independent hooks shortly, so this
is really just a cleanup.
llvm-svn: 165858
Additionally, all such cases are handled with no dynamic check.
All `classof()` of the form
class Foo {
[...]
static bool classof(const Bar *) { return true; }
[...]
}
where Foo is an ancestor of Bar are no longer necessary.
Don't write them!
Note: The exact test is `is_base_of<Foo, Bar>`, which is non-strict, so
that Foo is considered an ancestor of itself.
This leads to the following rule of thumb for LLVM-style RTTI:
The argument type of `classof()` should be a strict ancestor.
For more information about implementing LLVM-style RTTI, see
docs/HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI.rst
llvm-svn: 165765
to the instruction position. The old encoding would give an absolute
ID which counts up within a function, and only resets at the next function.
I.e., Instead of having:
... = icmp eq i32 n-1, n-2
br i1 ..., label %bb1, label %bb2
it will now be roughly:
... = icmp eq i32 1, 2
br i1 1, label %bb1, label %bb2
This makes it so that ids remain relatively small and can be encoded
in fewer bits.
With this encoding, forward reference operands will be given
negative-valued IDs. Use signed VBRs for the most common case
of forward references, which is phi instructions.
To retain backward compatibility we bump the bitcode version
from 0 to 1 to distinguish between the different encodings.
llvm-svn: 165739
Patch from Preston Briggs <preston.briggs@gmail.com>.
This is an updated version of the dependence-analysis patch, including an MIV
test based on Banerjee's inequalities.
It's a fairly complete implementation of the paper
Practical Dependence Testing
Gina Goff, Ken Kennedy, and Chau-Wen Tseng
PLDI 1991
It cannot yet propagate constraints between coupled RDIV subscripts (discussed
in Section 5.3.2 of the paper).
It's organized as a FunctionPass with a single entry point that supports testing
for dependence between two instructions in a function. If there's no dependence,
it returns null. If there's a dependence, it returns a pointer to a Dependence
which can be queried about details (what kind of dependence, is it loop
independent, direction and distance vector entries, etc). I haven't included
every imaginable feature, but there's a good selection that should be adequate
for supporting many loop transformations. Of course, it can be extended as
necessary.
Included in the patch file are many test cases, commented with C code showing
the loops and array references.
llvm-svn: 165708
SchedulerDAGInstrs::buildSchedGraph ignores dependencies between FixedStack
objects and byval parameters. So loading byval parameters from stack may be
inserted *before* it will be stored, since these operations are treated as
independent.
Fix:
Currently ARMTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments saves byval registers with
FixedStack MachinePointerInfo. To fix the problem we need to store byval
registers with MachinePointerInfo referenced to first the "byval" parameter.
Also commit adds two new fields to the InputArg structure: Function's argument
index and InputArg's part offset in bytes relative to the start position of
Function's argument. E.g.: If function's argument is 128 bit width and it was
splitted onto 32 bit regs, then we got 4 InputArg structs with same arg index,
but different offset values.
llvm-svn: 165616
Allows the new machine model to be used for NumMicroOps and OutputLatency.
Allows the HazardRecognizer to be disabled along with itineraries.
llvm-svn: 165603
This wasn't contributing anything significant to postRA heuristics except compile time (by my measurements) and will be replaced by a more general heuristic for cross-region dependencies within the scheduler itself.
llvm-svn: 165563
DeadArgumentElimination pass can replace one LLVM function with another,
invalidating a pointer stored in debug info metadata entry for this function.
To fix this, we collect debug info descriptors for functions before
running a DeadArgumentElimination pass and "patch" pointers in metadata nodes
if we replace a function.
llvm-svn: 165490
We use the enums to query whether an Attributes object has that attribute. The
opaque layer is responsible for knowing where that specific attribute is stored.
llvm-svn: 165488
This class is used by LSR and a number of places in the codegen.
This is the first step in de-coupling LSR from TLI, and creating
a new interface in between them.
llvm-svn: 165455
Start using the AttributesImpl object to hold the value of the attributes. All
queries go through the interfaces now.
This has one unfortunate consequence. I needed to move the AttributesImpl.h file
into include/llvm. But this is only temporary! Otherwise, the changes needed to
support this would be too large.
llvm-svn: 165433
The internal representation of the Attributes class will be opaque. All of the
query methods will need to query the opaque class. Therefore, these methods need
to be out-of-line.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 165305
This is a mechanical change of dynamic_cast<> to dyn_cast<>. A number of
these uses are actually more like isa<> or cast<>, and will be changed
to the semanticaly appropriate one in a future patch.
llvm-svn: 165291
This allows the processor-specific machine model to override selected
base opcodes without any fanciness.
e.g. InstRW<[CoreXWriteVANDP], (instregex "VANDP")>.
llvm-svn: 165180
In order to avoid rev-lock with Clang when moving to the new API, also
preserve the current API temporarily and insert a shim to implement the
new API in terms of the old.
llvm-svn: 165165
most of the behavior we want, but wrap the predicate in one which erases
elements from the set if they pass the predicate. Oh what I wouldn't
give for a lambda here.
Let me know if the predicate wrapping is too much magic. ;]
llvm-svn: 165076
preserves the values of the relocated entries, unlikely remove_if. This
allows walking them and erasing them.
Also flesh out the predicate we are using for this to support the
various constraints actually imposed on a UnaryPredicate -- without this
we can't compose it with std::not1.
Thanks to Sean Silva for the review here and noticing the issue with
std::remove_if.
llvm-svn: 165073
scheduled for processing on the worklist eventually gets deleted while
we are processing another alloca, fixing the original test case in
PR13990.
To facilitate this, add a remove_if helper to the SetVector abstraction.
It's not easy to use the standard abstractions for this because of the
specifics of SetVectors types and implementation.
Finally, a nice small test case is included. Thanks to Benjamin for the
fantastic reduced test case here! All I had to do was delete some empty
basic blocks!
llvm-svn: 165065
of operand is specific to MS-style inline assembly and should not be generated
when parsing normal assembly.
The purpose of the wildcard operands are to allow the AsmParser to match
multiple instructions (i.e., MCInsts) to a given ms-style asm statement. For
the time being the matcher just returns the first match. This patch only
implements wildcard matches for memory operands. Support for register
wildcards will be added in the near future.
llvm-svn: 165057
This adds 'elf' as a recognized target triple environment value and overrides the default generated object format on Windows platforms if that value is present. This patch also enables MCJIT tests on Windows using the new environment value.
llvm-svn: 165030
map constraints and MCInst operands to inline asm operands. This replaces the
getMCInstOperandNum() function.
The logic to determine the constraints are not in place, so we still default to
a register constraint (i.e., "r"). Also, we no longer build the MCInst but
rather return just the opcode to get the MCInstrDesc.
llvm-svn: 164979
The target backend can support data-in-code load commands even when
the assembler doesn't, or vice-versa. Allow targets to opt-in for
direct-to-object.
PR13973.
llvm-svn: 164974
- Update maximal stack alignment when stack arguments are prepared before a
call.
- Test cases are enhanced to show it's not a Win32 specific issue but a generic
one.
llvm-svn: 164946
folders and not having it here fails to compile if you actually try to use it.
Also, CreatePointerCast was failing to do the part where it does TD-aware
constant folding. Granted there is exactly one case where that it will ever
do anything, but there's no reason to skip it. For reference, that case is a
subtraction between two constant offsets on the same global variable, eg.,
"&A[123] - &A[4].f".
llvm-svn: 164760
This method can be called with a '0' argument which checks the return
value. However, the method it calls doesn't expect '0' as a valid value. Call the
correct method when it's 0.
llvm-svn: 164735
This opaque class will contain all of the attributes. All attribute queries will
go through this object. This object will also be uniqued in the LLVMContext.
Currently not used, so no implementation change.
llvm-svn: 164722
- Put statistics in alphabetical order
- Don't use getZextValue when building TableInt, just use APInts
- Introduce Create{Z,S}ExtOrTrunc in IRBuilder.
llvm-svn: 164696
Provide interface in TargetLowering to set or get the minimum number of basic
blocks whereby jump tables are generated for switch statements rather than an
if sequence.
getMinimumJumpTableEntries() defaults to 4.
setMinimumJumpTableEntries() allows target configuration.
This patch changes the default for the Hexagon architecture to 5
as it improves performance on some benchmarks.
llvm-svn: 164628
This silences several analyzer warnings within LLVM, and provides a slightly
nicer crash experience when someone calls isa<>, cast<>, or dyn_cast<> with
a null pointer.
llvm-svn: 164439
whether or not we want to print out backtrace information. Useful
for libraries that don't need backtrace information on a crash.
rdar://11844710
llvm-svn: 164426
The expression based expansion too often results in IR level optimizations
splitting the intermediate values into separate basic blocks, preventing
the formation of the VBSL instruction as the code author intended. In
particular, LICM would often hoist part of the computation out of a loop.
rdar://11011471
llvm-svn: 164340
This fixes some obscure failure cases involving registers defined inside multiclasses or foreach constructs that would not receive a unique ID, and would end up being omitted from the AsmMatcher tables.
llvm-svn: 164251
to improve compatibility with GNU as.
Based on a patch by PaX Team.
Fixed assertion failures on non-Darwin and added additional test cases.
llvm-svn: 164248
provide insertion order iteration, instead of the old option of
DenseMap order iteration over keys and insertion order iteration over
values.
This is implemented by keeping two copies of each key.
llvm-svn: 164221
This is a generally useful utility; there's no reason to have it hidden
in CodeGenDAGPatterns.cpp.
Also, rename it to fit the other comparators in Record.h
Review by Jakob.
llvm-svn: 164189
Now where we used to call ReInitMCSubtargetInfo, we actually recompute
the same information as InitMCSubtargetInfo instead of only setting
the feature bits.
llvm-svn: 164105
Add LIS::pruneValue() and extendToIndices(). These two functions are
used by the register coalescer when merging two live ranges requires
more than a trivial value mapping as supported by LiveInterval::join().
The pruneValue() function can remove the part of a value number that is
going to conflict in join(). Afterwards, extendToIndices can restore the
live range, using any new dominating value numbers and updating the SSA
form.
Use this complex value mapping to support merging a register into a
vector lane that has a conflicting value, but the clobbered lane is
undef.
llvm-svn: 164074
A value that is live in to a basic block should be returned by valueIn()
in LiveRangeQuery(getMBBStartIdx(MBB)), unless it is a PHI-def which
should be returned by valueDefined() instead.
Current code isn't using this functionality. Future code will.
llvm-svn: 163990
If a PHI value happens to be live out from the layout predecessor of its
def block, the def slot index will be in the middle of the segment:
%vreg11 = [192r,240B:0)[352r,416B:2)[416B,496r:1) 0@192r 1@480B-phi %2@352r
A LiveRangeQuery for 480 should return NULL from valueIn() since the
PHI value is defined at the block entry, not live in to the block.
No test case, future code depends on this functionality.
llvm-svn: 163971
new one, and add support for running the new pass in that mode and in
that slot of the pass manager. With this the new pass can completely
replace the old one within the pipeline.
The strategy for enabling or disabling the SSAUpdater logic is to do it
by making the requirement of the domtree analysis optional. By default,
it is required and we get the standard mem2reg approach. This is usually
the desired strategy when run in stand-alone situations. Within the
CGSCC pass manager, we disable requiring of the domtree analysis and
consequentially trigger fallback to the SSAUpdater promotion.
In theory this would allow the pass to re-use a domtree if one happened
to be available even when run in a mode that doesn't require it. In
practice, it lets us have a single pass rather than two which was
simpler for me to wrap my head around.
There is a hidden flag to force the use of the SSAUpdater code path for
the purpose of testing. The primary testing strategy is just to run the
existing tests through that path. One notable difference is that it has
custom code to handle lifetime markers, and one of the tests has been
enhanced to exercise that code.
This has survived a bootstrap and the test suite without serious
correctness issues, however my run of the test suite produced *very*
alarming performance numbers. I don't entirely understand or trust them
though, so more investigation is on-going.
To aid my understanding of the performance impact of the new SROA now
that it runs throughout the optimization pipeline, I'm enabling it by
default in this commit, and will disable it again once the LNT bots have
picked up one iteration with it. I want to get those bots (which are
much more stable) to evaluate the impact of the change before I jump to
any conclusions.
NOTE: Several Clang tests will fail because they run -O3 and check the
result's order of output. They'll go back to passing once I disable it
again.
llvm-svn: 163965
- The current_pos function is supposed to return all the written bytes, not the
current position of the underlying stream.
- This caused tell() to be broken whenever the underlying stream had buffered
content.
llvm-svn: 163948
* wrap code blocks in \code ... \endcode;
* refer to parameter names in paragraphs correctly (\arg is not what most
people want -- it starts a new paragraph);
* use \param instead of \arg to document parameters in order to be consistent
with the rest of the codebase.
llvm-svn: 163902
This is essentially a ground up re-think of the SROA pass in LLVM. It
was initially inspired by a few problems with the existing pass:
- It is subject to the bane of my existence in optimizations: arbitrary
thresholds.
- It is overly conservative about which constructs can be split and
promoted.
- The vector value replacement aspect is separated from the splitting
logic, missing many opportunities where splitting and vector value
formation can work together.
- The splitting is entirely based around the underlying type of the
alloca, despite this type often having little to do with the reality
of how that memory is used. This is especially prevelant with unions
and base classes where we tail-pack derived members.
- When splitting fails (often due to the thresholds), the vector value
replacement (again because it is separate) can kick in for
preposterous cases where we simply should have split the value. This
results in forming i1024 and i2048 integer "bit vectors" that
tremendously slow down subsequnet IR optimizations (due to large
APInts) and impede the backend's lowering.
The new design takes an approach that fundamentally is not susceptible
to many of these problems. It is the result of a discusison between
myself and Duncan Sands over IRC about how to premptively avoid these
types of problems and how to do SROA in a more principled way. Since
then, it has evolved and grown, but this remains an important aspect: it
fixes real world problems with the SROA process today.
First, the transform of SROA actually has little to do with replacement.
It has more to do with splitting. The goal is to take an aggregate
alloca and form a composition of scalar allocas which can replace it and
will be most suitable to the eventual replacement by scalar SSA values.
The actual replacement is performed by mem2reg (and in the future
SSAUpdater).
The splitting is divided into four phases. The first phase is an
analysis of the uses of the alloca. This phase recursively walks uses,
building up a dense datastructure representing the ranges of the
alloca's memory actually used and checking for uses which inhibit any
aspects of the transform such as the escape of a pointer.
Once we have a mapping of the ranges of the alloca used by individual
operations, we compute a partitioning of the used ranges. Some uses are
inherently splittable (such as memcpy and memset), while scalar uses are
not splittable. The goal is to build a partitioning that has the minimum
number of splits while placing each unsplittable use in its own
partition. Overlapping unsplittable uses belong to the same partition.
This is the target split of the aggregate alloca, and it maximizes the
number of scalar accesses which become accesses to their own alloca and
candidates for promotion.
Third, we re-walk the uses of the alloca and assign each specific memory
access to all the partitions touched so that we have dense use-lists for
each partition.
Finally, we build a new, smaller alloca for each partition and rewrite
each use of that partition to use the new alloca. During this phase the
pass will also work very hard to transform uses of an alloca into a form
suitable for promotion, including forming vector operations, speculating
loads throguh PHI nodes and selects, etc.
After splitting is complete, each newly refined alloca that is
a candidate for promotion to a scalar SSA value is run through mem2reg.
There are lots of reasonably detailed comments in the source code about
the design and algorithms, and I'm going to be trying to improve them in
subsequent commits to ensure this is well documented, as the new pass is
in many ways more complex than the old one.
Some of this is still a WIP, but the current state is reasonbly stable.
It has passed bootstrap, the nightly test suite, and Duncan has run it
successfully through the ACATS and DragonEgg test suites. That said, it
remains behind a default-off flag until the last few pieces are in
place, and full testing can be done.
Specific areas I'm looking at next:
- Improved comments and some code cleanup from reviews.
- SSAUpdater and enabling this pass inside the CGSCC pass manager.
- Some datastructure tuning and compile-time measurements.
- More aggressive FCA splitting and vector formation.
Many thanks to Duncan Sands for the thorough final review, as well as
Benjamin Kramer for lots of review during the process of writing this
pass, and Daniel Berlin for reviewing the data structures and algorithms
and general theory of the pass. Also, several other people on IRC, over
lunch tables, etc for lots of feedback and advice.
llvm-svn: 163883
This is mostly documentation for the new machine model. It is designed
to be flexible, easy to incrementally refine for a subtarget, and
provide all the information that MachineScheduler will need.
If all goes well, I will follow up with an example of the new model in
use for ARM.
llvm-svn: 163877
* wrap code blocks in \code ... \endcode;
* refer to parameter names in paragraphs correctly (\arg is not what most
people want -- it starts a new paragraph).
llvm-svn: 163790
Add some support for dealing with an object pointer on arguments.
Part of rdar://9797999
which now supports adding the object pointer attribute to the
subprogram as it should.
llvm-svn: 163754
- BlockAddress has no support of BA + offset form and there is no way to
propagate that offset into machine operand;
- Add BA + offset support and a new interface 'getTargetBlockAddress' to
simplify target block address forming;
- All targets are modified to use new interface and X86 backend is enhanced to
support BA + offset addressing.
llvm-svn: 163743
The search for liveness is clipped to a specific number of instructions around the target MachineInstr, in order to avoid degenerating into an O(N^2) algorithm. It tries to use various clues about how instructions around (both before and after) a given MachineInstr use that register, to determine its state at the MachineInstr.
llvm-svn: 163695
Sub-register lane masks are bitmasks that can be used to determine if
two sub-registers of a virtual register will overlap. For example, ARM's
ssub0 and ssub1 sub-register indices don't overlap each other, but both
overlap dsub0 and qsub0.
The lane masks will be accurate on most targets, but on targets that use
sub-register indexes in an irregular way, the masks may conservatively
report that two sub-register indices overlap when the eventually
allocated physregs don't.
Irregular register banks also mean that the bits in a lane mask can't be
mapped onto register units, but the concept is similar.
llvm-svn: 163630
Apparently, NumSubRegIndices was completely unused before. Adjust it by
one to include the null subreg index, just like getNumRegs() includes
the null register.
llvm-svn: 163628
The Hexagon target decided to use a lot of functionality from the
target-independent scheduler. That's fine, and other targets should be
able to do the same. This reorg and API update makes that easy.
For the record, ScheduleDAGMI was not meant to be subclassed. Instead,
new scheduling algorithms should be able to implement
MachineSchedStrategy and be done. But if need be, it's nice to be
able to extend ScheduleDAGMI, so I also made that easier. The target
scheduler is somewhat more apt to break that way though.
llvm-svn: 163580
For some reason .lcomm uses byte alignment and .comm log2 alignment so we can't
use the same setting for both. Fix this by reintroducing the LCOMM enum.
I verified this against mingw's gcc.
llvm-svn: 163420
- Darwin lied about not supporting .lcomm and turned it into zerofill in the
asm parser. Push the zerofill-conversion down into macho-specific code.
- This makes the tri-state LCOMMType enum superfluous, there are no targets
without .lcomm.
- Do proper error reporting when trying to use .lcomm with alignment on a target
that doesn't support it.
- .comm and .lcomm alignment was parsed in bytes on COFF, should be power of 2.
- Fixes PR13755 (.lcomm crashes on ELF).
llvm-svn: 163395
- This patch is inspired by the failure of the following code snippet
which is used to convert enumerable values into encoding bits to
improve the readability of td files.
class S<int s> {
bits<2> V = !if(!eq(s, 8), {0, 0},
!if(!eq(s, 16), {0, 1},
!if(!eq(s, 32), {1, 0},
!if(!eq(s, 64), {1, 1}, {?, ?}))));
}
Later, PR8330 is found to report not exactly the same bug relevant
issue to bit/bits values.
- Instead of resolving bit/bits values separately through
resolveBitReference(), this patch adds getBit() for all Inits and
resolves bit value by resolving plus getting the specified bit. This
unifies the resolving of bit with other values and removes redundant
logic for resolving bit only. In addition,
BitsInit::resolveReferences() is optimized to take advantage of this
origanization by resolving VarBitInit's variable reference first and
then getting bits from it.
- The type interference in '!if' operator is revised to support possible
combinations of int and bits/bit in MHS and RHS.
- As there may be illegal assignments from integer value to bit, says
assign 2 to a bit, but we only check this during instantiation in some
cases, e.g.
bit V = !if(!eq(x, 17), 0, 2);
Verbose diagnostic message is generated when invalid value is
resolveed to help locating the error.
- PR8330 is fixed as well.
llvm-svn: 163360
The RegisterCoalescer understands overlapping live ranges where one
register is defined as a copy of the other. With this change, register
allocators using LiveRegMatrix can do the same, at least for copies
between physical and virtual registers.
When a physreg is defined by a copy from a virtreg, allow those live
ranges to overlap:
%CL<def> = COPY %vreg11:sub_8bit; GR32_ABCD:%vreg11
%vreg13<def,tied1> = SAR32rCL %vreg13<tied0>, %CL<imp-use,kill>
We can assign %vreg11 to %ECX, overlapping the live range of %CL.
llvm-svn: 163336
We will soon allow virtual register live ranges to overlap regunit live
ranges when the physreg is defined as a copy of the virtreg:
%EAX = COPY %vreg5
FOO %vreg5
BAR %EAX<kill>
There is no real interference since %vreg5 and %EAX have the same value
where they overlap.
This patch prevents addKillFlags from adding virtreg kill flags to FOO
where the assigned physreg is overlapping the virtual register live
range.
llvm-svn: 163335
pointers-to-strong-pointers may be in play. These can lead to retains and
releases happening in unstructured ways, foiling the optimizer. This fixes
rdar://12150909.
llvm-svn: 163180
The MachineOperand::TiedTo field was maintained, but not used.
This patch enables it in isRegTiedToDefOperand() and
isRegTiedToUseOperand() which are the actual functions use by the
register allocator.
llvm-svn: 163153
After much agonizing, use a full 4 bits of precious MachineOperand space
to encode this. This uses existing padding, and doesn't grow
MachineOperand beyond its current 32 bytes.
This allows tied defs among the first 15 operands on a normal
instruction, just like the current MCInstrDesc constraint encoding.
Inline assembly needs to be able to tie more than the first 15 operands,
and gets special treatment.
Tied uses can appear beyond 15 operands, as long as they are tied to a
def that's in range.
llvm-svn: 163151
- CodeGenPrepare pass for identifying div/rem ops
- Backend specifies the type mapping using addBypassSlowDivType
- Enabled only for Intel Atom with O2 32-bit -> 8-bit
- Replace IDIV with instructions which test its value and use DIVB if the value
is positive and less than 256.
- In the case when the quotient and remainder of a divide are used a DIV
and a REM instruction will be present in the IR. In the non-Atom case
they are both lowered to IDIVs and CSE removes the redundant IDIV instruction,
using the quotient and remainder from the first IDIV. However,
due to this optimization CSE is not able to eliminate redundant
IDIV instructions because they are located in different basic blocks.
This is overcome by calculating both the quotient (DIV) and remainder (REM)
in each basic block that is inserted by the optimization and reusing the result
values when a subsequent DIV or REM instruction uses the same operands.
- Test cases check for the presents of the optimization when calculating
either the quotient, remainder, or both.
Patch by Tyler Nowicki!
llvm-svn: 163150
Rationale: For each preprocessor macro, either the definedness is what's
meaningful, or the value is what's meaningful, or both. If definedness is
meaningful, we should use #ifdef. If the value is meaningful, we should use
and #ifdef interchangeably for the same macro, seems ugly to me, even if
undefined macros are zero if used.
This also has the benefit that including an LLVM header doesn't prevent
you from compiling with -Wundef -Werror.
Patch by John Garvin!
<rdar://problem/12189979>
llvm-svn: 163148
by instruction address from DWARF.
Add --inlining flag to llvm-dwarfdump to demonstrate and test this functionality,
so that "llvm-dwarfdump --inlining --address=0x..." now works much like
"addr2line -i 0x...", provided that the binary has debug info
(Clang's -gline-tables-only *is* enough).
llvm-svn: 163128