This fixes a crash I observed in issue #48708 where the LSR
pass tries to insert an instruction in a basic block with only a
catchswitch statement in there. This happens because the Phi node
being evaluated assumes the same value for different basic blocks.
If the basic block associated with the incoming value of the operand
being evaluated has an EHPad terminator LSR skips optimizing it.
But if that incoming value can come from multiple different blocks
there can be some incoming basic blocks which are terminated in
an EHPad. If these are then rewritten in RewriteForPhi the ones
containing an EHPad terminator will hit the "Insertion point must
be a normal instruction" assert in AdjustInsertPositionForExpand.
This fix makes CollectLoopInvariantFixupsAndFormulae also ignore
cases where the same value has another incoming basic block with an
EHPad, same as it already does in case the primary value has one.
Patch by Lorenz Brun <lorenz@brun.one>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98378
In D115311, we're looking to modify clang to emit i constraints rather
than X constraints for callbr's indirect destinations. Prior to doing
so, update all of the existing tests in llvm/ to match.
Reviewed By: void, jyknight
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115410
This adjusts all the MVE and CDE intrinsics now that v2i1 is a legal
type, to use a <2 x i1> as opposed to emulating the predicate with a
<4 x i1>. The v4i1 workarounds have been removed leaving the natural
v2i1 types, notably in vctp64 which now generates a v2i1 type.
AutoUpgrade code has been added to upgrade old IR, which needs to
convert the old v4i1 to a v2i1 be converting it back and forth to an
integer with arm.mve.v2i and arm.mve.i2v intrinsics. These should be
optimized away in the final assembly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114455
Relative to the previous landing attempt, this introduces an additional
flag on forgetMemoizedResults() to not remove SCEVUnknown phis from
the value map. The invalidation after BECount calculation wants to
leave these alone and skips them in its own use-def walk, but we can
still end up invalidating them via forgetMemoizedResults() if there
is another IR value with the same SCEV. This is intended as a temporary
workaround only, and the need for this should go away once the
getBackedgeTakenInfo() invalidation is refactored in the spirit of
D114263.
-----
This adds validation for consistency of ValueExprMap and
ExprValueMap, and fixes identified issues:
* Addrec construction directly wrote to ValueExprMap in a few places,
without updating ExprValueMap. Add a helper to ensures they stay
consistent. The adjustment in forgetSymbolicName() explicitly
drops the old value from the map, so that we don't rely on it
being overwritten.
* forgetMemoizedResultsImpl() was dropping the SCEV from
ExprValueMap, but not dropping the corresponding entries from
ValueExprMap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113349
Relative to the previous landing attempt, this makes
insertValueToMap() resilient against the value already being
present in the map -- previously I only checked this for the
createSimpleAffineAddRec() case, but the same issue can also
occur for the general createNodeForPHI(). In both cases, the
addrec may be constructed and added to the map in a recursive
query trying to create said addrec. In this case, this happens
due to the invalidation when the BE count is computed, which
ends up clearing out the symbolic name as well.
-----
This adds validation for consistency of ValueExprMap and
ExprValueMap, and fixes identified issues:
* Addrec construction directly wrote to ValueExprMap in a few places,
without updating ExprValueMap. Add a helper to ensures they stay
consistent. The adjustment in forgetSymbolicName() explicitly
drops the old value from the map, so that we don't rely on it
being overwritten.
* forgetMemoizedResultsImpl() was dropping the SCEV from
ExprValueMap, but not dropping the corresponding entries from
ValueExprMap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113349
The compiler was generating symbols in the final code object for local
branch target labels. This bloats the code object, slows down the loader,
and is only used to simplify disassembly.
Use '--symbolize-operands' with llvm-objdump to improve readability of the
branch target operands in disassembly.
Fixes: SWDEV-312223
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114273
Added a lit test that checks scev-based salvagaing does not select IVs
that have a SCEV containing an undef.
Original Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111810
The patch attempts to optimize a sequence of SIMD loads from the same
base pointer:
%0 = gep float*, float* base, i32 4
%1 = bitcast float* %0 to <4 x float>*
%2 = load <4 x float>, <4 x float>* %1
...
%n1 = gep float*, float* base, i32 N
%n2 = bitcast float* %n1 to <4 x float>*
%n3 = load <4 x float>, <4 x float>* %n2
For AArch64 the compiler generates a sequence of LDR Qt, [Xn, #16].
However, 32-bit NEON VLD1/VST1 lack the [Wn, #imm] addressing mode, so
the address is computed before every ld/st instruction:
add r2, r0, #32
add r0, r0, #16
vld1.32 {d18, d19}, [r2]
vld1.32 {d22, d23}, [r0]
This can be improved by computing address for the first load, and then
using a post-indexed form of VLD1/VST1 to load the rest:
add r0, r0, #16
vld1.32 {d18, d19}, [r0]!
vld1.32 {d22, d23}, [r0]
In order to do that, the patch adds more patterns to DAGCombine:
- (load (add ptr inc1)) and (add ptr inc2) are now folded if inc1
and inc2 are constants.
- (or ptr inc) is now recognized as a pointer increment if ptr is
sufficiently aligned.
In addition to that, we now search for all possible base updates and
then pick the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108988
We would like to start pushing -mcpu=generic towards enabling the set of
features that improves performance for some CPUs, without hurting any
others. A blend of the performance options hopefully beneficial to all
CPUs. The largest part of that is enabling in-order scheduling using the
Cortex-A55 schedule model. This is similar to the Arm backend change
from eecb353d0e which made -mcpu=generic perform in-order scheduling
using the cortex-a8 schedule model.
The idea is that in-order cpu's require the most help in instruction
scheduling, whereas out-of-order cpus can for the most part out-of-order
schedule around different codegen. Our benchmarking suggests that
hypothesis holds. When running on an in-order core this improved
performance by 3.8% geomean on a set of DSP workloads, 2% geomean on
some other embedded benchmark and between 1% and 1.8% on a set of
singlecore and multicore workloads, all running on a Cortex-A55 cluster.
On an out-of-order cpu the results are a lot more noisy but show flat
performance or an improvement. On the set of DSP and embedded
benchmarks, run on a Cortex-A78 there was a very noisy 1% speed
improvement. Using the most detailed results I could find, SPEC2006 runs
on a Neoverse N1 show a small increase in instruction count (+0.127%),
but a decrease in cycle counts (-0.155%, on average). The instruction
count is very low noise, the cycle count is more noisy with a 0.15%
decrease not being significant. SPEC2k17 shows a small decrease (-0.2%)
in instruction count leading to a -0.296% decrease in cycle count. These
results are within noise margins but tend to show a small improvement in
general.
When specifying an Apple target, clang will set "-target-cpu apple-a7"
on the command line, so should not be affected by this change when
running from clang. This also doesn't enable more runtime unrolling like
-mcpu=cortex-a55 does, only changing the schedule used.
A lot of existing tests have updated. This is a summary of the important
differences:
- Most changes are the same instructions in a different order.
- Sometimes this leads to very minor inefficiencies, such as requiring
an extra mov to move variables into r0/v0 for the return value of a test
function.
- misched-fusion.ll was no longer fusing the pairs of instructions it
should, as per D110561. I've changed the schedule used in the test
for now.
- neon-mla-mls.ll now uses "mul; sub" as opposed to "neg; mla" due to
the different latencies. This seems fine to me.
- Some SVE tests do not always remove movprfx where they did before due
to different register allocation giving different destructive forms.
- The tests argument-blocks-array-of-struct.ll and arm64-windows-calls.ll
produce two LDR where they previously produced an LDP due to
store-pair-suppress kicking in.
- arm64-ldp.ll and arm64-neon-copy.ll are missing pre/postinc on LPD.
- Some tests such as arm64-neon-mul-div.ll and
ragreedy-local-interval-cost.ll have more, less or just different
spilling.
- In aarch64_generated_funcs.ll.generated.expected one part of the
function is no longer outlined. Interestingly if I switch this to use
any other scheduled even less is outlined.
Some of these are expected to happen, such as differences in outlining
or register spilling. There will be places where these result in worse
codegen, places where they are better, with the SPEC instruction counts
suggesting it is not a decrease overall, on average.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110830
SCEV-based salvaging will use excessive resources if it encounters
very long SCEV expressions. This patch places a limit on the length of
SCEV expression that salvaging will attempt to translate.
Reviewed by: Orlando
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110558
This updates a few more check lines, in some mte tests that were close
to auto generated already and some CodeGenPrepare/consthoist tests where
being able to see the entire code sequence is useful for determining
whether code differences are improvements or not.
This fixes a violation of the wrap flag rules introduced in c4048d8f. This was also noted in the (very old) PR23527.
The issue being fixed is that we assume the inbound flag on any GEP assumes that all users of *any* gep (or add) which happens to map to that SCEV would also be UB if the (other) gep overflowed. That's simply not true.
In terms of the test diffs, I don't see anything seriously problematic. The lost flags are expected (given the semantic restriction on when its legal to tag the SCEV), and there are several cases where the previously inferred flags are unsound per the new semantics.
The only common trend I noticed when looking at the deltas is that by not considering branch on poison as immediate UB in ValueTracking, we do miss a few cases we could reclaim. We may be able to claw some of these back with the follow ideas mentioned in PR51817.
It's worth noting that most of the changes are analysis result only changes. The two transform changes are pretty minimal. In one case, we miss the opportunity to infer a nuw (correctly). In the other, we fail to fold an exit and produce a loop invariant form instead. This one is probably over-reduced as the program appears to be undefined in practice, and neither before or after exploits that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109789
This reverts commit 8fdac7cb7a.
The issue causing the revert has been fixed a while ago in 60b852092c.
Original message:
Now that SCEVExpander can preserve LCSSA form,
we do not have to worry about LCSSA form when
trying to look through PHIs. SCEVExpander will take
care of inserting LCSSA PHI nodes as required.
This increases precision of the analysis in some cases.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev, bmahjour
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71539
The scev-based salvaging for LSR can sometimes produce unnecessarily
verbose expressions. This patch adds logic to detect when the value to
be recovered and the induction variable differ by only a constant
offset. Then, the expression to derive the current iteration count can
be omitted from the dbg.value in favour of the offset.
Reviewed by: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109044
Currently, opaque pointers are supported in two forms: The
-force-opaque-pointers mode, where all pointers are opaque and
typed pointers do not exist. And as a simple ptr type that can
coexist with typed pointers.
This patch removes support for the mixed mode. You either get
typed pointers, or you get opaque pointers, but not both. In the
(current) default mode, using ptr is forbidden. In -opaque-pointers
mode, all pointers are opaque.
The motivation here is that the mixed mode introduces additional
issues that don't exist in fully opaque mode. D105155 is an example
of a design problem. Looking at D109259, it would probably need
additional work to support mixed mode (e.g. to generate GEPs for
typed base but opaque result). Mixed mode will also end up
inserting many casts between i8* and ptr, which would require
significant additional work to consistently avoid.
I don't think the mixed mode is particularly valuable, as it
doesn't align with our end goal. The only thing I've found it to
be moderately useful for is adding some opaque pointer tests in
between typed pointer tests, but I think we can live without that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109290
his is a fix for PR43678, and is an alternate patch to D105723.
The basic issue we're running into is that LSR + SCEVExpander are moving the very instruction whose operand we're in the process of expanding. This breaks the subtle and ill-documented invariant which let LSR work. (Full story can be found here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105723#2878473)
Rather than attempting a fix, this change just removes the optimization entirely. The code is entirely untested, and removing it appears to have no impact I can find. This code was added back in 2014 by 1e12f8563d with a single test which does not seem to actually test the hoisting logic.
From a philosophical standpoint, it also seems very strange to have the expander implementing optimizations which should live in a dedicated transform pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106178
The SCEV-based salvaging method caches dbg.value information pre-LSR so
that salvaging may be attempted post-LSR. If the dbg.value are already
undef pre-LSR then a salvage attempt would be fruitless, so avoid
caching them.
Reviewed By: StephenTozer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107448
SCEV-based salvaging in LSR translates SCEVs to DIExpressions. SCEVs may
contain very large integers but the translation does not support
integers greater than 64 bits. This patch adds checks to ensure
conversions of these large integers is not attempted. A regression test
is added to ensure no such translation is attempted.
Reviewed by: StephenTozer
PR: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51329
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107438
This changes the lowering of f32 and f64 COPY from a 128bit vector ORR to
a fmov of the appropriate type. At least on some CPU's with 64bit NEON
data paths this is expected to be faster, and shouldn't be slower on any
CPU that treats fmov as a register rename.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106365
Add a comment when there is a shifted value,
add x9, x0, #291, lsl #12 ; =1191936
but not when the immediate value is unshifted,
subs x9, x0, #256 ; =256
when the comment adds nothing additional to the reader.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107196
Additional asserts were added to ScalarEvolution to enforce
pointer/int type rules. An assert is triggered when the LSR pass
attempts to extend a pointer SCEV in GenerateTruncates.
This patch changes GenerateTruncates to exit early if the Formaula
contains a ScaledReg or BaseReg with a pointer type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107185
Reapply commit d675b594f4 that was
reverted due to buildbot failures. A simple fix has been applied to
remove an assertion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105207
Reapply commit 796b84d26f that was
reverted due to reports of crashes. A minor change now guards against
getVariableLocationOperand() returning a nullptr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106659
This reapplies commit 76f3ffb2b2 that was
reverted due to buildbot failures.
- Update lit tests with REQUIRES condition.
- Abandon salvage attempt if SCEVUnknown::getValue() returns nullptr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105207
This patch extends salvaging of debuginfo in the Loop Strength Reduction
(LSR) pass by translating Scalar Evaluations (SCEV) into DIExpressions.
The method is as follows:
- Cache dbg.value intrinsics that are salvageable.
- Obtain a loop Induction Variable (IV) from ScalarExpressionExpander or
the loop header.
- Translate the IV SCEV into an expression that recovers the current
loop iteration count. Combine this with the dbg.value's location
op SCEV to create a DIExpression that salvages the value.
Review by: jmorse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105207
This patch addresses assertion failure in case when the only found formula for LSR
is `1*reg => reg` which was supposed to be an impossible situation, however there
is a test that shows it is possible.
In this case, we can use scale register with scale of 1 as the missing base register.
Reviewed By: huihuiz, reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105009
This adds support for opaque pointers to expandAddToGEP() by always
generating an i8 GEP for opaque pointers. After looking at some other
cases (constexpr GEP folding, SROA GEP generation), I've come around
to the idea that we should use i8 GEPs for opaque pointers, because
the alternative would be to guess a GEP type from surrounding code,
which will not be reliable. Ultimately, i8 GEPs is where we want to
end up anyway, and opaque pointers just make that the natural choice.
There are a couple of other places in SCEVExpander that check pointer
element types, I plan to update those when I run across usable test
coverage that doesn't assert elsewhere.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105398
As part of making ScalarEvolution's handling of pointers consistent, we
want to forbid multiplying a pointer by -1 (or any other value). This
means we can't blindly subtract pointers.
There are a few ways we could deal with this:
1. We could completely forbid subtracting pointers in getMinusSCEV()
2. We could forbid subracting pointers with different pointer bases
(this patch).
3. We could try to ptrtoint pointer operands.
The option in this patch is more friendly to non-integral pointers: code
that works with normal pointers will also work with non-integral
pointers. And it seems like there are very few places that actually
benefit from the third option.
As a minimal patch, the ScalarEvolution implementation of getMinusSCEV
still ends up subtracting pointers if they have the same base. This
should eliminate the shared pointer base, but eventually we'll need to
rewrite it to avoid negating the pointer base. I plan to do this as a
separate step to allow measuring the compile-time impact.
This doesn't cause obvious functional changes in most cases; the one
case that is significantly affected is ICmpZero handling in LSR (which
is the source of almost all the test changes). The resulting changes
seem okay to me, but suggestions welcome. As an alternative, I tried
explicitly ptrtoint'ing the operands, but the result doesn't seem
obviously better.
I deleted the test lsr-undef-in-binop.ll becuase I couldn't figure out
how to repair it to test what it was actually trying to test.
Recommitting with fix to MemoryDepChecker::isDependent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104806
As part of making ScalarEvolution's handling of pointers consistent, we
want to forbid multiplying a pointer by -1 (or any other value). This
means we can't blindly subtract pointers.
There are a few ways we could deal with this:
1. We could completely forbid subtracting pointers in getMinusSCEV()
2. We could forbid subracting pointers with different pointer bases
(this patch).
3. We could try to ptrtoint pointer operands.
The option in this patch is more friendly to non-integral pointers: code
that works with normal pointers will also work with non-integral
pointers. And it seems like there are very few places that actually
benefit from the third option.
As a minimal patch, the ScalarEvolution implementation of getMinusSCEV
still ends up subtracting pointers if they have the same base. This
should eliminate the shared pointer base, but eventually we'll need to
rewrite it to avoid negating the pointer base. I plan to do this as a
separate step to allow measuring the compile-time impact.
This doesn't cause obvious functional changes in most cases; the one
case that is significantly affected is ICmpZero handling in LSR (which
is the source of almost all the test changes). The resulting changes
seem okay to me, but suggestions welcome. As an alternative, I tried
explicitly ptrtoint'ing the operands, but the result doesn't seem
obviously better.
I deleted the test lsr-undef-in-binop.ll becuase I couldn't figure out
how to repair it to test what it was actually trying to test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104806
Zero factor leads to division by zero and failure of corresponding
assert as shown in PR50765. We should filter out such factors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104702
Reviewed By: huihuiz, reames
During Loop Strength Reduce, if the terminating condition for the loop
is not immediately adjacent to the terminating branch and it has more
than one use, a clone of the condition will be created just before the
terminating branch and will be used as the branch condition. Currently,
whether the instructions are "immediately adjacent" is determined by
checking whether the next instruction after the condition is the
terminating branch; this is incorrect however, as the presence of a
debug intrinsic between the two will result in a change to the output.
This is fixed by using getNextNonDebugInstruction() instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103033