X86 at least is able to use movmsk or kmov to move the mask to the scalar
domain. Then we can just use test instructions to test individual bits.
This is more efficient than extracting each mask element
individually.
I special cased v1i1 to use the previous behavior. This avoids
poor type legalization of bitcast of v1i1 to i1.
I've skipped expandload/compressstore as I think we need to
handle constant masks for those better first.
Many tests end up with duplicate test instructions due to tail
duplication in the branch folding pass. But the same thing
happens when constructing similar code in C. So its not unique
to the scalarization.
Not sure if this lowering code will also be good for other targets,
but we're only testing X86 today.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65319
llvm-svn: 367489
As it's causing some bot failures (and per request from kbarton).
This reverts commit r358543/ab70da07286e618016e78247e4a24fcb84077fda.
llvm-svn: 358546
This saves needing to call getInt32 ourselves. Making the code a little shorter.
The test changes are because insert/extract use getInt64 internally. Shouldn't be a functional issue.
This cleanup because I plan to write similar code for expandload/compressstore.
llvm-svn: 355767