This is the second of a series of patches to handle type uniqueing of the
type array for a subroutine type.
For vector and array types, getElements returns the array of subranges, so it
is a better name than getTypeArray. Even for class, struct and enum types,
getElements returns the members, which can be subprograms.
setArrays can set up to two arrays, the second is the templates.
This commit should have no functionality change.
llvm-svn: 214112
This is the first commit in a series that add an @llvm.assume intrinsic which
can be used to provide the optimizer with a condition it may assume to be true
(when the control flow would hit the intrinsic call). Some basic properties are added here:
- llvm.invariant(true) is dead.
- llvm.invariant(false) is unreachable (this directly corresponds to the
documented behavior of MSVC's __assume(0)), so is llvm.invariant(undef).
The intrinsic is tagged as writing arbitrarily, in order to maintain control
dependencies. BasicAA has been updated, however, to return NoModRef for any
particular location-based query so that we don't unnecessarily block code
motion.
llvm-svn: 213973
Ugh. Turns out not even transformation passes link in how to read IR.
I sincerely believe the buildbots will finally agree with my system
after this though. (I don't really understand why all of this has been
working on my system, but not on all the buildbots.)
Create a new tool called llvm-uselistorder to use for verifying use-list
order. For now, just dump everything from the (now defunct)
-verify-use-list-order pass into the tool.
This might be a better way to test use-list order anyway.
Part of PR5680.
llvm-svn: 213957
This functionality is currently turned off by default.
Part of the motivation for introducing scoped-noalias metadata is to enable the
preservation of noalias parameter attribute information after inlining.
Sometimes this can be inferred from the code in the caller after inlining, but
often we simply lose valuable information.
The overall process if fairly simple:
1. Create a new unqiue scope domain.
2. For each (used) noalias parameter, create a new alias scope.
3. For each pointer, collect the underlying objects. Add a noalias scope for
each noalias parameter from which we're not derived (and has not been
captured prior to that point).
4. Add an alias.scope for each noalias parameter from which we might be
derived (or has been captured before that point).
Note that the capture checks apply only if one of the underlying objects is not
an identified function-local object.
llvm-svn: 213949
The dragonegg buildbot (and others?) started failing after
r213945/r213946 because `llvm-as` wasn't linking in the bitcode reader.
I think moving the verify functions to the same file as the verify pass
should fix the build. Adding a command-line option for maintaining
use-list order in assembly as a drive-by to prevent warnings about
unused static functions.
llvm-svn: 213947
Add a -verify-use-list-order pass, which shuffles use-list order, writes
to bitcode, reads back, and verifies that the (shuffled) order matches.
- The utility functions live in lib/IR/UseListOrder.cpp.
- Moved (and renamed) the command-line option to enable writing
use-lists, so that this pass can return early if the use-list orders
aren't being serialized.
It's not clear that this pass is the right direction long-term (perhaps
a separate tool instead?), but short-term it's a great way to test the
use-list order prototype. I've added an XFAIL-ed testcase that I'm
hoping to get working pretty quickly.
This is part of PR5680.
llvm-svn: 213945
hint) the loop unroller replaces the llvm.loop.unroll.count metadata with
llvm.loop.unroll.disable metadata to prevent any subsequent unrolling
passes from unrolling more than the hint indicates. This patch fixes
an issue where loop unrolling could be disabled for other loops as well which
share the same llvm.loop metadata.
llvm-svn: 213900
This commit adds scoped noalias metadata. The primary motivations for this
feature are:
1. To preserve noalias function attribute information when inlining
2. To provide the ability to model block-scope C99 restrict pointers
Neither of these two abilities are added here, only the necessary
infrastructure. In fact, there should be no change to existing functionality,
only the addition of new features. The logic that converts noalias function
parameters into this metadata during inlining will come in a follow-up commit.
What is added here is the ability to generally specify noalias memory-access
sets. Regarding the metadata, alias-analysis scopes are defined similar to TBAA
nodes:
!scope0 = metadata !{ metadata !"scope of foo()" }
!scope1 = metadata !{ metadata !"scope 1", metadata !scope0 }
!scope2 = metadata !{ metadata !"scope 2", metadata !scope0 }
!scope3 = metadata !{ metadata !"scope 2.1", metadata !scope2 }
!scope4 = metadata !{ metadata !"scope 2.2", metadata !scope2 }
Loads and stores can be tagged with an alias-analysis scope, and also, with a
noalias tag for a specific scope:
... = load %ptr1, !alias.scope !{ !scope1 }
... = load %ptr2, !alias.scope !{ !scope1, !scope2 }, !noalias !{ !scope1 }
When evaluating an aliasing query, if one of the instructions is associated
with an alias.scope id that is identical to the noalias scope associated with
the other instruction, or is a descendant (in the scope hierarchy) of the
noalias scope associated with the other instruction, then the two memory
accesses are assumed not to alias.
Note that is the first element of the scope metadata is a string, then it can
be combined accross functions and translation units. The string can be replaced
by a self-reference to create globally unqiue scope identifiers.
[Note: This overview is slightly stylized, since the metadata nodes really need
to just be numbers (!0 instead of !scope0), and the scope lists are also global
unnamed metadata.]
Existing noalias metadata in a callee is "cloned" for use by the inlined code.
This is necessary because the aliasing scopes are unique to each call site
(because of possible control dependencies on the aliasing properties). For
example, consider a function: foo(noalias a, noalias b) { *a = *b; } that gets
inlined into bar() { ... if (...) foo(a1, b1); ... if (...) foo(a2, b2); } --
now just because we know that a1 does not alias with b1 at the first call site,
and a2 does not alias with b2 at the second call site, we cannot let inlining
these functons have the metadata imply that a1 does not alias with b2.
llvm-svn: 213864
In order to enable the preservation of noalias function parameter information
after inlining, and the representation of block-level __restrict__ pointer
information (etc.), additional kinds of aliasing metadata will be introduced.
This metadata needs to be carried around in AliasAnalysis::Location objects
(and MMOs at the SDAG level), and so we need to generalize the current scheme
(which is hard-coded to just one TBAA MDNode*).
This commit introduces only the necessary refactoring to allow for the
introduction of other aliasing metadata types, but does not actually introduce
any (that will come in a follow-up commit). What it does introduce is a new
AAMDNodes structure to hold all of the aliasing metadata nodes associated with
a particular memory-accessing instruction, and uses that structure instead of
the raw MDNode* in AliasAnalysis::Location, etc.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 213859
We use gep to access the global array "switch.table", and the table index
should be treated as unsigned. When the highest bit is 1, this commit
zero-extends the index to an integer type with larger size.
For a switch on i2, we used to generate:
%switch.tableidx = sub i2 %0, -2
getelementptr inbounds [4 x i64]* @switch.table, i32 0, i2 %switch.tableidx
It is incorrect when %switch.tableidx is 2 or 3. The fix is to generate
%switch.tableidx = sub i2 %0, -2
%switch.tableidx.zext = zext i2 %switch.tableidx to i3
getelementptr inbounds [4 x i64]* @switch.table, i32 0, i3 %switch.tableidx.zext
rdar://17735071
llvm-svn: 213815
While the subprogram map cache used by Dead Argument Elimination works
there, I made a mistake when reusing it for Argument Promotion in
r212128 because ArgPromo may transform functions more than once whereas
DAE transforms each function only once, removing all the dead arguments
in one go.
To address this, ensure that the map is updated after each argument
promotion.
In retrospect it might be a little wasteful to create a map of all
subprograms when only handling a single CGSCC, but the alternative is
walking the debug info for each function in the CGSCC that gets updated.
It's not clear to me what the right tradeoff is there, but since the
current tradeoff seems to be working OK (and the code to keep things
updated is very cheap), let's stick with that for now.
llvm-svn: 213805
It handles the errors which were seen in PR19958 where wrong code was being emitted due to earlier patch.
Added code for lshr as well as non-exact right shifts.
It implements :
(icmp eq/ne (ashr/lshr const2, A), const1)" ->
(icmp eq/ne A, Log2(const2/const1)) ->
(icmp eq/ne A, Log2(const2) - Log2(const1))
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4068
llvm-svn: 213678
"((~A & B) | A) -> (A | B)" and "((A & B) | ~A) -> (~A | B)"
Original Patch credit to Ankit Jain !!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4591
llvm-svn: 213676
Prior to this change, the loop vectorizer did not make use of the alias
analysis infrastructure. Instead, it performed memory dependence analysis using
ScalarEvolution-based linear dependence checks within equivalence classes
derived from the results of ValueTracking's GetUnderlyingObjects.
Unfortunately, this meant that:
1. The loop vectorizer had logic that essentially duplicated that in BasicAA
for aliasing based on identified objects.
2. The loop vectorizer could not partition the space of dependency checks
based on information only easily available from within AA (TBAA metadata is
currently the prime example).
This means, for example, regardless of whether -fno-strict-aliasing was
provided, the vectorizer would only vectorize this loop with a runtime
memory-overlap check:
void foo(int *a, float *b) {
for (int i = 0; i < 1600; ++i)
a[i] = b[i];
}
This is suboptimal because the TBAA metadata already provides the information
necessary to show that this check unnecessary. Of course, the vectorizer has a
limit on the number of such checks it will insert, so in practice, ignoring
TBAA means not vectorizing more-complicated loops that we should.
This change causes the vectorizer to use an AliasSetTracker to keep track of
the pointers in the loop. The resulting alias sets are then used to partition
the space of dependency checks, and potential runtime checks; this results in
more-efficient vectorizations.
When pointer locations are added to the AliasSetTracker, two things are done:
1. The location size is set to UnknownSize (otherwise you'd not catch
inter-iteration dependencies)
2. For instructions in blocks that would need to be predicated, TBAA is
removed (because the metadata might have a control dependency on the condition
being speculated).
For non-predicated blocks, you can leave the TBAA metadata. This is safe
because you can't have an iteration dependency on the TBAA metadata (if you
did, and you unrolled sufficiently, you'd end up with the same pointer value
used by two accesses that TBAA says should not alias, and that would yield
undefined behavior).
llvm-svn: 213486
Summary: This patch introduces two new iterator ranges and updates existing code to use it. No functional change intended.
Test Plan: All tests (make check-all) still pass.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4481
llvm-svn: 213474
IRBuilder has CreateAligned(Load|Store) functions; use them and we don't need
to make a second call to setAlignment.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 213453
There are some kinds of metadata that are safe to propagate from the scalar
instructions to the vector instructions (fpmath and tbaa currently).
Regarding TBAA, one might worry about propagating it on if-converted loads and
stores, because the metadata might have had a control dependency on the
condition, and thus actually aliased with some other non-speculated memory
access when the condition was false. However, this would be caught by the
runtime overlap checks.
llvm-svn: 213452
Merges equivalent loads on both sides of a hammock/diamond
and hoists into into the header.
Merges equivalent stores on both sides of a hammock/diamond
and sinks it to the footer.
Can enable if conversion and tolerate better load misses
and store operand latencies.
llvm-svn: 213396
This is used to avoid instrumentation of instructions added by UBSan
in Clang frontend (see r213291). This fixes PR20085.
Reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D4544.
llvm-svn: 213292
Origin is meaningless for fully initialized values. Avoid
storing origin for function arguments that are known to
be always initialized (i.e. shadow is a compile-time null
constant).
This is not about correctness, but purely an optimization.
Seems to affect compilation time of blacklisted functions
significantly.
llvm-svn: 213239
Refactor code, no functionality change, test case moved from instcombine to instsimplify.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4102
llvm-svn: 213231
Summary:
Converting outermost zext(a) to sext(a) causes worse code when the
computation of zext(a) could be reused. For example, after converting
... = array[zext(a)]
... = array[zext(a) + 1]
to
... = array[sext(a)]
... = array[zext(a) + 1],
the program computes sext(a), which is actually unnecessary. I added one
test in split-gep-and-gvn.ll to illustrate this scenario.
Also, with r211281 and r211084, we annotate more "nuw" tags to
computation involving CUDA intrinsics such as threadIdx.x. These
annotations help with splitting GEP a lot, rendering the benefit we get
from this reverted optimization only marginal.
Test Plan: make check-all
Reviewers: eliben, meheff
Reviewed By: meheff
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4542
llvm-svn: 213209
In the original version of the patch the behaviour was like described in
the comment. This behaviour was changed before committing it without
updating the comment.
llvm-svn: 213117
This patch modifies the existing DiagnosticInfo system to create a generic base
class that is inherited to produce diagnostic-based warnings. This is used by
the loop vectorizer to trigger a warning when vectorization is forced and
fails. Several tests have been added to verify this behavior.
Reviewed by: Arnold Schwaighofer
llvm-svn: 213110
not properly handle the case where the predecessor block was the entry block to
the function. The only in-tree client of this is JumpThreading, which worked
around the issue in its own code. This patch moves the solution into the helper
so that JumpThreading (and other clients) do not have to replicate the same fix
everywhere.
llvm-svn: 212875
Currently ASan instrumentation pass creates a string with global name
for each instrumented global (to include global names in the error report). Global
name is already mangled at this point, and we may not be able to demangle it
at runtime (e.g. there is no __cxa_demangle on Android).
Instead, create a string with fully qualified global name in Clang, and pass it
to ASan instrumentation pass in llvm.asan.globals metadata. If there is no metadata
for some global, ASan will use the original algorithm.
This fixes https://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=264.
llvm-svn: 212872
Fix a crash in `InstCombiner::Descale()` when a multiply-by-zero gets
created as an argument to a GEP partway through an iteration, causing
-instcombine to optimize the GEP before the multiply.
rdar://problem/17615671
llvm-svn: 212742
This is the one remaining place I see where passing
isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute a DataLayout pointer might matter (at least for
loads) -- I think I got the others in r212720. Most of the other remaining
callers of isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute only use it for call sites (or
otherwise exclude loads).
llvm-svn: 212730
isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute can optionally take a DataLayout pointer. In the
past, this was mainly used to make better decisions regarding divisions known
not to trap, and so was not all that important for users concerned with "cheap"
instructions. However, now it also helps look through bitcasts for
dereferencable loads, and will also be important if/when we add a
dereferencable pointer attribute.
This is some initial work to feed a DataLayout pointer through to callers of
isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute, generally where one was already available.
llvm-svn: 212720
isDereferenceablePointer should not give up upon encountering any bitcast. If
we're casting from a pointer to a larger type to a pointer to a small type, we
can continue by examining the bitcast's operand. This missing capability
was noted in a comment in the function.
In order for this to work, isDereferenceablePointer now takes an optional
DataLayout pointer (essentially all callers already had such a pointer
available). Most code uses isDereferenceablePointer though
isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute (which already took an optional DataLayout
pointer), and to enable the LICM test case, LICM needs to actually provide its DL
pointer to isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute (which it was not doing previously).
llvm-svn: 212686
Turn llvm::SpecialCaseList into a simple class that parses text files in
a specified format and knows nothing about LLVM IR. Move this class into
LLVMSupport library. Implement two users of this class:
* DFSanABIList in DFSan instrumentation pass.
* SanitizerBlacklist in Clang CodeGen library.
The latter will be modified to use actual source-level information from frontend
(source file names) instead of unstable LLVM IR things (LLVM Module identifier).
Remove dependency edge from ClangCodeGen/ClangDriver to LLVMTransformUtils.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 212643
In PR20059 ( http://llvm.org/pr20059 ), instcombine eliminates shuffles that are necessary before performing an operation that can trap (srem).
This patch calls isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute() and bails out of the optimization in SimplifyVectorOp() if needed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4424
llvm-svn: 212629
This reverts commit 5b55a47e94e28fbb56d0cd5d72c3db9105c15b4c.
A test case was found to crash after this was applied. I'll file a bug to track fixing this with the test case needed.
llvm-svn: 212550
All blacklisting logic is now moved to the frontend (Clang).
If a function (or source file it is in) is blacklisted, it doesn't
get sanitize_address attribute and is therefore not instrumented.
If a global variable (or source file it is in) is blacklisted, it is
reported to be blacklisted by the entry in llvm.asan.globals metadata,
and is not modified by the instrumentation.
The latter may lead to certain false positives - not all the globals
created by Clang are described in llvm.asan.globals metadata (e.g,
RTTI descriptors are not), so we may start reporting errors on them
even if "module" they appear in is blacklisted. We assume it's fine
to take such risk:
1) errors on these globals are rare and usually indicate wild memory access
2) we can lazily add descriptors for these globals into llvm.asan.globals
lazily.
llvm-svn: 212505
This patch adds to an existing loop over phi nodes in SimplifyCondBranchToCondBranch() to check for trapping ops and bails out of the optimization if we find one of those.
The test cases verify that trapping ops are not hoisted and non-trapping ops are still optimized as expected.
llvm-svn: 212490
This is useful for functions that are not actually available externally but
referenced by a vtable of some kind. Clang emits functions like this for the MS
ABI.
PR20182.
llvm-svn: 212337
Exposes more constant globals that can be removed by
the global optimizer. A specific example is the removal
of the static global block address array in
clang/test/CodeGen/indirect-goto.c. This change impacts only
lower optimization levels. With LTO interprocedural
const prop runs already before global opt.
llvm-svn: 212284
With this change all values passed through blacklisted functions
become fully initialized. Previous behavior was to initialize all
loads in blacklisted functions, but apply normal shadow propagation
logic for all other operation.
This makes blacklist applicable in a wider range of situations.
It also makes code for blacklisted functions a lot shorter, which
works as yet another workaround for PR17409.
llvm-svn: 212268
With this change all values passed through blacklisted functions
become fully initialized. Previous behavior was to initialize all
loads in blacklisted functions, but apply normal shadow propagation
logic for all other operation.
This makes blacklist applicable in a wider range of situations.
It also makes code for blacklisted functions a lot shorter, which
works as yet another workaround for PR17409.
llvm-svn: 212265
See https://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=299 for the
original feature request.
Introduce llvm.asan.globals metadata, which Clang (or any other frontend)
may use to report extra information about global variables to ASan
instrumentation pass in the backend. This metadata replaces
llvm.asan.dynamically_initialized_globals that was used to detect init-order
bugs. llvm.asan.globals contains the following data for each global:
1) source location (file/line/column info);
2) whether it is dynamically initialized;
3) whether it is blacklisted (shouldn't be instrumented).
Source location data is then emitted in the binary and can be picked up
by ASan runtime in case it needs to print error report involving some global.
For example:
0x... is located 4 bytes to the right of global variable 'C::array' defined in '/path/to/file:17:8' (0x...) of size 40
These source locations are printed even if the binary doesn't have any
debug info.
This is an ABI-breaking change. ASan initialization is renamed to
__asan_init_v4(). Pre-built libraries compiled with older Clang will not work
with the fresh runtime.
llvm-svn: 212188
This patch reduces the stack memory consumption of the InstCombine
function "isOnlyCopiedFromConstantGlobal() ", that in certain conditions
could overflow the stack because of excessive recursiveness.
For example, in a case like this:
%0 = alloca [50025 x i32], align 4
%1 = getelementptr inbounds [50025 x i32]* %0, i64 0, i64 0
store i32 0, i32* %1
%2 = getelementptr inbounds i32* %1, i64 1
store i32 1, i32* %2
%3 = getelementptr inbounds i32* %2, i64 1
store i32 2, i32* %3
%4 = getelementptr inbounds i32* %3, i64 1
store i32 3, i32* %4
%5 = getelementptr inbounds i32* %4, i64 1
store i32 4, i32* %5
%6 = getelementptr inbounds i32* %5, i64 1
store i32 5, i32* %6
...
This piece of code crashes llvm when trying to apply instcombine on
desktop. On embedded devices this could happen with a much lower limit
of recursiveness. Some instructions (getelementptr and bitcasts) make
the function recursively call itself on their uses, which is what makes
the example above consume so much stack (it becomes a recursive
depth-first tree visit with a very big depth).
The patch changes the algorithm to be semantically equivalent, but
iterative instead of recursive and the visiting order to be from a
depth-first visit to a breadth-first visit (visit all the instructions
of the current level before the ones of the next one).
Now if a lot of memory is required a heap allocation is done instead of
the the stack allocation, avoiding the possible crash.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4355
Patch by Marcello Maggioni! We don't generally commit large stress test
that look for out of memory conditions, so I didn't request that one be
added to the patch.
llvm-svn: 212133
Matching behavior with DeadArgumentElimination (and leveraging some
now-common infrastructure), keep track of the function from debug info
metadata if arguments are promoted.
This may produce interesting debug info - since the arguments may be
missing or of different types... but at least backtraces, inlining, etc,
will be correct.
llvm-svn: 212128
There were transforms whose *intent* was to downgrade the linkage of
external objects to have internal linkage.
However, it fired on things with private linkage as well.
llvm-svn: 212104
This both improves basic debug info quality, but also fixes a larger
hole whenever we inline a call/invoke without a location (debug info for
the entire inlining is lost and other badness that the debug info
emission code is currently working around but shouldn't have to).
llvm-svn: 212065
This new IR facility allows us to represent the object-file semantic of
a COMDAT group.
COMDATs allow us to tie together sections and make the inclusion of one
dependent on another. This is required to implement features like MS
ABI VFTables and optimizing away certain kinds of initialization in C++.
This functionality is only representable in COFF and ELF, Mach-O has no
similar mechanism.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4178
llvm-svn: 211920
This patch enables transforms for
(x + (~(y | c) + 1) --> x - (y | c) if c is odd
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4210
llvm-svn: 211881
If both instructions to be replaced are marked invariant the resulting
instruction is invariant.
rdar://13358910
Fix by Erik Eckstein!
llvm-svn: 211801
This patch enables transforms for
(x + (~(y | c) + 1) --> x - (y | c) if c is even
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4209
llvm-svn: 211765
Folding a reference to a thread_local variable into another global
variable's initializer is very problematic, there is no relocation that
exists to represent such an access.
llvm-svn: 211762
string_ostream is a safe and efficient string builder that combines opaque
stack storage with a built-in ostream interface.
small_string_ostream<bytes> additionally permits an explicit stack storage size
other than the default 128 bytes to be provided. Beyond that, storage is
transferred to the heap.
This convenient class can be used in most places an
std::string+raw_string_ostream pair or SmallString<>+raw_svector_ostream pair
would previously have been used, in order to guarantee consistent access
without byte truncation.
The patch also converts much of LLVM to use the new facility. These changes
include several probable bug fixes for truncated output, a programming error
that's no longer possible with the new interface.
llvm-svn: 211749
[LLVM part]
These patches rename the loop unrolling and loop vectorizer metadata
such that they have a common 'llvm.loop.' prefix. Metadata name
changes:
llvm.vectorizer.* => llvm.loop.vectorizer.*
llvm.loopunroll.* => llvm.loop.unroll.*
This was a suggestion from an earlier review
(http://reviews.llvm.org/D4090) which added the loop unrolling
metadata.
Patch by Mark Heffernan.
llvm-svn: 211710
Origin history should only be recorded for uninitialized values, because it is
meaningless otherwise. This change moves __msan_chain_origin to the runtime
library side and makes it conditional on the corresponding shadow value.
Previous code was correct, but _very_ inefficient.
llvm-svn: 211700
Fixes exponential compilation complexity in PR19835, caused by
LICM::sink not handling the following pattern well:
f = op g
e = op f, g
d = op e
c = op d, e
b = op c
a = op b, c
When an instruction with N uses is sunk, each of its operands gets N
new uses (all of them - phi nodes). In the example above, if a had 1
use, c would have 2, e would have 4, and g would have 8.
llvm-svn: 211673
Referencing a dllimport variable requires actually instructions, not
just a relocation. This fixes PR19955.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4249
llvm-svn: 211571
Patch removes rest part of code related to old implementation.
This patch belongs to patch series that improves MergeFunctions
performance time from O(N*N) to O(N*log(N)).
This one was the final patch.
llvm-svn: 211457
Added short description for new comparison algorithm, that introduces
total ordering among functions set.
This patch belongs to patch series that improves MergeFunctions
performance time from O(N*N) to O(N*log(N)).
llvm-svn: 211456
Patch activates new implementation.
So from now, merging process should take time O(N*log(N)).
Where N size of module (we are free to measure it in
functions or in instructions). Internally FnTree represents
binary tree. So every lookup operation takes O(log(N)) time.
It is still not the last patch in series, we also have to
clean-up pass from old code, and update pass comments.
This patch belongs to patch series that improves MergeFunctions
performance time from O(N*N) to O(N*log(N)).
llvm-svn: 211445
Patch removed next old FunctionComparator methods:
* enumerate
* isEquivalentOperation
* isEquivalentGEP
* isEquivalentType
This patch belongs to patch series that improves MergeFunctions
performance time from O(N*N) to O(N*log(N)).
llvm-svn: 211444
introduced among functions set.
This patch belongs to patch series that improves MergeFunctions
performance time from O(N*N) to O(N*log(N)).
llvm-svn: 211442
methods.
Patch changes return type of FunctionComparator::compare() and
FunctionComparator::compare(const BasicBlock*, const BasicBlock*)
methods from bool (equal or not) to {-1, 0, 1} (less, equal, great).
This patch belongs to patch series that improves MergeFunctions
performance time from O(N*N) to O(N*log(N)).
llvm-svn: 211437
Summary:
Different range metadata can lead to different optimizations in later
passes, possibly breaking the semantics of the merged function. So range
metadata must be taken into consideration when comparing Load
instructions.
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 211391
This patch adds support to recognize patterns such as fadd,fsub,fadd,fsub.../add,sub,add,sub... and
vectorizes them as vector shuffles if they are profitable.
These patterns of vector shuffle can later be converted to instructions such as addsubpd etc on X86.
Thanks to Arnold and Hal for the reviews. http://reviews.llvm.org/D4015
llvm-svn: 211339
We would previously put dllimport variables in switch lookup tables, which
doesn't work because the address cannot be used in a constant initializer.
This is basically the same problem that we have in PR19955.
Putting TLS variables in switch tables also desn't work, because the
address of such a variable is not constant.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4220
llvm-svn: 211331
This patch enables transforms for following patterns.
(x + (~(y & c) + 1) --> x - (y & c)
(x + (~((y >> z) & c) + 1) --> x - ((y>>z) & c)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3733
llvm-svn: 211266
* Find factorization opportunities using identity values.
* Find factorization opportunities by treating shl(X, C) as mul (X, shl(C))
* Keep NSW flag while simplifying instruction using factorization.
This fixes PR19263.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3799
llvm-svn: 211261
InstCombineMulDivRem has:
// Canonicalize (X+C1)*CI -> X*CI+C1*CI.
InstCombineAddSub has:
// W*X + Y*Z --> W * (X+Z) iff W == Y
These two transforms could fight with each other if C1*CI would not fold
away to something simpler than a ConstantExpr mul.
The InstCombineMulDivRem transform only acted on ConstantInts until
r199602 when it was changed to operate on all Constants in order to
let it fire on ConstantVectors.
To fix this, make this transform more careful by checking to see if we
actually folded away C1*CI.
This fixes PR20079.
llvm-svn: 211258
These will be used for custom lowering and for library
implementations of various math functions, so it's useful
to expose these as builtins.
llvm-svn: 211247
This patch add code to remove unreachable blocks from function
as they may cause jump threading to stuck in infinite loop.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3991
llvm-svn: 211103
Multiplication by an integer with a number of trailing zero bits leaves
the same number of lower bits of the result initialized to zero.
This change makes MSan take this into account in the case of multiplication by
a compile-time constant.
We don't handle the general, non-constant, case because
(a) it's not going to be cheap (computation-wise);
(b) multiplication by a partially uninitialized value in user code is
a bad idea anyway.
Constant case must be handled because it appears from LLVM optimization of a
completely valid user code, as the test case in compiler-rt demonstrates.
llvm-svn: 211092
Summary:
As a starting step, we only use one simple heuristic: if the sign bits
of both a and b are zero, we can prove "add a, b" do not unsigned
overflow, and thus convert it to "add nuw a, b".
Updated all affected tests and added two new tests (@zero_sign_bit and
@zero_sign_bit2) in AddOverflow.ll
Test Plan: make check-all
Reviewers: eliben, rafael, meheff, chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: chandlerc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4144
llvm-svn: 211084
r199771 accidently broke the logic that makes sure that SROA only splits
load on byte boundaries. If such a split happens, some bits get lost
when reassembling loads of wider types, causing data corruption.
Move the width check up to reject such splits early, avoiding the
corruption. Fixes PR19250.
Patch by: Björn Steinbrink <bsteinbr@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 211082
[This is resubmitting r210721, which was reverted due to suspected breakage
which turned out to be unrelated].
Some extra review comments were addressed. See D4090 and D4147 for more details.
The Clang change that produces this metadata was committed in r210667
Patch by Mark Heffernan.
llvm-svn: 211076
When LowerSwitch transforms a switch instruction into a tree of ifs it
is actually performing a binary search into the various case ranges, to
see if the current value falls into one cases range of values.
So, if we have a program with something like this:
switch (a) {
case 0:
do0();
break;
case 1:
do1();
break;
case 2:
do2();
break;
default:
break;
}
the code produced is something like this:
if (a < 1) {
if (a == 0) {
do0();
}
} else {
if (a < 2) {
if (a == 1) {
do1();
}
} else {
if (a == 2) {
do2();
}
}
}
This code is inefficient because the check (a == 1) to execute do1() is
not needed.
The reason is that because we already checked that (a >= 1) initially by
checking that also (a < 2) we basically already inferred that (a == 1)
without the need of an extra basic block spawned to check if actually (a
== 1).
The patch addresses this problem by keeping track of already
checked bounds in the LowerSwitch algorithm, so that when the time
arrives to produce a Leaf Block that checks the equality with the case
value / range the algorithm can decide if that block is really needed
depending on the already checked bounds .
For example, the above with "a = 1" would work like this:
the bounds start as LB: NONE , UB: NONE
as (a < 1) is emitted the bounds for the else path become LB: 1 UB:
NONE. This happens because by failing the test (a < 1) we know that the
value "a" cannot be smaller than 1 if we enter the else branch.
After the emitting the check (a < 2) the bounds in the if branch become
LB: 1 UB: 1. This is because by checking that "a" is smaller than 2 then
the upper bound becomes 2 - 1 = 1.
When it is time to emit the leaf block for "case 1:" we notice that 1
can be squeezed exactly in between the LB and UB, which means that if we
arrived to that block there is no need to emit a block that checks if (a
== 1).
Patch by: Marcello Maggioni <hayarms@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 211038
As a follow-up to r210375 which canonicalizes addrspacecast
instructions, this patch canonicalizes addrspacecast constant
expressions.
Given clang uses ConstantExpr::getAddrSpaceCast to emit addrspacecast
cosntant expressions, this patch is also a step towards having the
frontend emit canonicalized addrspacecasts.
Piggyback a minor refactor in InstCombineCasts.cpp
Update three affected tests in addrspacecast-alias.ll,
access-non-generic.ll and constant-fold-gep.ll and added one new test in
constant-fold-address-space-pointer.ll
llvm-svn: 211004
This patch is to move GlobalMerge pass from Transform/Scalar
to CodeGen, because GlobalMerge depends on TargetMachine.
In the mean time, the macro INITIALIZE_TM_PASS is also moved
to CodeGen/Passes.h. With this fix we can avoid making
libScalarOpts depend on libCodeGen.
llvm-svn: 210951
Init-order and use-after-return modes can currently be enabled
by runtime flags. use-after-scope mode is not really working at the
moment.
The only problem I see is that users won't be able to disable extra
instrumentation for init-order and use-after-scope by a top-level Clang flag.
But this instrumentation was implicitly enabled for quite a while and
we didn't hear from users hurt by it.
llvm-svn: 210924
This commit adds a weak variant of the cmpxchg operation, as described
in C++11. A cmpxchg instruction with this modifier is permitted to
fail to store, even if the comparison indicated it should.
As a result, cmpxchg instructions must return a flag indicating
success in addition to their original iN value loaded. Thus, for
uniformity *all* cmpxchg instructions now return "{ iN, i1 }". The
second flag is 1 when the store succeeded.
At the DAG level, a new ATOMIC_CMP_SWAP_WITH_SUCCESS node has been
added as the natural representation for the new cmpxchg instructions.
It is a strong cmpxchg.
By default this gets Expanded to the existing ATOMIC_CMP_SWAP during
Legalization, so existing backends should see no change in behaviour.
If they wish to deal with the enhanced node instead, they can call
setOperationAction on it. Beware: as a node with 2 results, it cannot
be selected from TableGen.
Currently, no use is made of the extra information provided in this
patch. Test updates are almost entirely adapting the input IR to the
new scheme.
Summary for out of tree users:
------------------------------
+ Legacy Bitcode files are upgraded during read.
+ Legacy assembly IR files will be invalid.
+ Front-ends must adapt to different type for "cmpxchg".
+ Backends should be unaffected by default.
llvm-svn: 210903