This patch adds the safe stack instrumentation pass to LLVM, which separates
the program stack into a safe stack, which stores return addresses, register
spills, and local variables that are statically verified to be accessed
in a safe way, and the unsafe stack, which stores everything else. Such
separation makes it much harder for an attacker to corrupt objects on the
safe stack, including function pointers stored in spilled registers and
return addresses. You can find more information about the safe stack, as
well as other parts of or control-flow hijack protection technique in our
OSDI paper on code-pointer integrity (http://dslab.epfl.ch/pubs/cpi.pdf)
and our project website (http://levee.epfl.ch).
The overhead of our implementation of the safe stack is very close to zero
(0.01% on the Phoronix benchmarks). This is lower than the overhead of
stack cookies, which are supported by LLVM and are commonly used today,
yet the security guarantees of the safe stack are strictly stronger than
stack cookies. In some cases, the safe stack improves performance due to
better cache locality.
Our current implementation of the safe stack is stable and robust, we
used it to recompile multiple projects on Linux including Chromium, and
we also recompiled the entire FreeBSD user-space system and more than 100
packages. We ran unit tests on the FreeBSD system and many of the packages
and observed no errors caused by the safe stack. The safe stack is also fully
binary compatible with non-instrumented code and can be applied to parts of
a program selectively.
This patch is our implementation of the safe stack on top of LLVM. The
patches make the following changes:
- Add the safestack function attribute, similar to the ssp, sspstrong and
sspreq attributes.
- Add the SafeStack instrumentation pass that applies the safe stack to all
functions that have the safestack attribute. This pass moves all unsafe local
variables to the unsafe stack with a separate stack pointer, whereas all
safe variables remain on the regular stack that is managed by LLVM as usual.
- Invoke the pass as the last stage before code generation (at the same time
the existing cookie-based stack protector pass is invoked).
- Add unit tests for the safe stack.
Original patch by Volodymyr Kuznetsov and others at the Dependable Systems
Lab at EPFL; updates and upstreaming by myself.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6094
llvm-svn: 239761
This commit connects the machine function analysis pass (which creates machine
functions) to the MIR parser, which will initialize the machine functions
with the state from the MIR file and reconstruct the machine IR.
This commit introduces a new interface called 'MachineFunctionInitializer',
which can be used to provide custom initialization for the machine functions.
This commit also introduces a new diagnostic class called
'DiagnosticInfoMIRParser' which is used for MIR parsing errors.
This commit modifies the default diagnostic handling in LLVMContext - now the
the diagnostics are printed directly into llvm::errs() so that the MIR parsing
errors can be printed with colours.
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9928
llvm-svn: 239753
Summary:
NFC: no one uses AnalyzeBranchPredicate yet.
Add TargetInstrInfo::AnalyzeBranchPredicate and implement for x86. A
later change adding support for page-fault based implicit null checks
depends on this.
Reviewers: reames, ab, atrick
Reviewed By: atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10200
llvm-svn: 239742
Summary:
TargetInstrInfo::getLdStBaseRegImmOfs to
TargetInstrInfo::getMemOpBaseRegImmOfs and implement for x86. The
implementation only handles a few easy cases now and will be made more
sophisticated in the future.
This is NFCI: the only user of `getLdStBaseRegImmOfs` (now
`getmemOpBaseRegImmOfs`) is `LoadClusterMotion` and `LoadClusterMotion`
is disabled for x86.
Reviewers: reames, ab, MatzeB, atrick
Reviewed By: MatzeB, atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10199
llvm-svn: 239741
Summary:
This instruction encodes a loading operation that may fault, and a label
to branch to if the load page-faults. The locations of potentially
faulting loads and their "handler" destinations are recorded in a
FaultMap section, meant to be consumed by LLVM's clients.
Nothing generates FAULTING_LOAD_OP instructions yet, but they will be
used in a future change.
The documentation (FaultMaps.rst) needs improvement and I will update
this diff with a more expanded version shortly.
Depends on D10196
Reviewers: rnk, reames, AndyAyers, ab, atrick, pgavlin
Reviewed By: atrick, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10197
llvm-svn: 239740
LLVM targeting aarch64 doesn't correctly produce aligned accesses for non-aligned
data at -O0/fast-isel (-mno-unaligned-access).
The root cause seems to be in fast-isel not producing unaligned access correctly
for -mno-unaligned-access.
The patch just aborts fast-isel for loads and stores when -mno-unaligned-access is
present.
The regression test is updated to check this new test case (-mno-unaligned-access
together with fast-isel).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10360
llvm-svn: 239732
Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar trivial patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
llvm-svn: 239721
Re-commit after adding "-aarch64-neon-syntax=generic" to fix the failure on OS X.
This patch was firstly committed in r239514, then reverted in r239544 because of a syntax incompatible failure on OS X.
llvm-svn: 239711
Now the library names in the Makefiles match the library names in
LLVMBuild.txt.
This should hopefully fix the remaining bot failures.
llvm-svn: 239661
r213101 changed the behaviour of this method to not only affect the
PostMachineScheduler scheduler but also the PostRAScheduler scheduler,
renaming should make this fact clear. Also document that the preferred
way is to specify this in the scheduling model instead of overriding
this method.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10427
llvm-svn: 239659
This will use Itinieraries if available, but will also work if just a
MCSchedModel is available.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10428
llvm-svn: 239658
- Add glc, slc, and tfe operands to flat instructions
- Add missing flat instructions
- Fix the encoding of flat_load_dwordx3 and flat_store_dwordx3.
llvm-svn: 239637
The alignment is not required, so we can just remove it for now.
The old code is a hack as it depends on the buffer management to find
the current column.
If the alignment is really desirable, the proper way to do it is
to pass in a formatted_raw_stream that knows the current column.
llvm-svn: 239603
We were putting them in the filter field, which is correct for 64-bit
but wrong for 32-bit.
Also switch the order of scope table entry emission so outermost entries
are emitted first, and fix an obvious state assignment bug.
llvm-svn: 239574
Remove the EFLAGS from the stackmap live-out mask. The EFLAGS register is not
supposed to be part of that set, because the X86 calling conventions mark the
register as NOT preserved.
Also remove the IP registers, since spilling and restoring those doesn't really
make any sense.
Related to rdar://problem/21019635.
llvm-svn: 239568
This intrinsic is like framerecover plus a load. It recovers the EH
registration stack allocation from the parent frame and loads the
exception information field out of it, giving back a pointer to an
EXCEPTION_POINTERS struct. It's designed for clang to use in SEH filter
expressions instead of accessing the EXCEPTION_POINTERS parameter that
is available on x64.
This required a minor change to MC to allow defining a label variable to
another absolute framerecover label variable.
llvm-svn: 239567
Summary:
For the moment, TargetMachine::getTargetTriple() still returns a StringRef.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: ted, llvm-commits, rengolin, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10362
llvm-svn: 239554
Revert "[AArch64] Match interleaved memory accesses into ldN/stN instructions."
Revert "Fixing MSVC 2013 build error."
The test/CodeGen/AArch64/aarch64-interleaved-accesses.ll test was failing on OS X.
llvm-svn: 239544
Summary:
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jfb, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10361
llvm-svn: 239538
This patch ensures that SHL/SRL/SRA shifts for i8 and i16 vectors avoid scalarization. It builds on the existing i8 SHL vectorized implementation of moving the shift bits up to the sign bit position and separating the 4, 2 & 1 bit shifts with several improvements:
1 - SSE41 targets can use (v)pblendvb directly with the sign bit instead of performing a comparison to feed into a VSELECT node.
2 - pre-SSE41 targets were masking + comparing with an 0x80 constant - we avoid this by using the fact that a set sign bit means a negative integer which can be compared against zero to then feed into VSELECT, avoiding the need for a constant mask (zero generation is much cheaper).
3 - SRA i8 needs to be unpacked to the upper byte of a i16 so that the i16 psraw instruction can be correctly used for sign extension - we have to do more work than for SHL/SRL but perf tests indicate that this is still beneficial.
The i16 implementation is similar but simpler than for i8 - we have to do 8, 4, 2 & 1 bit shifts but less shift masking is involved. SSE41 use of (v)pblendvb requires that the i16 shift amount is splatted to both bytes however.
Tested on SSE2, SSE41 and AVX machines.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9474
llvm-svn: 239509
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10096
This is the back end portion of the patch related to D10095.
The patch adds the instructions and back end intrinsics for:
vbpermq
vgbbd
llvm-svn: 239505
This reverts commit r239437.
This broke clang-cl self-hosts. We'd end up calling the __imp_ symbol
directly instead of using it to do an indirect function call.
llvm-svn: 239502
It hasn't been used since r130964.
This also removes MachineModuleInfo::isUsedFunction and
MachineModuleInfo::AnalyzeModule, both of which were only
there to support UsedFunctions.
llvm-svn: 239501
This is a reimplementation of D9780 at the machine instruction level rather than the DAG.
Use the MachineCombiner pass to reassociate scalar single-precision AVX additions (just a
starting point; see the TODO comments) to increase ILP when it's safe to do so.
The code is closely based on the existing MachineCombiner optimization that is implemented
for AArch64.
This patch should not cause the kind of spilling tragedy that led to the reversion of r236031.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10321
llvm-svn: 239486
Summary:
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rafael
Reviewed By: rafael
Subscribers: rafael, ted, jfb, llvm-commits, rengolin, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10311
llvm-svn: 239467
Summary:
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rafael
Reviewed By: rafael
Subscribers: rafael, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10307
llvm-svn: 239465
Summary:
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: echristo, rafael
Reviewed By: rafael
Subscribers: rafael, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10243
llvm-svn: 239464
Use a "safeseh" string attribute to do this. You would think we chould
just accumulate the set of personalities like we do on dwarf, but this
fails to account for the LSDA-loading thunks we use for
__CxxFrameHandler3. Each of those needs to make it into .sxdata as well.
The string attribute seemed like the most straightforward approach.
llvm-svn: 239448
Summary:
We used to assume V->RAUW only modifies the operand list of V's user.
However, if V and V's user are Constants, RAUW may replace and invalidate V's
user entirely.
This patch fixes the above issue by letting the caller replace the
operand instead of calling RAUW on Constants.
Test Plan: @nested_const_expr and @rauw in access-non-generic.ll
Reviewers: broune, jholewinski
Reviewed By: broune, jholewinski
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10345
llvm-svn: 239435
This gets all the handler info through to the asm printer and we can
look at the .xdata tables now. I've convinced one small catch-all test
case to work, but other than that, it would be a stretch to say this is
functional.
The state numbering algorithm avoids doing any scope reconstruction as
we do for C++ to simplify the implementation.
llvm-svn: 239433
Store instructions do not modify register values and therefore it's safe
to form a store pair even if the source register has been read in between
the two store instructions.
Previously, the read of w1 (see below) prevented the formation of a stp.
str w0, [x2]
ldr w8, [x2, #8]
add w0, w8, w1
str w1, [x2, #4]
ret
We now generate the following code.
stp w0, w1, [x2]
ldr w8, [x2, #8]
add w0, w8, w1
ret
All correctness tests with -Ofast on A57 with Spec200x and EEMBC pass.
Performance results for SPEC2K were within noise.
llvm-svn: 239432
that was resetting it.
Remove the uses of DisableTailCalls in subclasses of TargetLowering and use
the value of function attribute "disable-tail-calls" instead. Also,
unconditionally add pass TailCallElim to the pipeline and check the function
attribute at the start of runOnFunction to disable the pass on a per-function
basis.
This is part of the work to remove TargetMachine::resetTargetOptions, and since
DisableTailCalls was the last non-fast-math option that was being reset in that
function, we should be able to remove the function entirely after the work to
propagate IR-level fast-math flags to DAG nodes is completed.
Out-of-tree users should remove the uses of DisableTailCalls and make changes
to attach attribute "disable-tail-calls"="true" or "false" to the functions in
the IR.
rdar://problem/13752163
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10099
llvm-svn: 239427
array of bytes. The generation of this byte arrays was expecting
the host to be little endian, which prevents big endian hosts to be
used in the generation of the PTX code. This patch fixes the
problem by changing the way the bytes are extracted so that it
works for either little and big endian.
llvm-svn: 239412
Summary:
For some branches, GAS accepts an immediate instead of the 2nd register operand.
We only implement this for BNE and BEQ for now. Other branch instructions can be added later, if needed.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: seanbruno, emaste, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9666
llvm-svn: 239396
Summary:
This cleans up most allocas NVPTXLowerKernelArgs emits for byval
parameters.
Test Plan: makes bug21465.ll more stronger to verify no redundant local load/store.
Reviewers: eliben, jholewinski
Reviewed By: eliben, jholewinski
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10322
llvm-svn: 239368
Summary:
This was a longstanding FIXME and is a necessary precursor to cases
where foldOperandImpl may have to create more than one instruction
(e.g. to constrain a register class). This is the split out NFC changes from
D6262.
Reviewers: pete, ributzka, uweigand, mcrosier
Reviewed By: mcrosier
Subscribers: mcrosier, ted, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10174
llvm-svn: 239336
on a per-function basis.
Previously some of the passes were conditionally added to ARM's pass pipeline
based on the target machine's subtarget. This patch makes changes to add those
passes unconditionally and execute them conditonally based on the predicate
functor passed to the pass constructors. This enables running different sets of
passes for different functions in the module.
rdar://problem/20542263
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8717
llvm-svn: 239325
While we have some code to transform specification like {ax} into
{eax}/{rax} if the operand type isn't 16bit, we should reject cases
where there is no sane way to do this, like the i128 type in the
example.
Related to rdar://21042280
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10260
llvm-svn: 239309
This patch adds support for system register MMFR4_EL1 (memory model feature register) in the assembler.
This register provides information about the implemented memory model and memory management support.
llvm-svn: 239302
Implemented DAG lowering for all these forms.
Added tests for DAG lowering and encoding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10310
llvm-svn: 239300
These are added mainly for the benefit of clang, but this also means that they
are now allowed in .fpu directives and we emit the correct .fpu directive when
single-precision-only is used.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10238
llvm-svn: 239151
Add getFPUFeatures to TargetParser, which gets the list of subtarget features
that are enabled/disabled for each FPU, and use it when handling the .fpu
directive.
No functional change in this commit, though clang will start behaving
differently once it starts using this.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10237
llvm-svn: 239150
Summary:
Only restoring AvailableFeatures is not enough and will lead to buggy behaviour.
For example, if we have a feature enabled and we ".set pop", the next time we try
to ".set" that feature nothing will happen because the "!(STI.getFeatureBits()[Feature])"
check will be false, because we didn't restore STI.FeatureBits.
In order to fix this, we need to make MipsAssemblerOptions remember the STI.FeatureBits
instead of the AvailableFeatures and then regenerate AvailableFeatures each time we ".set pop".
This is because, AFAIK, there is no way to convert from AvailableFeatures back to STI.FeatureBits,
but the reverse is possible by using ComputeAvailableFeatures(STI.FeatureBits).
I also moved the updating of AssemblerOptions inside the "if" statement in
setFeatureBits() and clearFeatureBits(), as there is no reason to update if
nothing changes.
Reviewers: dsanders, mkuper
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9156
llvm-svn: 239144
Summary:
A small bit that I missed when I updated the X86 backend to account for
the Win64 calling convention on non-Windows. Now we don't use dead
non-volatile registers when emitting a Win64 indirect tail call on
non-Windows.
Should fix PR23710.
Test Plan: Added test for the correct behavior based on the case I posted to PR23710.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10258
llvm-svn: 239111
Now that we can look at users, we can trivially do this: when we would
have otherwise disabled GlobalMerge (currently -O<3), we can just run
it for minsize functions, as it's usually a codesize win.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10054
llvm-svn: 239087
Fix the FIXME and remove this old as(1) compat option. It was useful for
bringup of the integrated assembler to diff object files, but now it's
just causing more relocations than strictly necessary to be generated.
rdar://21201804
llvm-svn: 239084
Summary:
With this patch, NVPTXLowerKernelArgs converts a kernel pointer argument to a
pointer in the global address space. This change, along with
NVPTXFavorNonGenericAddrSpaces, allows the NVPTX backend to emit ld.global.*
and st.global.* for accessing kernel pointer arguments.
Minor changes:
1. refactor: extract function convertToPointerInAddrSpace
2. fix a bug in the test case in bug21465.ll
Test Plan: lower-kernel-ptr-arg.ll
Reviewers: eliben, meheff, jholewinski
Reviewed By: jholewinski
Subscribers: wengxt, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10154
llvm-svn: 239082
Summary:
-march=bpf -> host endian
-march=bpf_le -> little endian
-match=bpf_be -> big endian
Test Plan:
v1 was tested by IBM s390 guys and appears to be working there.
It bit rots too fast here.
Reviewers: chandlerc, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10177
llvm-svn: 239071
Now that we sometimes know the address space, this can
theoretically do a better job.
This needs better test coverage, but this mostly depends on
first updating the loop optimizatiosn to provide the address
space.
llvm-svn: 239053
Summary:
This is the first of several patches to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU
triples from the internals of LLVM. After this is complete, GNU triples
will be replaced by a more authoratitive representation in the form of
an LLVM TargetTuple.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: ted, llvm-commits, rengolin, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10236
llvm-svn: 239036
The fix is just that getOther had not been updated for packing the st_other
values in fewer bits and could return spurious values:
- unsigned Other = (getFlags() & (0x3f << ELF_STO_Shift)) >> ELF_STO_Shift;
+ unsigned Other = (getFlags() & (0x7 << ELF_STO_Shift)) >> ELF_STO_Shift;
Original message:
Pack the MCSymbolELF bit fields into MCSymbol's Flags.
This reduces MCSymolfELF from 64 bytes to 56 bytes on x86_64.
While at it, also make getOther/setOther easier to use by accepting unshifted
STO_* values.
llvm-svn: 239012
This reduces MCSymolfELF from 64 bytes to 56 bytes on x86_64.
While at it, also make getOther/setOther easier to use by accepting unshifted
STO_* values.
llvm-svn: 239006
The first try (r238051) to land this was reverted due to ExecutionEngine build failure;
that was hopefully addressed by r238788.
The second try (r238842) to land this was reverted due to BUILD_SHARED_LIBS failure;
that was hopefully addressed by r238953.
This patch adds a TargetRecip class for processing many recip codegen possibilities.
The class is intended to handle both command-line options to llc as well
as options passed in from a front-end such as clang with the -mrecip option.
The x86 backend is updated to use the new functionality.
Only -mcpu=btver2 with -ffast-math should see a functional change from this patch.
All other x86 CPUs continue to *not* use reciprocal estimates by default with -ffast-math.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8982
llvm-svn: 239001
The existing code would unnecessarily break LDRD/STRD apart with
non-adjacent registers, on thumb2 this is not necessary.
Ideally on thumb2 we shouldn't match for ldrd/strd pre-regalloc anymore
as there is not reason to set register hints anymore, changing that is
something for a future patch however.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9694
Recommiting after the revert in r238821, the buildbot still failed with
the patch removed so there seems to be another reason for the breakage.
llvm-svn: 238935
AVX-512: Implemented GETEXP instruction for KNL and SKX
Added rounding mode modifier for SQRTPS/PD
Added tests for encoding and intrinsics.
CR:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9991
llvm-svn: 238923
Summary:
But still handle them the same way since I don't know how they differ on
this target.
Of these, /U[qytnms]/ do not have backend tests but are accepted by clang.
No functional change intended.
Reviewers: t.p.northover
Reviewed By: t.p.northover
Subscribers: t.p.northover, aemerson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8203
llvm-svn: 238921
Intel® Memory Protection Extensions (Intel® MPX) is a new feature in Skylake.
It is a part of KNL and SKX sets. It is also a part of Skylake client.
I added definition of %bnd0 - %bnd3 registers, each register is a pair of 64-bit integers.
llvm-svn: 238916
This patch removes the old X86ISD::FSRL op - which allowed float vectors to use the byte right shift operations (causing a domain switch....).
Since the refactoring of the shuffle lowering code this no longer has any use.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10169
llvm-svn: 238906
The first try (r238051) to land this was reverted due to bot failures
that were hopefully addressed by r238788.
This patch adds a TargetRecip class for processing many recip codegen possibilities.
The class is intended to handle both command-line options to llc as well
as options passed in from a front-end such as clang with the -mrecip option.
The x86 backend is updated to use the new functionality.
Only -mcpu=btver2 with -ffast-math should see a functional change from this patch.
All other x86 CPUs continue to *not* use reciprocal estimates by default with -ffast-math.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8982
llvm-svn: 238842
Summary:
With this change we are able to realign the stack dynamically, whenever it
contains objects with alignment requirements that are larger than the
alignment specified from the given ABI.
We have to use the $fp register as the frame pointer when we perform
dynamic stack realignment. In complex stack frames, with variably-sized
objects, we reserve additionally the callee-saved register $s7 as the
base pointer in order to reference locals.
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8633
llvm-svn: 238829
This reverts commit r238795, as it broke the Thumb2 self-hosting buildbot.
Since self-hosting issues with Clang are hard to investigate, I'm taking the
liberty to revert now, so we can investigate it offline.
llvm-svn: 238821
Summary: These directives are used to set the current value of the SoftFloat feature.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mpf
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9074
llvm-svn: 238813
This create a MCSymbolELF class and moves SymbolSize since only ELF
needs a size expression.
This reduces the size of MCSymbol from 56 to 48 bytes.
llvm-svn: 238801
The existing code would unnecessarily break LDRD/STRD apart with
non-adjacent registers, on thumb2 this is not necessary.
Ideally on thumb2 we shouldn't match for ldrd/strd pre-regalloc anymore
as there is not reason to set register hints anymore, changing that is
something for a future patch however.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9694
llvm-svn: 238795
Previously CCMP/FCCMP instructions were only used by the
AArch64ConditionalCompares pass for control flow. This patch uses them
for SELECT like instructions as well by matching patterns in ISelLowering.
PR20927, rdar://18326194
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8232
llvm-svn: 238793
Summary: Implement bswap intrinsic for MIPS FastISel. It's very different for misp32 r1/r2 .
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
bswap1.ll
test-suite
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7219
llvm-svn: 238760
Summary:
Implement the intrinsics memset, memcopy and memmove in MIPS FastISel.
Make some needed infrastructure fixes so that this can work.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
memtest1.ll
The patch passes test-suite for mips32 r1/r2 and at O0/O2
Reviewers: rkotler, dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7158
llvm-svn: 238759
Summary: Implement the LLVM assembly urem/srem and sdiv/udiv instructions in MIPS FastISel.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
srem1.ll
div1.ll
test-suite at O0/O2 for mips32 r1/r2
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7028
llvm-svn: 238757
Summary: Implement the LLVM IR select statement for MIPS FastISelsel.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
"Make check" test included now.
Passes test-suite at O2/O0 mips32 r1/r2.
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6774
llvm-svn: 238756
Summary:
The contents of the HI/LO registers are unpredictable after the execution of
the MUL instruction. In addition to implicitly defining these registers in the
MUL instruction definition, we have to mark those registers as dead too.
Without this the fast register allocator is running out of registers when the
MUL instruction is followed by another one that tries to allocate the AC0
register.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9825
llvm-svn: 238755
This is important because of different addressing modes
depending on the address space for GPU targets.
This only adds the argument, and does not update
any of the uses to provide the correct address space.
llvm-svn: 238723
The original version didn't properly account for the base register
being modified before the final jump, so caused miscompilations in
Chromium and LLVM. I've fixed this and tested with an LLVM self-host
(I don't have the means to build & test Chromium).
The general idea remains the same: in pathological cases jump tables
can be too far away from the instructions referencing them (like other
constants) so they need to be movable.
Should fix PR23627.
llvm-svn: 238680
best approach of each.
For vNi16, we use SHL + ADD + SRL pattern that seem easily the best.
For vNi32, we use the PUNPCK + PSADBW + PACKUSWB pattern. In some cases
there is a huge improvement with this in IACA's estimated throughput --
over 2x higher throughput!!!! -- but the measurements are too good to be
true. In one narrow case, the SHL + ADD + SHL + ADD + SRL pattern looks
slightly faster, but I'm not sure I believe any of the measurements at
this point. Both are the exact same uops though. Hard to be confident of
anything past that.
If anyone wants to collect very detailed (Agner-level) timings with the
result of this patch, or with the i32 case replaced with SHL + ADD + SHl
+ ADD + SRL, I'd be very interested. Note that you'll need to test it on
both Ivybridge and Haswell, with both SSE3, SSSE3, and AVX selected as
I saw unique behavior in each of these buckets with IACA all of which
should be checked against measured performance.
But this patch is still a useful improvement by dropping duplicate work
and getting the much nicer PSADBW lowering for v2i64.
I'd still like to rephrase this in terms of generic horizontal sum. It's
a bit lame to have a special case of that just for popcount.
llvm-svn: 238652
The plan was to move the whole table into the already existing ArchExtNames
but some fields depend on a table-generated file, and we don't yet have this
feature in the generic lib/Support side.
Once the minimum target-specific table-generated files are available in a
generic fashion to these libraries, we'll have to keep it in the ASM parser.
llvm-svn: 238651
shorter one. NFC.
In addition to being much shorter to type and requiring fewer arguments,
this change saves over 30 lines from this one file, all wasted on total
boilerplate...
llvm-svn: 238640
shifting vectors of bytes as x86 doesn't have direct support for that.
This removes a bunch of redundant masking in the generated code for SSE2
and SSE3.
In order to avoid the really significant code size growth this would
have triggered, I also factored the completely repeatative logic for
shifting and masking into two lambdas which in turn makes all of this
much easier to read IMO.
llvm-svn: 238637
in-register LUT technique.
Summary:
A description of this technique can be found here:
http://wm.ite.pl/articles/sse-popcount.html
The core of the idea is to use an in-register lookup table and the
PSHUFB instruction to compute the population count for the low and high
nibbles of each byte, and then to use horizontal sums to aggregate these
into vector population counts with wider element types.
On x86 there is an instruction that will directly compute the horizontal
sum for the low 8 and high 8 bytes, giving vNi64 popcount very easily.
Various tricks are used to get vNi32 and vNi16 from the vNi8 that the
LUT computes.
The base implemantion of this, and most of the work, was done by Bruno
in a follow up to D6531. See Bruno's detailed post there for lots of
timing information about these changes.
I have extended Bruno's patch in the following ways:
0) I committed the new tests with baseline sequences so this shows
a diff, and regenerated the tests using the update scripts.
1) Bruno had noticed and mentioned in IRC a redundant mask that
I removed.
2) I introduced a particular optimization for the i32 vector cases where
we use PSHL + PSADBW to compute the the low i32 popcounts, and PSHUFD
+ PSADBW to compute doubled high i32 popcounts. This takes advantage
of the fact that to line up the high i32 popcounts we have to shift
them anyways, and we can shift them by one fewer bit to effectively
divide the count by two. While the PSHUFD based horizontal add is no
faster, it doesn't require registers or load traffic the way a mask
would, and provides more ILP as it happens on different ports with
high throughput.
3) I did some code cleanups throughout to simplify the implementation
logic.
4) I refactored it to continue to use the parallel bitmath lowering when
SSSE3 is not available to preserve the performance of that version on
SSE2 targets where it is still much better than scalarizing as we'll
still do a bitmath implementation of popcount even in scalar code
there.
With #1 and #2 above, I analyzed the result in IACA for sandybridge,
ivybridge, and haswell. In every case I measured, the throughput is the
same or better using the LUT lowering, even v2i64 and v4i64, and even
compared with using the native popcnt instruction! The latency of the
LUT lowering is often higher than the latency of the scalarized popcnt
instruction sequence, but I think those latency measurements are deeply
misleading. Keeping the operation fully in the vector unit and having
many chances for increased throughput seems much more likely to win.
With this, we can lower every integer vector popcount implementation
using the LUT strategy if we have SSSE3 or better (and thus have
PSHUFB). I've updated the operation lowering to reflect this. This also
fixes an issue where we were scalarizing horribly some AVX lowerings.
Finally, there are some remaining cleanups. There is duplication between
the two techniques in how they perform the horizontal sum once the byte
population count is computed. I'm going to factor and merge those two in
a separate follow-up commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10084
llvm-svn: 238636
a separate routine, generalize it to work for all the integer vector
sizes, and do general code cleanups.
This dramatically improves lowerings of byte and short element vector
popcount, but more importantly it will make the introduction of the
LUT-approach much cleaner.
The biggest cleanup I've done is to just force the legalizer to do the
bitcasting we need. We run these iteratively now and it makes the code
much simpler IMO. Other changes were minor, and mostly naming and
splitting things up in a way that makes it more clear what is going on.
The other significant change is to use a different final horizontal sum
approach. This is the same number of instructions as the old method, but
shifts left instead of right so that we can clear everything but the
final sum with a single shift right. This seems likely better than
a mask which will usually have to read the mask from memory. It is
certaily fewer u-ops. Also, this will be temporary. This and the LUT
approach share the need of horizontal adds to finish the computation,
and we have more clever approaches than this one that I'll switch over
to.
llvm-svn: 238635
It turns out that _except_handler3 and _except_handler4 really use the
same stack allocation layout, at least today. They just make different
choices about encoding the LSDA.
This is in preparation for lowering the llvm.eh.exceptioninfo().
llvm-svn: 238627
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9941
It adds the various FMA instructions introduced in the version 2.07 of
the ISA along with the testing for them. These are operations on single
precision scalar values in VSX registers.
llvm-svn: 238578
Small (really small!) C++ exception handling examples work on 32-bit x86
now.
This change disables the use of .seh_* directives in WinException when
CFI is not in use. It also uses absolute symbol references in the tables
instead of imagerel32 relocations.
Also fixes a cache invalidation bug in MMI personality classification.
llvm-svn: 238575
MIOperands/ConstMIOperands are classes iterating over the MachineOperand
of a MachineInstr, however MachineInstr::mop_iterator does the same
thing.
I assume these two iterators exist to have a uniform interface to
iterate over the operands of a machine instruction bundle and a single
machine instruction. However in practice I find it more confusing to have 2
different iterator classes, so this patch transforms (nearly all) the
code to use mop_iterators.
The only exception being MIOperands::anlayzePhysReg() and
MIOperands::analyzeVirtReg() still needing an equivalent, I leave that
as an exercise for the next patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9932
This version is slightly modified from the proposed revision in that it
introduces MachineInstr::getOperandNo to avoid the extra counting
variable in the few loops that previously used MIOperands::getOperandNo.
llvm-svn: 238539
This moves all the state numbering code for C++ EH to WinEHPrepare so
that we can call it from the X86 state numbering IR pass that runs
before isel.
Now we just call the same state numbering machinery and insert a bunch
of stores. It also populates MachineModuleInfo with information about
the current function.
llvm-svn: 238514
For x86 targets, do not do sibling call optimization when materializing
the callee's address would require a GOT relocation. We can still do
tail calls to internal functions, hidden functions, and protected
functions, because they do not require this kind of relocation. It is
still possible to get GOT relocations when the user explicitly asks for
it with musttail or -tailcallopt, both of which are supposed to
guarantee TCO.
Based on a patch by Chih-hung Hsieh.
Reviewers: srhines, timmurray, danalbert, enh, void, nadav, rnk
Subscribers: joerg, davidxl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9799
llvm-svn: 238487
We were previously codegen'ing these as regular load/store operations and
hoping that the register allocator would allocate registers in ascending order
so that we could apply an LDM/STM combine after register allocation. According
to the commit that first introduced this code (r37179), we planned to teach
the register allocator to allocate the registers in ascending order. This
never got implemented, and up to now we've been stuck with very poor codegen.
A much simpler approach for achiveing better codegen is to create LDM/STM
instructions with identical sets of virtual registers, let the register
allocator pick arbitrary registers and order register lists when printing an
MCInst. This approach also avoids the need to repeatedly calculate offsets
which ultimately ought to be eliminated pre-RA in order to decrease register
pressure.
This is implemented by lowering the memcpy intrinsic to a series of SD-only
MCOPY pseudo-instructions which performs a memory copy using a given number
of registers. During SD->MI lowering, we lower MCOPY to LDM/STM. This is a
little unusual, but it avoids the need to encode register lists in the SD,
and we can take advantage of SD use lists to decide whether to use the _UPD
variant of the instructions.
Fixes PR9199.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9508
llvm-svn: 238473
Octeon CPUs use dmtc2 rt,imm16 and dmfcp2 rt,imm16 for the crypto coprocessor.
E.g. dmtc2 rt,0x4057 starts calculation of sha-1.
I had to introduce a new deconding namespace to avoid a decoding conflict.
Reviewed By: dsanders
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10083
llvm-svn: 238439
Add support for resolving MIPS64r2 and MIPS64r6 relocations in MCJIT.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9667
llvm-svn: 238424
Summary:
This patch made two improvements to NaryReassociate and the NVPTX pipeline
1. Run EarlyCSE/GVN after NaryReassociate to get rid of redundant common
expressions.
2. When adding an instruction to SeenExprs, maps both the SCEV before and after
reassociation to that instruction.
Test Plan: updated @reassociate_gep_nsw in nary-gep.ll
Reviewers: meheff, broune
Reviewed By: broune
Subscribers: dberlin, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9947
llvm-svn: 238396
Now that most of the methods in Clang and LLVM that were parsing arch/cpu/fpu
strings are using ARMTargetParser, it's time to make it a bit more conforming
with what the ABI says.
This commit adds some clarification on what build attributes are accepted and
which are "non-standard". It also makes clear that the "defaultCPU" and
"defaultArch" methods were really just build attribute getters.
It also diverges from GCC's behaviour to say that armv2/armv3 are really an
ARMv4 in the build attributes, when the ABI has a clear state for that: Pre-v4.
llvm-svn: 238344
This broke the llvm-mips-linux builder and several of our out-of-tree builders.
Initial investigations show that the commit probably isn't the problem but
reverting anyway while I investigate.
llvm-svn: 238302
With this patch the x86 backend is now shrink-wrapping capable
and this functionality can be tested by using the
-enable-shrink-wrap switch.
The next step is to make more test and enable shrink-wrapping by
default for x86.
Related to <rdar://problem/20821487>
llvm-svn: 238293
This gets gas and llc -filetype=obj to agree on the order of prefixes.
For llvm-mc we need to fix the asm parser to know that it makes a difference
on which line the "lock" is in.
Part of pr23594.
llvm-svn: 238232
v2: Use C++ comments and end with periods
Signed-off-by: Jan Vesely <jan.vesely@rutgers.edu>
Reviewed-by: Matt Arsenault <Matthew.Arsenault@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 238228
Previously, subtarget features were a bitfield with the underlying type being uint64_t.
Since several targets (X86 and ARM, in particular) have hit or were very close to hitting this bound, switching the features to use a bitset.
No functional change.
The first several times this was committed (e.g. r229831, r233055), it caused several buildbot failures.
Apparently the reason for most failures was both clang and gcc's inability to deal with large numbers (> 10K) of bitset constructor calls in tablegen-generated initializers of instruction info tables.
This should now be fixed.
llvm-svn: 238192
Summary:
Following on from r209907 which made personality encodings indirect, do the
same for TType encodings. This fixes the case where a try/catch block needs
to generate references to, for example, std::exception in the
.gcc_except_table.
This commit uses DW_EH_PE_sdata8 for N64 as far as is possible at the moment.
However, it is possible to end up with DW_EH_PE_sdata4 when a TargetMachine is
not available. There's no risk of issues with inconsistency here since the
tables are self describing but it does mean there is a small chance of the
PC-relative offset being out of range for particularly large programs.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: srhines, joerg, tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9669
llvm-svn: 238190
Part of D9474, this patch extends AVX2 v16i16 types to 2 x 8i32 vectors and uses i32 shift variable shifts before packing back to i16.
Adds AVX2 tests for v8i16 and v16i16
llvm-svn: 238149
This lets us drop a parameter the opName parameter to the VINTRP
multiclass and makes it possible to create multiple VINTRP defs
with the same asm mnemonic.
llvm-svn: 238146
in POWER8:
vadduqm
vaddeuqm
vaddcuq
vaddecuq
vsubuqm
vsubeuqm
vsubcuq
vsubecuq
In addition to adding the instructions themselves, it also adds support for the
v1i128 type for intrinsics (Intrinsics.td, Function.cpp, and
IntrinsicEmitter.cpp).
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9081
llvm-svn: 238144
The semantics of the scalar FMA intrinsics are that the high vector elements are copied from the first source.
The existing pattern switches src1 and src2 around, to match the "213" order, which ends up tying the original src2 to the dest. Since the actual scalar fma3 instructions copy the high elements from the dest register, the wrong values are copied.
This modifies the pattern to leave src1 and src2 in their original order.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9908
llvm-svn: 238131
On GPU targets, materializing constants is cheap and stores are
expensive, so only doing this for zero vectors was silly.
Most of the new testcases aren't optimally merged, and are for
later improvements.
llvm-svn: 238108
When the compare feeding a branch was in a different BB from the branch, we'd
try to "regenerate" the compare in the block with the branch, possibly trying
to make use of values not available there. Copy a page from AArch64's play book
here to fix the problem (at least in terms of correctness).
Fixes PR23640.
llvm-svn: 238097
This is part of the work to remove TargetMachine::resetTargetOptions.
In this patch, instead of updating global variable NoFramePointerElim in
resetTargetOptions, its use in DisableFramePointerElim is replaced with a call
to TargetFrameLowering::noFramePointerElim. This function determines on a
per-function basis if frame pointer elimination should be disabled.
There is no change in functionality except that cl:opt option "disable-fp-elim"
can now override function attribute "no-frame-pointer-elim".
llvm-svn: 238080
This patch adds a class for processing many recip codegen possibilities.
The TargetRecip class is intended to handle both command-line options to llc as well
as options passed in from a front-end such as clang with the -mrecip option.
The x86 backend is updated to use the new functionality.
Only -mcpu=btver2 with -ffast-math should see a functional change from this patch.
All other CPUs continue to *not* use reciprocal estimates by default with -ffast-math.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8982
llvm-svn: 238051
The 'off' field of 'struct bpf_insn' is in cpu-endianness,
since the rest is emitted as little endian, make sure
that 'off' field is little endian as well.
llvm-svn: 238038
The problem was that I slipped a change required for shrink-wrapping, namely I
used getFirstTerminator instead of the getLastNonDebugInstr that was here before
the refactoring, whereas the surrounding code is not yet patched for that.
Original message:
[X86] Refactor the prologue emission to prepare for shrink-wrapping.
- Add a late pass to expand pseudo instructions (tail call and EH returns).
Instead of doing it in the prologue emission.
- Factor some static methods in X86FrameLowering to ease code sharing.
NFC.
Related to <rdar://problem/20821487>
llvm-svn: 238035
This patch adds support for the ISA 2.07 additions involving the
branch history rolling buffer and event-based branching. These will
not be used by typical applications, so built-in support is not
required. They will only be available via inline assembly.
Assembly/disassembly tests are included in the patch.
llvm-svn: 238032
The list of subtarget features for the 7em triple contains 't2xtpk',
which actually disables that subtarget feature. Correct that to
'+t2xtpk' and test that the instructions enabled by that feature do
actually work.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9936
llvm-svn: 238022
Revert "[X86] Refactor the prologue emission to prepare for shrink-wrapping."
This reverts commit 6b3b93fc8b68a2c806aa992ee4bd3d7f61898d4b.
This reverts commit ab0b15dff8539826283a59c2dd700a18a9680e0f.
llvm-svn: 238011
- Add a late pass to expand pseudo instructions (tail call and EH returns).
Instead of doing it in the prologue emission.
- Factor some static methods in X86FrameLowering to ease code sharing.
NFC.
Related to <rdar://problem/20821487>
llvm-svn: 237977
Unfortunately, I can't reduce a small test case for this (although compiling
mpfr-3.1.2 with -O2 -mcpu=a2 would fairly reliably trigger a crash), but the
problem is fairly clear (at least once you know you're looking for one). If the
TLS instruction being replaced was at the end of the block, we'd increment the
iterator past it (so it would then point to MBB.end()), and then we'd increment
it again as part of the for statement, thus overrunning the end of the list.
Don't do that.
llvm-svn: 237974
The raw non-instruction/constant form of this is still relying on being
able to access the pointee type from a pointer type - those will be
cleaned up later. For now, just focus on the cases where the pointee
type is easily accessible.
llvm-svn: 237958
My recent patch to add support for ISA 2.07 vector pack/unpack
instructions didn't properly check for availability of the vpkudum
instruction when recognizing it as a special vector shuffle case.
This causes us to leave the vector shuffle in place (rather than
converting it to a vector permute) so that it can be recognized later
as a vpkudum, but that pattern is invalid for processors prior to
POWER8. Thus LLVM crashes with an "unable to select" message. We
observed this since one of our buildbots is configured to generate
code for a POWER7.
This patch fixes the problem by checking for availability of the
vpkudum instruction during custom lowering of vector shuffles.
I've added a test case variant for the vpkudum pattern when the
instruction isn't available.
llvm-svn: 237952
On X86 (and similar OOO cores) unrolling is very limited, and even if the
runtime unrolling is otherwise profitable, the expense of a division to compute
the trip count could greatly outweigh the benefits. On the A2, we unroll a lot,
and the benefits of unrolling are more significant (seeing a 5x or 6x speedup
is not uncommon), so we're more able to tolerate the expense, on average, of a
division to compute the trip count.
llvm-svn: 237947
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9891
Following up on the VSX single precision loads and stores added earlier, this
adds support for elementary arithmetic operations on single precision values
in VSX registers. These instructions utilize the new VSSRC register class.
Instructions added:
xsaddsp
xsdivsp
xsmulsp
xsresp
xsrsqrtesp
xssqrtsp
xssubsp
llvm-svn: 237937
This starts merging MCSection and MCSectionData.
There are a few issues with the current split between MCSection and
MCSectionData.
* It optimizes the the not as important case. We want the production
of .o files to be really fast, but the split puts the information used
for .o emission in a separate data structure.
* The ELF/COFF/MachO hierarchy is not represented in MCSectionData,
leading to some ad-hoc ways to represent the various flags.
* It makes it harder to remember where each item is.
The attached patch starts merging the two by moving the alignment from
MCSectionData to MCSection.
Most of the patch is actually just dropping 'const', since
MCSectionData is mutable, but MCSection was not.
llvm-svn: 237936
Predicate UseAVX depricates pattern selection on AVX-512.
This predicate is necessary for DAG selection to select EVEX form.
But mapping SSE intrinsics to AVX-512 instructions is not ready yet.
So I replaced UseAVX with HasAVX for intrinsics patterns.
llvm-svn: 237903
This patch improves support for sign extension of the lower lanes of vectors of integers by making use of the SSE41 pmovsx* sign extension instructions where possible, and optimizing the sign extension by shifts on pre-SSE41 targets (avoiding the use of i64 arithmetic shifts which require scalarization).
It converts SIGN_EXTEND nodes to SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG where necessary, that more closely matches the pmovsx* instruction than the default approach of using SIGN_EXTEND_INREG which splits the operation (into an ANY_EXTEND lowered to a shuffle followed by shifts) making instruction matching difficult during lowering. Necessary support for SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG has been added to the DAGCombiner.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9848
llvm-svn: 237885
Ideally this is going to be and LLVM IR pass (shared, among others
with AArch64), but for the time being just enable it if consumers
ask us for optimization and not unconditionally.
Discussed with Tim Northover on IRC.
llvm-svn: 237837
Now that Intrinsic::ID is a typed enum, we can forward declare it and so return it from this method.
This updates all users which were either using an unsigned to store it, or had a now unnecessary cast.
llvm-svn: 237810
fixed extract-insert i1 element,
load i1, zextload i1 should be with "and $1, %reg" to prevent loading garbage.
added a bunch of new tests.
llvm-svn: 237793
Summary:
For N32/N64, private labels begin with '.L' but for O32 they begin with '$'.
MCAsmInfo now has an initializer function which can be used to provide information from the TargetMachine to control the assembly syntax.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: jfb, sandeep, llvm-commits, rafael
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9821
llvm-svn: 237789
Summary:
The documentation writes vectors highest-index first whereas LLVM-IR writes
them lowest-index first. As a result, instructions defined in terms of
left_half() and right_half() had the halves reversed.
In addition to correcting them, they have been improved to allow shuffles
that use the same operand twice or in reverse order. For example, ilvev
used to accept masks of the form:
<0, n, 2, n+2, 4, n+4, ...>
but now accepts:
<0, 0, 2, 2, 4, 4, ...>
<n, n, n+2, n+2, n+4, n+4, ...>
<0, n, 2, n+2, 4, n+4, ...>
<n, 0, n+2, 2, n+4, 4, ...>
One further improvement is that splati.[bhwd] is now the preferred instruction
for splat-like operations. The other special shuffles are no longer used
for splats. This lead to the discovery that <0, 0, ...> would not cause
splati.[hwd] to be selected and this has also been fixed.
This fixes the enc-3des test from the test-suite on Mips64r6 with MSA.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9660
llvm-svn: 237689
This changes the ABI used on 32-bit x86 for passing vector arguments.
Historically, clang passes the first 4 vector arguments in-register, and additional vector arguments on the stack, regardless of platform. That is different from the behavior of gcc, icc, and msvc, all of which pass only the first 3 arguments in-register.
The 3-register convention is documented, unofficially, in Agner's calling convention guide, and, officially, in the recently released version 1.0 of the i386 psABI.
Darwin is kept as is because the OS X ABI Function Call Guide explicitly documents the current (4-register) behavior.
This fixes PR21510
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9644
llvm-svn: 237682
This reverts commit r237210.
Also fix X86/complex-fca.ll to match the code that we used to generate
on win32 and now generate everwhere to conform to SysV.
llvm-svn: 237639
ld64 currently mishandles internal pointer relocations (i.e.
ARM64_RELOC_UNSIGNED referred to by section & offset rather than symbol). The
existing __cfstring clause was an early discovery and workaround for this, but
the problem is wider and we should avoid such relocations wherever possible for
now.
This code should be reverted to allowing internal relocations as soon as
possible.
PR23437.
llvm-svn: 237621
This was previously returning int. However there are no negative opcode
numbers and more importantly this was needlessly different from
MCInstrDesc::getOpcode() (which even is the value returned here) and
SDValue::getOpcode()/SDNode::getOpcode().
llvm-svn: 237611
Previously, they were forced to immediately follow the actual branch
instruction. This was usually OK (the LEAs actually accessing them got emitted
nearby, and weren't usually separated much afterwards). Unfortunately, a
sufficiently nasty phi elimination dumps many instructions right before the
basic block terminator, and this can increase the range too much.
This patch frees them up to be placed as usual by the constant islands pass,
and consequently has to slightly modify the form of TBB/TBH tables to refer to
a PC-relative label at the final jump. The other jump table formats were
already position-independent.
rdar://20813304
llvm-svn: 237590
This pseudo-instruction expands into 'sethi' and 'or' instructions,
or, just one of them, if the other isn't necessary for a given value.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9089
llvm-svn: 237585
- Adds support for the asm syntax, which has an immediate integer
"ASI" (address space identifier) appearing after an address, before
a comma.
- Adds the various-width load, store, and swap in alternate address
space instructions. (ldsba, ldsha, lduba, lduha, lda, stba, stha,
sta, swapa)
This does not attempt to hook these instructions up to pointer address
spaces in LLVM, although that would probably be a reasonable thing to
do in the future.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8904
llvm-svn: 237581
(Note that register "Y" is essentially just ASR0).
Also added some test cases for divide and multiply, which had none before.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8670
llvm-svn: 237580
This patch implements LLVM support for the ACLE special register intrinsics in
section 10.1, __arm_{w,r}sr{,p,64}.
This patch is intended to lower the read/write_register instrinsics, used to
implement the special register intrinsics in the clang patch for special
register intrinsics (see http://reviews.llvm.org/D9697), to ARM specific
instructions MRC,MCR,MSR etc. to allow reading an writing of coprocessor
registers in AArch32 and AArch64. This is done by inspecting the register
string passed to the intrinsic and then lowering to the appropriate
instruction.
Patch by Luke Cheeseman.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9699
llvm-svn: 237579
instructions. These intrinsics are comming with rounding mode.
Added intrinsics for MAXSS/D, MINSS/D - with and without sae.
By Asaf Badouh (asaf.badouh@intel.com)
llvm-svn: 237560
If some commits are happy, and some commits are sad, this is a sad commit. It
is sad because it restricts instruction scheduling to work around a binutils
linker bug, and moreover, one that may never be fixed. On 2012-05-21, GCC was
updated not to produce code triggering this bug, and now we'll do the same...
When resolving an address using the ELF ABI TOC pointer, two relocations are
generally required: one for the high part and one for the low part. Only
the high part generally explicitly depends on r2 (the TOC pointer). And, so,
we might produce code like this:
.Ltmp526:
addis 3, 2, .LC12@toc@ha
.Ltmp1628:
std 2, 40(1)
ld 5, 0(27)
ld 2, 8(27)
ld 11, 16(27)
ld 3, .LC12@toc@l(3)
rldicl 4, 4, 0, 32
mtctr 5
bctrl
ld 2, 40(1)
And there is nothing wrong with this code, as such, but there is a linker bug
in binutils (https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18414) that will
misoptimize this code sequence to this:
nop
std r2,40(r1)
ld r5,0(r27)
ld r2,8(r27)
ld r11,16(r27)
ld r3,-32472(r2)
clrldi r4,r4,32
mtctr r5
bctrl
ld r2,40(r1)
because the linker does not know (and does not check) that the value in r2
changed in between the instruction using the .LC12@toc@ha (TOC-relative)
relocation and the instruction using the .LC12@toc@l(3) relocation.
Because it finds these instructions using the relocations (and not by
scanning the instructions), it has been asserted that there is no good way
to detect the change of r2 in between. As a result, this bug may never be
fixed (i.e. it may become part of the definition of the ABI). GCC was
updated to add extra dependencies on r2 to instructions using the @toc@l
relocations to avoid this problem, and we'll do the same here.
This is done as a separate pass because:
1. These extra r2 dependencies are not really properties of the
instructions, but rather due to a linker bug, and maybe one day we'll be
able to get rid of them when targeting linkers without this bug (and,
thus, keeping the logic centralized here will make that
straightforward).
2. There are ISel-level peephole optimizations that propagate the @toc@l
relocations to some user instructions, and so the exta dependencies do
not apply only to a fixed set of instructions (without undesirable
definition replication).
The test case was reduced with the help of bugpoint, with minimal cleaning. I'm
looking forward to our upcoming MI serialization support, and with that, much
better tests can be created.
llvm-svn: 237556
Summary:
But still handle them the same way since I don't know how they differ on
this target.
Of these, 'o' and 'v' are not tested but were already implemented.
I'm not sure why 'i' is required for X86 since it's supposed to be an
immediate constraint rather than a memory constraint. A test asserts
without it so I've included it for now.
No functional change intended.
Reviewers: nadav
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8254
llvm-svn: 237517
This patch adds support for the following new instructions in the
Power ISA 2.07:
vpksdss
vpksdus
vpkudus
vpkudum
vupkhsw
vupklsw
These instructions are available through the vec_packs, vec_packsu,
vec_unpackh, and vec_unpackl built-in interfaces. These are
lane-sensitive instructions, so the built-ins have different
implementations for big- and little-endian, and the instructions must
be marked as killing the vector swap optimization for now.
The first three instructions perform saturating pack operations. The
fourth performs a modulo pack operation, which means it can be
represented with a vector shuffle, and conversely the appropriate
vector shuffles may cause this instruction to be generated. The other
instructions are only generated via built-in support for now.
Appropriate tests have been added.
There is a companion patch to clang for the rest of this support.
llvm-svn: 237499
Other pieces of CodeGen want to negate frame object offsets to account
for architectures where the stack grows down. Our object is a pseudo
object so it's offset doesn't matter. However, we shouldn't choose an
offset which results in undefined behavior if you negate it.
llvm-svn: 237474
Summary:
To maintain compatibility with GAS, we need to stop treating negative 32-bit immediates as 64-bit values when expanding LI/DLI.
This currently happens because of sign extension.
To do this we need to choose the 32-bit value expansion for values which use their upper 33 bits only for sign extension (i.e. no 0's, only 1's).
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8662
llvm-svn: 237428
Instead of doing that, create a temporary copy of MCTargetOptions and reset its
SanitizeAddress field based on the function's attribute every time an InlineAsm
instruction is emitted in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm.
This is part of the work to remove TargetMachine::resetTargetOptions (the FIXME
added to TargetMachine.cpp in r236009 explains why this function has to be
removed).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9570
llvm-svn: 237412
The induction variable in the vectorized loop wasn't
recognized properly, so a hardware loop wasn't generated.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9722
llvm-svn: 237388
After converting a loop to a hardware loop, the pass should remove
any unnecessary instructions from the old compare-and-branch
code. This patch removes a dead constant assignment that was
used in the compare instruction.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9720
llvm-svn: 237373
If the loop trip count may underflow or wrap, the compiler should
not generate a hardware loop since the trip count will be
incorrect.
llvm-svn: 237365
Summary:
When we are trying to fill the delay slot of a call instruction, we must avoid
filler instructions that use the $ra register. This fixes the test
MultiSource/Applications/JM/lencod when we enable the forward delay slot filler.
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9670
llvm-svn: 237362
Summary:
If we only pass the necessary operands, we don't have to determine the position of the symbol operand when entering expandLoadAddressSym().
This simplifies the expandLoadAddressSym() code.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9291
llvm-svn: 237355