Commit Graph

711 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 58c8948a0c blockfreq: Clean up irreducible testcases
Strip irreducible testcases to pure control flow.  The function calls
made the branch weights more believable but cluttered it up a lot.
There isn't going to be any constant analysis here, so just use dumb
branch logic to clarify the important parts.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 207192
2014-04-25 04:38:35 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith b3380ea60a blockfreq: Skip irreducible backedges inside functions
The branch that skips irreducible backedges was only active when
propagating mass at the top-level.  In particular, when propagating mass
through a loop recognized by `LoopInfo` with irreducible control flow
inside, irreducible backedges would not be skipped.

Not sure where that idea came from, but the result was that mass was
lost until after loop exit.  Added a testcase that covers this case.

llvm-svn: 206860
2014-04-22 03:31:53 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 10be9a8868 Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206707, reapplying r206704.  The preceding commit
to CalcSpillWeights should have sorted out the failing buildbots.

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 206766
2014-04-21 17:57:07 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith e63327e967 Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206704, as expected.

llvm-svn: 206707
2014-04-19 22:46:00 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 875ddfac75 Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206677, reapplying my BlockFrequencyInfo rewrite.

I've done a careful audit, added some asserts, and fixed a couple of
bugs (unfortunately, they were in unlikely code paths).  There's a small
chance that this will appease the failing bots [1][2].  (If so, great!)

If not, I have a follow-up commit ready that will temporarily add
-debug-only=block-freq to the two failing tests, allowing me to compare
the code path between what the failing bots and what my machines (and
the rest of the bots) are doing.  Once I've triggered those builds, I'll
revert both commits so the bots go green again.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816
[2]: http://llvm-amd64.freebsd.your.org/b/builders/clang-i386-freebsd/builds/18445

<rdar://problem/14292693>

llvm-svn: 206704
2014-04-19 22:34:26 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 76b813619a Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl" (#2)
This reverts commit r206666, as planned.

Still stumped on why the bots are failing.  Sanitizer bots haven't
turned anything up.  If anyone can help me debug either of the failures
(referenced in r206666) I'll owe them a beer.  (In the meantime, I'll be
auditing my patch for undefined behaviour.)

llvm-svn: 206677
2014-04-19 00:42:46 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith b3caf3646f Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl" (#2)
This reverts commit r206628, reapplying r206622 (and r206626).

Two tests are failing only on buildbots [1][2]: i.e., I can't reproduce
on Darwin, and Chandler can't reproduce on Linux.  Asan and valgrind
don't tell us anything, but we're hoping the msan bot will catch it.

So, I'm applying this again to get more feedback from the bots.  I'll
leave it in long enough to trigger builds in at least the sanitizer
buildbots (it was failing for reasons unrelated to my commit last time
it was in), and hopefully a few others.... and then I expect to revert a
third time.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816
[2]: http://llvm-amd64.freebsd.your.org/b/builders/clang-i386-freebsd/builds/18445

llvm-svn: 206666
2014-04-18 22:30:03 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 0842ff36a6 Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl" (#2)
This reverts commit r206622 and the MSVC fixup in r206626.

Apparently the remotely failing tests are still failing, despite my
attempt to fix the nondeterminism in r206621.

llvm-svn: 206628
2014-04-18 17:56:08 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith f8361d127a Reapply "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commit r206556, effectively reapplying commit r206548 and
its fixups in r206549 and r206550.

In an intervening commit I've added target triples to the tests that
were failing remotely [1] (but passing locally).  I'm hoping the mystery
is solved?  I'll revert this again if the tests are still failing
remotely.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816

llvm-svn: 206622
2014-04-18 17:22:25 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 18eadd9260 [LCG] Add support for building persistent and connected SCCs to the
LazyCallGraph. This is the start of the whole point of this different
abstraction, but it is just the initial bits. Here is a run-down of
what's going on here. I'm planning to incorporate some (or all) of this
into comments going forward, hopefully with better editing and wording.
=]

The crux of the problem with the traditional way of building SCCs is
that they are ephemeral. The new pass manager however really needs the
ability to associate analysis passes and results of analysis passes with
SCCs in order to expose these analysis passes to the SCC passes. Making
this work is kind-of the whole point of the new pass manager. =]

So, when we're building SCCs for the call graph, we actually want to
build persistent nodes that stick around and can be reasoned about
later. We'd also like the ability to walk the SCC graph in more complex
ways than just the traditional postorder traversal of the current CGSCC
walk. That means that in addition to being persistent, the SCCs need to
be connected into a useful graph structure.

However, we still want the SCCs to be formed lazily where possible.

These constraints are quite hard to satisfy with the SCC iterator. Also,
using that would bypass our ability to actually add data to the nodes of
the call graph to facilite implementing the Tarjan walk. So I've
re-implemented things in a more direct and embedded way. This
immediately makes it easy to get the persistence and connectivity
correct, and it also allows leveraging the existing nodes to simplify
the algorithm. I've worked somewhat to make this implementation more
closely follow the traditional paper's nomenclature and strategy,
although it is still a bit obtuse because it isn't recursive, using
an explicit stack and a tail call instead, and it is interruptable,
resuming each time we need another SCC.

The other tricky bit here, and what actually took almost all the time
and trials and errors I spent building this, is exactly *what* graph
structure to build for the SCCs. The naive thing to build is the call
graph in its newly acyclic form. I wrote about 4 versions of this which
did precisely this. Inevitably, when I experimented with them across
various use cases, they became incredibly awkward. It was all
implementable, but it felt like a complete wrong fit. Square peg, round
hole. There were two overriding aspects that pushed me in a different
direction:

1) We want to discover the SCC graph in a postorder fashion. That means
   the root node will be the *last* node we find. Using the call-SCC DAG
   as the graph structure of the SCCs results in an orphaned graph until
   we discover a root.

2) We will eventually want to walk the SCC graph in parallel, exploring
   distinct sub-graphs independently, and synchronizing at merge points.
   This again is not helped by the call-SCC DAG structure.

The structure which, quite surprisingly, ended up being completely
natural to use is the *inverse* of the call-SCC DAG. We add the leaf
SCCs to the graph as "roots", and have edges to the caller SCCs. Once
I switched to building this structure, everything just fell into place
elegantly.

Aside from general cleanups (there are FIXMEs and too few comments
overall) that are still needed, the other missing piece of this is
support for iterating across levels of the SCC graph. These will become
useful for implementing #2, but they aren't an immediate priority.

Once SCCs are in good shape, I'll be working on adding mutation support
for incremental updates and adding the pass manager that this analysis
enables.

llvm-svn: 206581
2014-04-18 10:50:32 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith e576167df8 Revert "blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl"
This reverts commits r206548, r206549 and r206549.

There are some unit tests failing that aren't failing locally [1], so
reverting until I have time to investigate.

[1]: http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6/builds/1816

llvm-svn: 206556
2014-04-18 02:17:43 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 12e68e1733 blockfreq: Rewrite BlockFrequencyInfoImpl
Rewrite the shared implementation of BlockFrequencyInfo and
MachineBlockFrequencyInfo entirely.

The old implementation had a fundamental flaw:  precision losses from
nested loops (or very wide branches) compounded past loop exits (and
convergence points).

The @nested_loops testcase at the end of
test/Analysis/BlockFrequencyAnalysis/basic.ll is motivating.  This
function has three nested loops, with branch weights in the loop headers
of 1:4000 (exit:continue).  The old analysis gives non-sensical results:

    Printing analysis 'Block Frequency Analysis' for function 'nested_loops':
    ---- Block Freqs ----
     entry = 1.0
     for.cond1.preheader = 1.00103
     for.cond4.preheader = 5.5222
     for.body6 = 18095.19995
     for.inc8 = 4.52264
     for.inc11 = 0.00109
     for.end13 = 0.0

The new analysis gives correct results:

    Printing analysis 'Block Frequency Analysis' for function 'nested_loops':
    block-frequency-info: nested_loops
     - entry: float = 1.0, int = 8
     - for.cond1.preheader: float = 4001.0, int = 32007
     - for.cond4.preheader: float = 16008001.0, int = 128064007
     - for.body6: float = 64048012001.0, int = 512384096007
     - for.inc8: float = 16008001.0, int = 128064007
     - for.inc11: float = 4001.0, int = 32007
     - for.end13: float = 1.0, int = 8

Most importantly, the frequency leaving each loop matches the frequency
entering it.

The new algorithm leverages BlockMass and PositiveFloat to maintain
precision, separates "probability mass distribution" from "loop
scaling", and uses dithering to eliminate probability mass loss.  I have
unit tests for these types out of tree, but it was decided in the review
to make the classes private to BlockFrequencyInfoImpl, and try to shrink
them (or remove them entirely) in follow-up commits.

The new algorithm should generally have a complexity advantage over the
old.  The previous algorithm was quadratic in the worst case.  The new
algorithm is still worst-case quadratic in the presence of irreducible
control flow, but it's linear without it.

The key difference between the old algorithm and the new is that control
flow within a loop is evaluated separately from control flow outside,
limiting propagation of precision problems and allowing loop scale to be
calculated independently of mass distribution.  Loops are visited
bottom-up, their loop scales are calculated, and they are replaced by
pseudo-nodes.  Mass is then distributed through the function, which is
now a DAG.  Finally, loops are revisited top-down to multiply through
the loop scales and the masses distributed to pseudo nodes.

There are some remaining flaws.

  - Irreducible control flow isn't modelled correctly.  LoopInfo and
    MachineLoopInfo ignore irreducible edges, so this algorithm will
    fail to scale accordingly.  There's a note in the class
    documentation about how to get closer.  See also the comments in
    test/Analysis/BlockFrequencyInfo/irreducible.ll.

  - Loop scale is limited to 4096 per loop (2^12) to avoid exhausting
    the 64-bit integer precision used downstream.

  - The "bias" calculation proposed on llvmdev is *not* incorporated
    here.  This will be added in a follow-up commit, once comments from
    this review have been handled.

llvm-svn: 206548
2014-04-18 01:57:45 +00:00
Akira Hatanaka 5638b89944 Fix a bug in which BranchProbabilityInfo wasn't setting branch weights of basic blocks inside loops correctly.
Previously, BranchProbabilityInfo::calcLoopBranchHeuristics would determine the weights of basic blocks inside loops even when it didn't have enough information to estimate the branch probabilities correctly. This patch fixes the function to exit early if it doesn't see any exit edges or back edges and let the later heuristics determine the weights.

This fixes PR18705 and <rdar://problem/15991090>.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3363

llvm-svn: 206194
2014-04-14 16:56:19 +00:00
Hal Finkel 56bf297e3a Don't assert in BasicTTI::getMemoryOpCost for non-simple types
BasicTTI::getMemoryOpCost must explicitly check for non-simple types; setting
AllowUnknown=true with TLI->getSimpleValueType is not sufficient because, for
example, non-power-of-two vector types return non-simple EVTs (not MVT::Other).

llvm-svn: 206150
2014-04-14 05:59:09 +00:00
Sebastian Pop b5b84e0963 in findGCD of multiply expr return the gcd
we used to return 1 instead of the gcd

llvm-svn: 205800
2014-04-08 21:21:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel de0b413ec0 [PowerPC] Adjust load/store costs in PPCTTI
This provides more realistic costs for the insert/extractelement instructions
(which are load/store pairs), accounts for the cheap unaligned Altivec load
sequence, and for unaligned VSX load/stores.

Bad news:
MultiSource/Applications/sgefa/sgefa - 35% slowdown (this will require more investigation)
SingleSource/Benchmarks/McGill/queens - 20% slowdown (we no longer vectorize this, but it was a constant store that was scalarized)
MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/pcompress2/pcompress2 - 2% slowdown

Good news:
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout/ary3 - 54% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/ary - 40% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Ptrdist/ks/ks - 35% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/neural/neural - 30% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/TSVC/Symbolics-flt/Symbolics-flt - 20% speedup

Unfortunately, estimating the costs of the stack-based scalarization sequences
is hard, and adjusting these costs is like a game of whac-a-mole :( I'll
revisit this again after we have better codegen for vector extloads and
truncstores and unaligned load/stores.

llvm-svn: 205658
2014-04-04 23:51:18 +00:00
Hal Finkel 6fd19ab35e Account for scalarization costs in BasicTTI::getMemoryOpCost for extending vector loads
When a vector type legalizes to a larger vector type, and the target does not
support the associated extending load (or truncating store), then legalization
will scalarize the load (or store) resulting in an associated scalarization
cost.  BasicTTI::getMemoryOpCost needs to account for this.

Between this, and r205487, PowerPC on the P7 with VSX enabled shows:

MultiSource/Benchmarks/PAQ8p/paq8p: 43% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/BenchmarkGame/puzzle: 51% speedup
SingleSource/UnitTests/Vectorizer/gcc-loops 28% speedup

(some of these are new; some of these, such as PAQ8p, just reverse regressions
that VSX support would trigger)

llvm-svn: 205495
2014-04-03 00:53:59 +00:00
Hal Finkel 55312debee Fix multi-register costs in BasicTTI::getCastInstrCost
For an cast (extension, etc.), the currently logic predicts a low cost if the
associated operation (keyed on the destination type) is legal (or promoted).
This is not true when the number of values required to legalize the type is
changing. For example, <8 x i16> being sign extended by <8 x i32> is not
generically cheap on PPC with VSX, even though sign extension to v4i32 is
legal, because two output v4i32 values are required compared to the single
v8i16 input value, and without custom logic in the target, this conversion will
scalarize.

llvm-svn: 205487
2014-04-02 23:18:54 +00:00
Tim Northover 00ed9964c6 ARM64: initial backend import
This adds a second implementation of the AArch64 architecture to LLVM,
accessible in parallel via the "arm64" triple. The plan over the
coming weeks & months is to merge the two into a single backend,
during which time thorough code review should naturally occur.

Everything will be easier with the target in-tree though, hence this
commit.

llvm-svn: 205090
2014-03-29 10:18:08 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 1a444489e9 PR15967 Fix in basicaa for faulty returning no alias.
This commit consist of two parts.
The first part fix the PR15967. The wrong conclusion was made when the MaxLookup
limit was reached. The fix introduce a out parameter (MaxLookupReached) to
DecomposeGEPExpression that the function aliasGEP can act upon.
The second part is introducing the constant MaxLookupSearchDepth to make sure
that DecomposeGEPExpression and GetUnderlyingObject use the same search depth.
This is a small cleanup to clarify the original algorithm.

Patch by Karl-Johan Karlsson!

llvm-svn: 204859
2014-03-26 21:30:19 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer e75eaca32f ScalarEvolution: Compute exit counts for loops with a power-of-2 step.
If we have a loop of the form
for (unsigned n = 0; n != (k & -32); n += 32) {}
then we know that n is always divisible by 32 and the loop must
terminate. Even if we have a condition where the loop counter will
overflow it'll always hold this invariant.

PR19183. Our loop vectorizer creates this pattern and it's also
occasionally formed by loop counters derived from pointers.

llvm-svn: 204728
2014-03-25 16:25:12 +00:00
Rafael Espindola f3336bc1d5 Reject alias to undefined symbols in the verifier.
On ELF and COFF an alias is just another name for a position in the file.
There is no way to refer to a position in another file, so an alias to
undefined is meaningless.

MachO currently doesn't support aliases. The spec has a N_INDR, which when
implemented will have a different set of restrictions. Adding support for
it shouldn't be harder than any other IR extension.

For now, having the IR represent what is actually possible with current
tools makes it easier to fix the design of GlobalAlias.

llvm-svn: 203705
2014-03-12 20:15:49 +00:00
Raul E. Silvera ce376c0fcb When analyzing vectors of element type that require legalization,
the legalization cost must be included to get an accurate
estimation of the total cost of the scalarized vector.
The inaccurate cost triggered unprofitable SLP vectorization on
32-bit X86.

Summary:
Include legalization overhead when computing scalarization cost

Reviewers: hfinkel, nadav

CC: chandlerc, rnk, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2992

llvm-svn: 203509
2014-03-10 22:59:13 +00:00
Matt Arsenault a236ea551c Teach lint about address spaces
llvm-svn: 203132
2014-03-06 17:33:55 +00:00
Sebastian Pop f05ba89bd3 add -da-delinearize runs and checks to MIV testcases
llvm-svn: 201869
2014-02-21 18:15:18 +00:00
Nico Rieck 5ba5226ab9 Add extra CHECK prefix to tests with explicit prefix
These tests mistakenly assume that CHECK is still available even if an
explicit prefix is specified.

llvm-svn: 201492
2014-02-16 13:28:15 +00:00
Nico Rieck 35a237d4ed Actually call FileCheck in tests
llvm-svn: 201491
2014-02-16 13:27:39 +00:00
Nico Rieck 7647178738 Fix broken CHECK lines
llvm-svn: 201479
2014-02-16 07:31:05 +00:00
Andrea Di Biagio b7882b3bd1 [Vectorizer] Add a new 'OperandValueKind' in TargetTransformInfo called
'OK_NonUniformConstValue' to identify operands which are constants but
not constant splats.

The cost model now allows returning 'OK_NonUniformConstValue'
for non splat operands that are instances of ConstantVector or
ConstantDataVector.

With this change, targets are now able to compute different costs
for instructions with non-uniform constant operands.
For example, On X86 the cost of a vector shift may vary depending on whether
the second operand is a uniform or non-uniform constant.

This patch applies the following changes:
 - The cost model computation now takes into account non-uniform constants;
 - The cost of vector shift instructions has been improved in
   X86TargetTransformInfo analysis pass;
 - BBVectorize, SLPVectorizer and LoopVectorize now know how to distinguish
   between non-uniform and uniform constant operands.

Added a new test to verify that the output of opt
'-cost-model -analyze' is valid in the following configurations: SSE2,
SSE4.1, AVX, AVX2.

llvm-svn: 201272
2014-02-12 23:43:47 +00:00
Craig Topper 522af29465 Test case I forgot to 'add' for r201126.
llvm-svn: 201207
2014-02-12 03:58:47 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 5a188549ad ScalarEvolution: Analyze trip count of loops with a switch guarding the exit.
llvm-svn: 201159
2014-02-11 15:44:32 +00:00
Tim Northover f0e21616f3 X86: add costs for 64-bit vector ext/trunc & rebalance
The most important part of this is probably adding any cost at all for
operations like zext <8 x i8> to <8 x i32>. Before they were being
recorded as extremely costly (24, I believe) which made LLVM fall back
on a 4-wide vectorisation of a loop.

It also rebalances the values for sext, zext and trunc. Lacking any
other sane metric that might work across CPU microarchitectures I went
for instructions. This seems to be in reasonable accord with the rest
of the table (sitofp, ...) though no doubt at least one value is
sub-optimal for some bizarre reason.

Finally, separate AVX and AVX2 values are provided where appropriate.
The CodeGen is quite different in many cases.

rdar://problem/15981990

llvm-svn: 200928
2014-02-06 18:18:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth bf71a34eb9 [PM] Add a new "lazy" call graph analysis pass for the new pass manager.
The primary motivation for this pass is to separate the call graph
analysis used by the new pass manager's CGSCC pass management from the
existing call graph analysis pass. That analysis pass is (somewhat
unfortunately) over-constrained by the existing CallGraphSCCPassManager
requirements. Those requirements make it *really* hard to cleanly layer
the needed functionality for the new pass manager on top of the existing
analysis.

However, there are also a bunch of things that the pass manager would
specifically benefit from doing differently from the existing call graph
analysis, and this new implementation tries to address several of them:

- Be lazy about scanning function definitions. The existing pass eagerly
  scans the entire module to build the initial graph. This new pass is
  significantly more lazy, and I plan to push this even further to
  maximize locality during CGSCC walks.
- Don't use a single synthetic node to partition functions with an
  indirect call from functions whose address is taken. This node creates
  a huge choke-point which would preclude good parallelization across
  the fanout of the SCC graph when we got to the point of looking at
  such changes to LLVM.
- Use a memory dense and lightweight representation of the call graph
  rather than value handles and tracking call instructions. This will
  require explicit update calls instead of some updates working
  transparently, but should end up being significantly more efficient.
  The explicit update calls ended up being needed in many cases for the
  existing call graph so we don't really lose anything.
- Doesn't explicitly model SCCs and thus doesn't provide an "identity"
  for an SCC which is stable across updates. This is essential for the
  new pass manager to work correctly.
- Only form the graph necessary for traversing all of the functions in
  an SCC friendly order. This is a much simpler graph structure and
  should be more memory dense. It does limit the ways in which it is
  appropriate to use this analysis. I wish I had a better name than
  "call graph". I've commented extensively this aspect.

This is still very much a WIP, in fact it is really just the initial
bits. But it is about the fourth version of the initial bits that I've
implemented with each of the others running into really frustrating
problms. This looks like it will actually work and I'd like to split the
actual complexity across commits for the sake of my reviewers. =] The
rest of the implementation along with lots of wiring will follow
somewhat more rapidly now that there is a good path forward.

Naturally, this doesn't impact any of the existing optimizer. This code
is specific to the new pass manager.

A bunch of thanks are deserved for the various folks that have helped
with the design of this, especially Nick Lewycky who actually sat with
me to go through the fundamentals of the final version here.

llvm-svn: 200903
2014-02-06 04:37:03 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 629199ccb3 Fix crasher introduced in r200203 and caught by a libc++ buildbot. Don't assume that getMulExpr returns a SCEVMulExpr, it may have simplified it to something else!
llvm-svn: 200210
2014-01-27 10:47:44 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 31eaca5513 Teach SCEV to handle more cases of 'and X, CST', specifically where CST is any number of contiguous 1 bits in a row, with any number of leading and trailing 0 bits.
Unfortunately, this in turn led to some lower quality SCEVs due to some different paths through expression simplification, so add getUDivExactExpr and use it. This fixes all instances of the problems that I found, but we can make that function smarter as necessary.

Merge test "xor-and.ll" into "and-xor.ll" since I needed to update it anyways. Test 'nsw-offset.ll' analyzes a little deeper, %n now gets a scev in terms of %no instead of a SCEVUnknown.

llvm-svn: 200203
2014-01-27 10:04:03 +00:00
Alp Toker cb40291100 Fix known typos
Sweep the codebase for common typos. Includes some changes to visible function
names that were misspelt.

llvm-svn: 200018
2014-01-24 17:20:08 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer e3ac099726 BasicAA: We need to check both access sizes when comparing a gep and an
underlying object of unknown size.

Fixes PR18460.

llvm-svn: 199351
2014-01-16 04:53:18 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer c10563d14e Fix broken CHECK lines.
llvm-svn: 199016
2014-01-11 21:06:00 +00:00
Stepan Dyatkovskiy 431993b57b Fixed old typo in ScalarEvolution, that caused wrong SCEVs zext operation.
Detailed description is here:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18000#c16

For participation in bugfix process special thanks to David Wiberg.

llvm-svn: 198863
2014-01-09 12:26:12 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 833a82ecde BasicAA: Use reachabilty instead of dominance for checking value equality in phi
cycles

This allows the value equality check to work even if we don't have a dominator
tree. Also add some more comments.

I was worried about compile time impacts and did not implement reachability but
used the dominance check in the initial patch. The trade-off was that the
dominator tree was required.
The llvm utility function isPotentiallyReachable cuts off the recursive search
after 32 visits. Testing did not show any compile time regressions showing my
worries unjustfied.

No compile time or performance regressions at O3 -flto -mavx on test-suite +
externals.

Addresses review comments from r198290.

llvm-svn: 198400
2014-01-03 05:47:03 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 0d10a9d579 BasicAA: Fix value equality and phi cycles
When there are cycles in the value graph we have to be careful interpreting
"Value*" identity as "value" equivalence. We interpret the value of a phi node
as the value of its operands.
When we check for value equivalence now we make sure that the "Value*" dominates
all cycles (phis).

%0 = phi [%noaliasval, %addr2]
%l = load %ptr
%addr1 = gep @a, 0, %l
%addr2 = gep @a, 0, (%l + 1)
store %ptr ...

Before this patch we would return NoAlias for (%0, %addr1) which is wrong
because the value of the load is from different iterations of the loop.

Tested on x86_64 -mavx at O3 and O3 -flto with no performance or compile time
regressions.

PR18068
radar://15653794

llvm-svn: 198290
2014-01-02 03:31:36 +00:00
Matt Arsenault a8fe22baba Use correct size for address space in BasicAA.
The tests just hit this with a different sized
address space since I haven't figured out how
to use this to break it.

I thought I committed this a long time ago,
and I'm not sure why missing this hasn't caused
any problems.

llvm-svn: 194903
2013-11-16 00:36:43 +00:00
Sebastian Pop a1cc34b981 improve dependence analysis testcases
print the name of the function on which the dependence analysis is performed
such that changes to the testcase are easier to review.

llvm-svn: 194528
2013-11-12 22:47:30 +00:00
Sebastian Pop c62c679c1b delinearization of arrays
llvm-svn: 194527
2013-11-12 22:47:20 +00:00
Andrew Trick 34e2f0c4ea Rewrite SCEV's backedge taken count computation.
Patch by Michele Scandale!

Rewrite of the functions used to compute the backedge taken count of a
loop on LT and GT comparisons.

I decided to split the handling of LT and GT cases becasue the trick
"a > b == -a < -b" in some cases prevents the trip count computation
due to the multiplication by -1 on the two operands of the
comparison. This issue comes from the conservative computation of
value range of SCEVs: taking the negative SCEV of an expression that
have a small positive range (e.g. [0,31]), we would have a SCEV with a
fullset as value range.

Indeed, in the new rewritten function I tried to better handle the
maximum backedge taken count computation when MAX/MIN expression are
used to handle the cases where no entry guard is found.

Some test have been modified in order to check the new value correctly
(I manually check them and reasoning on possible overflow the new
values seem correct).

I finally added a new test case related to the multiplication by -1
issue on GT comparisons.

llvm-svn: 194116
2013-11-06 02:08:26 +00:00
Hal Finkel 4d94930bcb Consider (x == -1) unlikely in BranchProbabilityInfo
This adds another heuristic to BPI, similar to the existing heuristic that
considers (x == 0) unlikely to be true. As suggested in the PACT'98 paper by
Deitrich, Cheng, and Hwu, -1 is often used to indicate an invalid index, and
equality comparisons with -1 are also unlikely to succeed. Local
experimentation supports this hypothesis: This yields a 1-2% speedup in the
test-suite sqlite benchmark on the PPC A2 core, with no significant
regressions.

llvm-svn: 193855
2013-11-01 10:58:22 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 6094f30da2 SCEV: Make the final add of an inbounds GEP nuw if we know that the index is positive.
We can't do this for the general case as saying a GEP with a negative index
doesn't have unsigned wrap isn't valid for negative indices.
  %gep = getelementptr inbounds i32* %p, i64 -1

But an inbounds GEP cannot run past the end of address space. So we check for
the very common case of a positive index and make GEPs derived from that NUW.
Together with Andy's recent non-unit stride work this lets us analyze loops
like

  void foo3(int *a, int *b) {
    for (; a < b; a++) {}
  }

PR12375, PR12376.

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2033

llvm-svn: 193514
2013-10-28 07:30:06 +00:00
Shuxin Yang 2e1890e18b Revert r193251 : Use address-taken to disambiguate global variable and indirect memops.
llvm-svn: 193489
2013-10-27 03:08:44 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 0ccab2d66c X86: Custom lower sext v16i8 to v16i16, and the corresponding truncate.
Also update the cost model.

llvm-svn: 193270
2013-10-23 21:06:07 +00:00
Shuxin Yang e4fb375995 Use address-taken to disambiguate global variable and indirect memops.
Major steps include:
 1). introduces a not-addr-taken bit-field in GlobalVariable
 2). GlobalOpt pass sets "not-address-taken" if it proves a global varirable 
    dosen't have its address taken.
 3). AA use this info for disambiguation. 

llvm-svn: 193251
2013-10-23 17:28:19 +00:00
Manman Ren a1ce9891ac Simplify testing case (Thanks Rafael for the testing case).
llvm-svn: 193177
2013-10-22 18:15:50 +00:00
Manman Ren f3850c0807 TBAA: fix PR17620.
We can have a struct type with a single field and the field does not start
with 0. In that case, we should correctly update the offset.

llvm-svn: 193137
2013-10-22 01:40:25 +00:00
Matt Arsenault be18b8a3ca Fix creating bitcasts between address spaces in SCEV.
The test before wasn't successfully testing this
since it was missing the datalayout piece to change
the size of the second address space.

llvm-svn: 193102
2013-10-21 18:41:10 +00:00
Andrew Trick 768b917dc8 SCEV should use NSW to get trip count for positive nonunit stride loops.
SCEV currently fails to compute loop counts for nonunit stride
loops. This comes up frequently. It prevents loop optimization and
forces vectorization to insert extra loop checks.

For example:
void foo(int n, int *x) {
 for (int i = 0; i < n; i += 3) {
   x[i] = i;
   x[i+1] = i+1;
   x[i+2] = i+2;
 }
}

We need to properly handle the case in which limit > INT_MAX-stride. In
the above case: n > INT_MAX-3. In this case the loop counter will step
beyond the limit and overflow at the same time. However, knowing that
signed integer overlow in undefined, we can assume the loop test
behavior is arbitrary after overflow. This obeys both C undefined
behavior rules, and the more strict LLVM poison value rules.

I'm finally fixing this in response to Hal Finkel's persistence.
The most probable reason that we never optimized this before is that
we were being careful to handle case where the developer expected a
side-effect free infinite loop relying on overflow:

for (int i = 0; i < n; i += s) {
  ++j;
}
return j;

If INT_MAX+1 is a multiple of s and n > INT_MAX-s, then we might
expect an infinite loop. However there are plenty of ways to achieve
this effect without relying on undefined behavior of signed overflow.

llvm-svn: 193015
2013-10-18 23:43:53 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ea56494625 Remove the very substantial, largely unmaintained legacy PGO
infrastructure.

This was essentially work toward PGO based on a design that had several
flaws, partially dating from a time when LLVM had a different
architecture, and with an effort to modernize it abandoned without being
completed. Since then, it has bitrotted for several years further. The
result is nearly unusable, and isn't helping any of the modern PGO
efforts. Instead, it is getting in the way, adding confusion about PGO
in LLVM and distracting everyone with maintenance on essentially dead
code. Removing it paves the way for modern efforts around PGO.

Among other effects, this removes the last of the runtime libraries from
LLVM. Those are being developed in the separate 'compiler-rt' project
now, with somewhat different licensing specifically more approriate for
runtimes.

llvm-svn: 191835
2013-10-02 15:42:23 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 21981a1a0d Use CHECK-LABEL
llvm-svn: 191713
2013-09-30 23:31:55 +00:00
Manman Ren 0ed04fc9ab TBAA: handle scalar TBAA format and struct-path aware TBAA format.
Remove the command line argument "struct-path-tbaa" since we should not depend
on command line argument to decide which format the IR file is using. Instead,
we check the first operand of the tbaa tag node, if it is a MDNode, we treat
it as struct-path aware TBAA format, otherwise, we treat it as scalar TBAA
format.

When clang starts to use struct-path aware TBAA format no matter whether
struct-path-tbaa is no, and we can auto-upgrade existing bc files, the support
for scalar TBAA format can be dropped.

Existing testing cases are updated to use the struct-path aware TBAA format.

llvm-svn: 191538
2013-09-27 18:34:27 +00:00
Yi Jiang 5c343de8d3 X86 horizontal vector reduction cost model
llvm-svn: 191021
2013-09-19 17:48:48 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer cae8735a54 Costmodel: Add support for horizontal vector reductions
Upcoming SLP vectorization improvements will want to be able to estimate costs
of horizontal reductions. Add infrastructure to support this.

We model reductions as a series of (shufflevector,add) tuples ultimately
followed by an extractelement. For example, for an add-reduction of <4 x float>
we could generate the following sequence:

 (v0, v1, v2, v3)
   \   \  /  /
     \  \  /
       +  +

 (v0+v2, v1+v3, undef, undef)
    \      /
 ((v0+v2) + (v1+v3), undef, undef)

 %rdx.shuf = shufflevector <4 x float> %rdx, <4 x float> undef,
                           <4 x i32> <i32 2, i32 3, i32 undef, i32 undef>
 %bin.rdx = fadd <4 x float> %rdx, %rdx.shuf
 %rdx.shuf7 = shufflevector <4 x float> %bin.rdx, <4 x float> undef,
                          <4 x i32> <i32 1, i32 undef, i32 undef, i32 undef>
 %bin.rdx8 = fadd <4 x float> %bin.rdx, %rdx.shuf7
 %r = extractelement <4 x float> %bin.rdx8, i32 0

This commit adds a cost model interface "getReductionCost(Opcode, Ty, Pairwise)"
that will allow clients to ask for the cost of such a reduction (as backends
might generate more efficient code than the cost of the individual instructions
summed up). This interface is excercised by the CostModel analysis pass which
looks for reduction patterns like the one above - starting at extractelements -
and if it sees a matching sequence will call the cost model interface.

We will also support a second form of pairwise reduction that is well supported
on common architectures (haddps, vpadd, faddp).

 (v0, v1, v2, v3)
  \   /    \  /
 (v0+v1, v2+v3, undef, undef)
    \     /
 ((v0+v1)+(v2+v3), undef, undef, undef)

  %rdx.shuf.0.0 = shufflevector <4 x float> %rdx, <4 x float> undef,
        <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 2 , i32 undef, i32 undef>
  %rdx.shuf.0.1 = shufflevector <4 x float> %rdx, <4 x float> undef,
        <4 x i32> <i32 1, i32 3, i32 undef, i32 undef>
  %bin.rdx.0 = fadd <4 x float> %rdx.shuf.0.0, %rdx.shuf.0.1
  %rdx.shuf.1.0 = shufflevector <4 x float> %bin.rdx.0, <4 x float> undef,
        <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 undef, i32 undef, i32 undef>
  %rdx.shuf.1.1 = shufflevector <4 x float> %bin.rdx.0, <4 x float> undef,
        <4 x i32> <i32 1, i32 undef, i32 undef, i32 undef>
  %bin.rdx.1 = fadd <4 x float> %rdx.shuf.1.0, %rdx.shuf.1.1
  %r = extractelement <4 x float> %bin.rdx.1, i32 0

llvm-svn: 190876
2013-09-17 18:06:50 +00:00
Matt Arsenault a90a18e0ea Teach ScalarEvolution about pointer address spaces
llvm-svn: 190425
2013-09-10 19:55:24 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 5faa669b66 Fix lint assert on integer vector division
llvm-svn: 189290
2013-08-26 23:29:33 +00:00
Bill Wendling a08bb49c61 FileCheck-ize tests.
llvm-svn: 188971
2013-08-22 00:51:19 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar 9efbedfd35 [tests] Cleanup initialization of test suffixes.
- Instead of setting the suffixes in a bunch of places, just set one master
   list in the top-level config. We now only modify the suffix list in a few
   suites that have one particular unique suffix (.ml, .mc, .yaml, .td, .py).

 - Aside from removing the need for a bunch of lit.local.cfg files, this enables
   4 tests that were inadvertently being skipped (one in
   Transforms/BranchFolding, a .s file each in DebugInfo/AArch64 and
   CodeGen/PowerPC, and one in CodeGen/SI which is now failing and has been
   XFAILED).

 - This commit also fixes a bunch of config files to use config.root instead of
   older copy-pasted code.

llvm-svn: 188513
2013-08-16 00:37:11 +00:00
Bill Wendling dc17270968 FileCheckize some of the testcases.
llvm-svn: 187756
2013-08-05 23:43:18 +00:00
Renato Golin 0178a25fc5 Fixes ARM LNT bot from SLP change in O3
This patch fixes the multiple breakages on ARM test-suite after the SLP
vectorizer was introduced by default on O3. The problem was an illegal
vector type on ARMTTI::getCmpSelInstrCost() <3 x i1> which is not simple.

The guard protects this code from breaking (cause of the problems) but
doesn't fix the issue that is generating the odd vector in the first
place, which also needs to be investigated.

llvm-svn: 187658
2013-08-02 17:10:04 +00:00
Stephen Lin 6dd347b39f Add newlines at end of test files, no functionality change
llvm-svn: 186263
2013-07-13 22:00:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel ec474f28e3 Add the nearbyint -> FNEARBYINT mapping to BasicTargetTransformInfo
This fixes an oversight that Intrinsic::nearbyint was not being mapped to
ISD::FNEARBYINT (thus fixing the over-optimistic cost we were assigning to
nearbyint calls for some targets).

llvm-svn: 185783
2013-07-08 03:24:07 +00:00
Nick Lewycky c2ec0725ce Extend 'readonly' and 'readnone' to work on function arguments as well as
functions. Make the function attributes pass add it to known library functions
and when it can deduce it.

llvm-svn: 185735
2013-07-06 00:29:58 +00:00
Jakob Stoklund Olesen 0b075103cd Minimize precision loss when computing cyclic probabilities.
Allow block frequencies to exceed 32 bits by using the new
BlockFrequency division function.

llvm-svn: 185236
2013-06-28 22:40:43 +00:00
Preston Briggs 6c286b6029 (no commit message)
llvm-svn: 185187
2013-06-28 18:44:48 +00:00
Nadav Rotem f9ecbcb835 CostModel: improve the cost model for load/store of non power-of-two types such as <3 x float>, which are popular in graphics.
llvm-svn: 185085
2013-06-27 17:52:04 +00:00
Jakob Stoklund Olesen 6e630d46d2 Print block frequencies in decimal form.
This is easier to read than the internal fixed-point representation.

If anybody knows the correct algorithm for converting fixed-point
numbers to base 10, feel free to fix it.

llvm-svn: 184881
2013-06-25 21:57:38 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer a04b9ef1e8 X86 cost model: Vectorizing integer division is a bad idea
radar://14057959

llvm-svn: 184872
2013-06-25 19:14:09 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 866793109e BlockFrequency: Bump up the entry frequency a bit.
This is a band-aid to fix the most severe regressions we're seeing from basing
spill decisions on block frequencies, until we have a better solution.

llvm-svn: 184835
2013-06-25 13:34:40 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer bfb84d0bd6 Revert "BlockFrequency: Saturate at 1 instead of 0 when multiplying a frequency with a branch probability."
This reverts commit r184584. Breaks PPC selfhost.

llvm-svn: 184590
2013-06-21 20:20:27 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer bd0f107929 BlockFrequency: Saturate at 1 instead of 0 when multiplying a frequency with a branch probability.
Zero is used by BlockFrequencyInfo as a special "don't know" value. It also
causes a sink for frequencies as you can't ever get off a zero frequency with
more multiplies.

This recovers a 10% regression on MultiSource/Benchmarks/7zip. A zero frequency
was propagated into an inner loop causing excessive spilling.

PR16402.

llvm-svn: 184584
2013-06-21 19:30:05 +00:00
Andrew Trick 3c944ba2f0 Unit test for SCEV fix r182989, PR16130.
llvm-svn: 183017
2013-05-31 16:42:41 +00:00
Michael Kuperstein f3e663af39 Make BasicAliasAnalysis recognize the fact a noalias argument cannot alias another argument, even if the other argument is not itself marked noalias.
llvm-svn: 182755
2013-05-28 08:17:48 +00:00
Diego Novillo c63995394d Add a new function attribute 'cold' to functions.
Other than recognizing the attribute, the patch does little else.
It changes the branch probability analyzer so that edges into
blocks postdominated by a cold function are given low weight.

Added analysis and code generation tests.  Added documentation for the
new attribute.

llvm-svn: 182638
2013-05-24 12:26:52 +00:00
Tim Northover 7dbbc28f72 AArch64: use MCJIT by default and enable related tests.
This just enables some testing I'd missed after implementing MCJIT
support.

llvm-svn: 181215
2013-05-06 16:51:08 +00:00
Matt Arsenault c23753a53e Fix unchecked uses of DominatorTree in MemoryDependenceAnalysis.
Use unknown results for places where it would be needed

llvm-svn: 181176
2013-05-06 02:07:24 +00:00
Tobias Grosser a7ddc98206 RegionInfo: Do not crash if unreachable block is found
llvm-svn: 181025
2013-05-03 15:48:34 +00:00
Manman Ren 662ece49de TBAA: remove !tbaa from testing cases if not used.
This will make it easier to turn on struct-path aware TBAA since the metadata
format will change.

llvm-svn: 180743
2013-04-29 22:42:01 +00:00
Manman Ren 5c37106d65 Struct-path aware TBAA: change the format of TBAAStructType node.
We switch the order of offset and field type to make TBAAStructType node
(name, parent node, offset) similar to scalar TBAA node (name, parent node).
TypeIsImmutable is added to TBAAStructTag node.

llvm-svn: 180654
2013-04-27 00:26:11 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 9881dcf2f2 ARM cost model: Integer div and rem is lowered to a function call
Reflect this in the cost model. I observed this in MiBench/consumer-lame.

radar://13354716

llvm-svn: 180576
2013-04-25 21:16:18 +00:00
Jim Grosbach 563983c8a3 Legalize vector truncates by parts rather than just splitting.
Rather than just splitting the input type and hoping for the best, apply
a bit more cleverness. Just splitting the types until the source is
legal often leads to an illegal result time, which is then widened and a
scalarization step is introduced which leads to truly horrible code
generation. With the loop vectorizer, these sorts of operations are much
more common, and so it's worth extra effort to do them well.

Add a legalization hook for the operands of a TRUNCATE node, which will
be encountered after the result type has been legalized, but if the
operand type is still illegal. If simple splitting of both types
ends up with the result type of each half still being legal, just
do that (v16i16 -> v16i8 on ARM, for example). If, however, that would
result in an illegal result type (v8i32 -> v8i8 on ARM, for example),
we can get more clever with power-two vectors. Specifically,
split the input type, but also widen the result element size, then
concatenate the halves and truncate again.  For example on ARM,
To perform a "%res = v8i8 trunc v8i32 %in" we transform to:
  %inlo = v4i32 extract_subvector %in, 0
  %inhi = v4i32 extract_subvector %in, 4
  %lo16 = v4i16 trunc v4i32 %inlo
  %hi16 = v4i16 trunc v4i32 %inhi
  %in16 = v8i16 concat_vectors v4i16 %lo16, v4i16 %hi16
  %res = v8i8 trunc v8i16 %in16

This allows instruction selection to generate three VMOVN instructions
instead of a sequences of moves, stores and loads.

Update the ARMTargetTransformInfo to take this improved legalization
into account.

Consider the simplified IR:

define <16 x i8> @test1(<16 x i32>* %ap) {
  %a = load <16 x i32>* %ap
  %tmp = trunc <16 x i32> %a to <16 x i8>
  ret <16 x i8> %tmp
}

define <8 x i8> @test2(<8 x i32>* %ap) {
  %a = load <8 x i32>* %ap
  %tmp = trunc <8 x i32> %a to <8 x i8>
  ret <8 x i8> %tmp
}

Previously, we would generate the truly hideous:
	.syntax unified
	.section	__TEXT,__text,regular,pure_instructions
	.globl	_test1
	.align	2
_test1:                                 @ @test1
@ BB#0:
	push	{r7}
	mov	r7, sp
	sub	sp, sp, #20
	bic	sp, sp, #7
	add	r1, r0, #48
	add	r2, r0, #32
	vld1.64	{d24, d25}, [r0:128]
	vld1.64	{d16, d17}, [r1:128]
	vld1.64	{d18, d19}, [r2:128]
	add	r1, r0, #16
	vmovn.i32	d22, q8
	vld1.64	{d16, d17}, [r1:128]
	vmovn.i32	d20, q9
	vmovn.i32	d18, q12
	vmov.u16	r0, d22[3]
	strb	r0, [sp, #15]
	vmov.u16	r0, d22[2]
	strb	r0, [sp, #14]
	vmov.u16	r0, d22[1]
	strb	r0, [sp, #13]
	vmov.u16	r0, d22[0]
	vmovn.i32	d16, q8
	strb	r0, [sp, #12]
	vmov.u16	r0, d20[3]
	strb	r0, [sp, #11]
	vmov.u16	r0, d20[2]
	strb	r0, [sp, #10]
	vmov.u16	r0, d20[1]
	strb	r0, [sp, #9]
	vmov.u16	r0, d20[0]
	strb	r0, [sp, #8]
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[3]
	strb	r0, [sp, #3]
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[2]
	strb	r0, [sp, #2]
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[1]
	strb	r0, [sp, #1]
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[0]
	strb	r0, [sp]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[3]
	strb	r0, [sp, #7]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[2]
	strb	r0, [sp, #6]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[1]
	strb	r0, [sp, #5]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[0]
	strb	r0, [sp, #4]
	vldmia	sp, {d16, d17}
	vmov	r0, r1, d16
	vmov	r2, r3, d17
	mov	sp, r7
	pop	{r7}
	bx	lr

	.globl	_test2
	.align	2
_test2:                                 @ @test2
@ BB#0:
	push	{r7}
	mov	r7, sp
	sub	sp, sp, #12
	bic	sp, sp, #7
	vld1.64	{d16, d17}, [r0:128]
	add	r0, r0, #16
	vld1.64	{d20, d21}, [r0:128]
	vmovn.i32	d18, q8
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[3]
	vmovn.i32	d16, q10
	strb	r0, [sp, #3]
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[2]
	strb	r0, [sp, #2]
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[1]
	strb	r0, [sp, #1]
	vmov.u16	r0, d18[0]
	strb	r0, [sp]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[3]
	strb	r0, [sp, #7]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[2]
	strb	r0, [sp, #6]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[1]
	strb	r0, [sp, #5]
	vmov.u16	r0, d16[0]
	strb	r0, [sp, #4]
	ldm	sp, {r0, r1}
	mov	sp, r7
	pop	{r7}
	bx	lr

Now, however, we generate the much more straightforward:
	.syntax unified
	.section	__TEXT,__text,regular,pure_instructions
	.globl	_test1
	.align	2
_test1:                                 @ @test1
@ BB#0:
	add	r1, r0, #48
	add	r2, r0, #32
	vld1.64	{d20, d21}, [r0:128]
	vld1.64	{d16, d17}, [r1:128]
	add	r1, r0, #16
	vld1.64	{d18, d19}, [r2:128]
	vld1.64	{d22, d23}, [r1:128]
	vmovn.i32	d17, q8
	vmovn.i32	d16, q9
	vmovn.i32	d18, q10
	vmovn.i32	d19, q11
	vmovn.i16	d17, q8
	vmovn.i16	d16, q9
	vmov	r0, r1, d16
	vmov	r2, r3, d17
	bx	lr

	.globl	_test2
	.align	2
_test2:                                 @ @test2
@ BB#0:
	vld1.64	{d16, d17}, [r0:128]
	add	r0, r0, #16
	vld1.64	{d18, d19}, [r0:128]
	vmovn.i32	d16, q8
	vmovn.i32	d17, q9
	vmovn.i16	d16, q8
	vmov	r0, r1, d16
	bx	lr

llvm-svn: 179989
2013-04-21 23:47:41 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer c0c7ff4ac0 X86 cost model: Exit before calling getSimpleVT on non-simple VTs
getSimpleVT can only handle simple value types.

radar://13676022

llvm-svn: 179714
2013-04-17 20:04:53 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 87a0af6e1b CostModel: increase the default cost of supported floating point operations from 1 to two. Fixed a few tests that changes because now the cost of one insert + a vector operation on two doubles is lower than two scalar operations on doubles.
llvm-svn: 179413
2013-04-12 21:15:03 +00:00
Manman Ren 06a9d50a35 Aliasing rules for struct-path aware TBAA.
Added PathAliases to check if two struct-path tags can alias.
Added command line option -struct-path-tbaa.

llvm-svn: 179337
2013-04-11 23:24:18 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer f47d2d7f6b X86 cost model: Model cost for uitofp and sitofp on SSE2
The costs are overfitted so that I can still use the legalization factor.

For example the following kernel has about half the throughput vectorized than
unvectorized when compiled with SSE2. Before this patch we would vectorize it.

unsigned short A[1024];
double B[1024];
void f() {
  int i;
  for (i = 0; i < 1024; ++i) {
    B[i] = (double) A[i];
  }
}

radar://13599001

llvm-svn: 179033
2013-04-08 18:05:48 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 995ce6c388 TargetLowering: Fix getTypeConversion handling of extended vector types
The code in getTypeConversion attempts to promote the element vector type
before it trys to split or widen the vector.
After it failed finding a legal vector type by promoting it would continue using
the promoted vector element type. Thereby missing legal splitted vector types.
For example the type v32i32 that has a legal split of 4 x v3i32 on x86/sse2
would be transformed to: v32i256 and from there on successively split to:
v16i256, v8i256, v1i256 and then finally ends up as an i64 type.
By resetting the vector element type to the original vector element type that
existed before the promotion the code will attempt to split the vector type to
smaller vector widths of the same type.

llvm-svn: 178999
2013-04-07 20:22:56 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 44f902ed7d X86 cost model: Differentiate cost for vector shifts of constants
SSE2 has efficient support for shifts by a scalar. My previous change of making
shifts expensive did not take this into account marking all shifts as expensive.
This would prevent vectorization from happening where it is actually beneficial.

With this change we differentiate between shifts of constants and other shifts.

radar://13576547

llvm-svn: 178808
2013-04-04 23:26:24 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer e9b5016411 X86 cost model: Vector shifts are expensive in most cases
The default logic does not correctly identify costs of casts because they are
marked as custom on x86.

For some cases, where the shift amount is a scalar we would be able to generate
better code. Unfortunately, when this is the case the value (the splat) will get
hoisted out of the loop, thereby making it invisible to ISel.

radar://13130673
radar://13537826

llvm-svn: 178703
2013-04-03 21:46:05 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 52ceb44331 X86TTI: Add accurate costs for itofp operations, based on the actual instruction counts.
llvm-svn: 178459
2013-04-01 10:23:49 +00:00
Andrew Trick 9093e15066 Fix SCEV forgetMemoizedResults should search and destroy backedge exprs.
Fixes PR15570: SEGV: SCEV back-edge info invalid after dead code removal.

Indvars creates a SCEV expression for the loop's back edge taken
count, then determines that the comparison is always true and
removes it.

When loop-unroll asks for the expression, it contains a NULL
SCEVUnknkown (as a CallbackVH).

forgetMemoizedResults should invalidate the loop back edges expression.

llvm-svn: 177986
2013-03-26 03:14:53 +00:00
Jyotsna Verma 5bd02926b4 Disable profiling tests for Hexagon since it doesn't support JIT.
llvm-svn: 177917
2013-03-25 21:15:11 +00:00
Manman Ren 0827e97700 Support in AAEvaluator to print alias queries of loads/stores with TBAA tags.
Add "evaluate-tbaa" to print alias queries of loads/stores. Alias queries
between pointers do not include TBAA tags.

Add testing case for "placement new". TBAA currently says NoAlias.

llvm-svn: 177772
2013-03-22 22:34:41 +00:00
Michael Liao 70dd7f999d Correct cost model for vector shift on AVX2
- After moving logic recognizing vector shift with scalar amount from
  DAG combining into DAG lowering, we declare to customize all vector
  shifts even vector shift on AVX is legal. As a result, the cost model
  needs special tuning to identify these legal cases.

llvm-svn: 177586
2013-03-20 22:01:10 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 0f1bc60d51 Optimize sext <4 x i8> and <4 x i16> to <4 x i64>.
Patch by Ahmad, Muhammad T <muhammad.t.ahmad@intel.com>

llvm-svn: 177421
2013-03-19 18:38:27 +00:00
Renato Golin 227eb6fc5f Improve long vector sext/zext lowering on ARM
The ARM backend currently has poor codegen for long sext/zext
operations, such as v8i8 -> v8i32. This patch addresses this
by performing a custom expansion in ARMISelLowering. It also
adds/changes the cost of such lowering in ARMTTI.

This partially addresses PR14867.

Patch by Pete Couperus

llvm-svn: 177380
2013-03-19 08:15:38 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer ae0052f114 ARM cost model: Make some vector integer to float casts cheaper
The default logic marks them as too expensive.

For example, before this patch we estimated:
  cost of 16 for instruction:   %r = uitofp <4 x i16> %v0 to <4 x float>

While this translates to:
  vmovl.u16 q8, d16
  vcvt.f32.u32  q8, q8

All other costs are left to the values assigned by the fallback logic. Theses
costs are mostly reasonable in the sense that they get progressively more
expensive as the instruction sequences emitted get longer.

radar://13445992

llvm-svn: 177334
2013-03-18 22:47:09 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 6c9c3a8b99 ARM cost model: Correct cost for some cheap float to integer conversions
Fix cost of some "cheap" cast instructions. Before this patch we used to
estimate for example:
  cost of 16 for instruction:   %r = fptoui <4 x float> %v0 to <4 x i16>

While we would emit:
  vcvt.s32.f32  q8, q8
  vmovn.i32 d16, q8
  vuzp.8  d16, d17

All other costs are left to the values assigned by the fallback logic. Theses
costs are mostly reasonable in the sense that they get progressively more
expensive as the instruction sequences emitted get longer.

radar://13434072

llvm-svn: 177333
2013-03-18 22:47:06 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 9d7a3827e4 ARM cost model: Fix costs for some vector selects
I was too pessimistic in r177105. Vector selects that fit into a legal register
type lower just fine. I was mislead by the code fragment that I was using. The
stores/loads that I saw in those cases came from lowering the conditional off
an address.

Changing the code fragment to:

%T0_3 = type <8 x i18>
%T1_3 = type <8 x i1>

define void @func_blend3(%T0_3* %loadaddr, %T0_3* %loadaddr2,
                         %T1_3* %blend, %T0_3* %storeaddr) {
  %v0 = load %T0_3* %loadaddr
  %v1 = load %T0_3* %loadaddr2
==> FROM:
  ;%c = load %T1_3* %blend
==> TO:
  %c = icmp slt %T0_3 %v0, %v1
==> USE:
  %r = select %T1_3 %c, %T0_3 %v0, %T0_3 %v1

  store %T0_3 %r, %T0_3* %storeaddr
  ret void
}

revealed this mistake.

radar://13403975

llvm-svn: 177170
2013-03-15 18:31:01 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer f5284ff61f ARM cost model: Fix cost of fptrunc and fpext instructions
A vector fptrunc and fpext simply gets split into scalar instructions.

radar://13192358

llvm-svn: 177159
2013-03-15 15:10:47 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 8070b382ec ARM cost model: Increase cost of some vector selects we do terrible on
By terrible I mean we store/load from the stack.

This matters on PAQp8 in _Z5trainPsS_ii (which is inlined into Mixer::update)
where we decide to vectorize a loop with a VF of 8 resulting in a 25%
degradation on a cortex-a8.

LV: Found an estimated cost of 2 for VF 8 For instruction:   icmp slt i32
LV: Found an estimated cost of 2 for VF 8 For instruction:   select i1, i32, i32

The bug that tracks the CodeGen part is PR14868.

radar://13403975

llvm-svn: 177105
2013-03-14 19:17:02 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 90774f3c8f ARM cost model: Increase the cost for vector casts that use the stack
Increase the cost of v8/v16-i8 to v8/v16-i32 casts and truncates as the backend
currently lowers those using stack accesses.

This was responsible for a significant degradation on
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Trimaran/enc-pc1/enc-pc1
where we vectorize one loop to a vector factor of 16. After this patch we select
a vector factor of 4 which will generate reasonable code.

unsigned char cle[32];

void test(short c) {
  unsigned short compte;
  for (compte = 0; compte <= 31; compte++) {
    cle[compte] = cle[compte] ^ c;
  }
}

radar://13220512

llvm-svn: 176898
2013-03-12 21:19:22 +00:00
Jan Wen Voung 6dc3076080 Revert the test moves from 176733. Use "REQUIRES: asserts" instead.
llvm-svn: 176873
2013-03-12 16:27:52 +00:00
Jan Wen Voung 7857a64909 Disable statistics on Release builds and move tests that depend on -stats.
Summary:
Statistics are still available in Release+Asserts (any +Asserts builds),
and stats can also be turned on with LLVM_ENABLE_STATS.

Move some of the FastISel stats that were moved under DEBUG()
back out of DEBUG(), since stats are disabled across the board now.

Many tests depend on grepping "-stats" output.  Move those into
a orig_dir/Stats/. so that they can be marked as unsupported
when building without statistics.

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D486

llvm-svn: 176733
2013-03-08 22:56:31 +00:00
Shuxin Yang 408bdad5b4 Memory Dependence Analysis (not mem-dep test) take advantage of "invariant.load" metadata.
The "invariant.load" metadata indicates the memory unit being accessed is immutable.
A load annotated with this metadata can be moved across any store.

As I am not sure if it is legal to move such loads across barrier/fence, this
change dose not allow such transformation.

rdar://11311484

Thank Arnold for code review.

llvm-svn: 176562
2013-03-06 17:48:48 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 20ef54f4c1 X86 cost model: Adjust cost for custom lowered vector multiplies
This matters for example in following matrix multiply:

int **mmult(int rows, int cols, int **m1, int **m2, int **m3) {
  int i, j, k, val;
  for (i=0; i<rows; i++) {
    for (j=0; j<cols; j++) {
      val = 0;
      for (k=0; k<cols; k++) {
        val += m1[i][k] * m2[k][j];
      }
      m3[i][j] = val;
    }
  }
  return(m3);
}

Taken from the test-suite benchmark Shootout.

We estimate the cost of the multiply to be 2 while we generate 9 instructions
for it and end up being quite a bit slower than the scalar version (48% on my
machine).

Also, properly differentiate between avx1 and avx2. On avx-1 we still split the
vector into 2 128bits and handle the subvector muls like above with 9
instructions.
Only on avx-2 will we have a cost of 9 for v4i64.

I changed the test case in test/Transforms/LoopVectorize/X86/avx1.ll to use an
add instead of a mul because with a mul we now no longer vectorize. I did
verify that the mul would be indeed more expensive when vectorized with 3
kernels:

for (i ...)
   r += a[i] * 3;
for (i ...)
  m1[i] = m1[i] * 3; // This matches the test case in avx1.ll
and a matrix multiply.

In each case the vectorized version was considerably slower.

radar://13304919

llvm-svn: 176403
2013-03-02 04:02:52 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer f7cfac7a14 Cost model support for lowered math builtins.
We make the cost for calling libm functions extremely high as emitting the
calls is expensive and causes spills (on x86) so performance suffers. We still
vectorize important calls like ceilf and friends on SSE4.1. and fabs.

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D466

llvm-svn: 176287
2013-02-28 19:09:33 +00:00
Bill Wendling a032374ea0 Use references to attribute groups on the call/invoke instructions.
Listing all of the attributes for the callee of a call/invoke instruction is way
too much and makes the IR unreadable. Use references to attributes instead.

llvm-svn: 175877
2013-02-22 09:09:42 +00:00
Elena Demikhovsky 0ccdd1315b I optimized the following patterns:
sext <4 x i1> to <4 x i64>
 sext <4 x i8> to <4 x i64>
 sext <4 x i16> to <4 x i64>
 
I'm running Combine on SIGN_EXTEND_IN_REG and revert SEXT patterns:
 (sext_in_reg (v4i64 anyext (v4i32 x )), ExtraVT) -> (v4i64 sext (v4i32 sext_in_reg (v4i32 x , ExtraVT)))
 
 The sext_in_reg (v4i32 x) may be lowered to shl+sar operations.
 The "sar" does not exist on 64-bit operation, so lowering sext_in_reg (v4i64 x) has no vector solution.

I also added a cost of this operations to the AVX costs table.

llvm-svn: 175619
2013-02-20 12:42:54 +00:00
Bill Wendling 90bc19cd91 Modify the LLVM assembly output so that it uses references to represent function attributes.
This makes the LLVM assembly look better. E.g.:

     define void @foo() #0 { ret void }
     attributes #0 = { nounwind noinline ssp }

llvm-svn: 175605
2013-02-20 07:21:42 +00:00
Tim Northover 67d3c09332 AArch64: adjust tests which rely on a default JIT
Profiling tests *do* need a JIT. They'll pass if a cross-compiler targetting
AArch64 by default has been built, but fail if a native AArch64 compiler has
been build. Therefore XFAIL is inappropriate and we mark them unsupported.

ExecutionEngine tests are JIT by definition, they should also be unsupported.

Transforms/LICM only uses the interpreter to check the output is still sane
after optimisation. It can be switched to use an interpreter.

llvm-svn: 175433
2013-02-18 11:08:37 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 89aef93841 ARM cost model: Add vector reverse shuffle costs
A reverse shuffle is lowered to a vrev and possibly a vext instruction (quad
word).

radar://13171406

llvm-svn: 174933
2013-02-12 02:40:39 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 62fe7a5b17 Refine fix to bug 15041.
Thanks to help from Nadav and Hal, I have a more reasonable (and even
correct!) approach.  This specifically penalizes the insertelement
and extractelement operations for the performance hit that will occur
on PowerPC processors.

llvm-svn: 174725
2013-02-08 18:19:17 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 594fa2dc2b ARM cost model: Address computation in vector mem ops not free
Adds a function to target transform info to query for the cost of address
computation. The cost model analysis pass now also queries this interface.
The code in LoopVectorize adds the cost of address computation as part of the
memory instruction cost calculation. Only there, we know whether the instruction
will be scalarized or not.
Increase the penality for inserting in to D registers on swift. This becomes
necessary because we now always assume that address computation has a cost and
three is a closer value to the architecture.

radar://13097204

llvm-svn: 174713
2013-02-08 14:50:48 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 213fced704 ARM cost model: Add costs for vector selects
Vector selects are cheap on NEON. They get lowered to a vbsl instruction.

radar://13158753

llvm-svn: 174631
2013-02-07 16:10:15 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer a804bbee9b ARM cost model: Cost for scalar integer casts and floating point conversions
Also adds some costs for vector integer float conversions.

llvm-svn: 174371
2013-02-05 14:05:55 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 98f1012f9b ARM cost model: Penalize insertelement into D subregisters
Swift has a renaming dependency if we load into D subregisters. We don't have a
way of distinguishing between insertelement operations of values from loads and
other values. Therefore, we are pessimistic for now (The performance problem
showed up in example 14 of gcc-loops).

radar://13096933

llvm-svn: 174300
2013-02-04 02:52:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel 4e5ca9e578 Initial implementation of PPCTargetTransformInfo
This provides a place to add customized operation cost information and
control some other target-specific IR-level transformations.

The only non-trivial logic in this checkin assigns a higher cost to
unaligned loads and stores (covered by the included test case).

llvm-svn: 173520
2013-01-25 23:05:59 +00:00
Nadav Rotem b1615b1ac4 Make opt grab the triple from the module and use it to initialize the target machine.
llvm-svn: 171341
2013-01-01 08:00:32 +00:00
Dmitri Gribenko 56bf2e1830 Tests: rewrite 'opt ... %s' to 'opt ... < %s' so that opt does not emit a ModuleID
This is done to avoid odd test failures, like the one fixed in r171243.

llvm-svn: 171250
2012-12-30 02:33:22 +00:00
Dmitri Gribenko 10c4b4d249 Add a check to the test Analysis/ScalarEvolution/2010-09-03-RequiredTransitive.ll
This test did not test anything at all (except for opt crashing, but that was
not the reason why it was added).

llvm-svn: 171248
2012-12-30 01:42:34 +00:00
Dmitri Gribenko b137c9e551 Tests: rewrite 'opt ... %s' to 'opt ... < %s' so that opt does not emit a ModuleID
This is done to avoid odd test failures, like the one fixed in r171243.

llvm-svn: 171246
2012-12-30 01:28:40 +00:00
Nadav Rotem aa92ea4f12 We are not ready to estimate the cost of integer expansions based on the number of parts. This test is too noisy.
llvm-svn: 170999
2012-12-23 09:11:07 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 6d4fdd6d2c Improve the X86 cost model for loads and stores.
llvm-svn: 170830
2012-12-21 01:33:59 +00:00
Jakub Staszak 338863a546 Reverse order of checking SSE level when calculating compare cost, so we check
AVX2 before AVX.

llvm-svn: 170464
2012-12-18 22:57:56 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer edd62b14e5 Optimistically analyse Phi cycles
Analyse Phis under the starting assumption that they are NoAlias. Recursively
look at their inputs.
If they MayAlias/MustAlias there must be an input that makes them so.

Addresses bug 14351.

llvm-svn: 169788
2012-12-10 23:02:41 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 0a471ea66c Cost Model: change the default cost of control flow instructions (br / ret / ...) to zero.
llvm-svn: 169423
2012-12-05 21:21:26 +00:00
Preston Briggs fd0b5c898a Modified dump() to provide a little
more information for dependences between
instructions that don't share a common loop.

Updated the test results appropriately.

llvm-svn: 168965
2012-11-30 00:44:47 +00:00
Preston Briggs 5cb8cfae1e Modified depends() to recognize that when all levels are "=" and
there's no possible loo-independent dependence, then there's no
dependence.

Updated all test result appropriately.

llvm-svn: 168719
2012-11-27 19:12:26 +00:00
Preston Briggs 1084fa2ef2 Modify depends(Src, Dst, PossiblyLoopIndependent).
If the Src and Dst are the same instruction,
no loop-independent dependence is possible,
so we force the PossiblyLoopIndependent flag to false.

The test case results are updated appropriately.

llvm-svn: 168678
2012-11-27 06:41:46 +00:00
Preston Briggs 3ad394931d Corrects a problem where we reply exclusively of GEPs to drive
analysis.  Better is to look for cases with useful GEPs and use them
when possible.  When a pair of useful GEPs is not available, use the
raw SCEVs directly. This approach supports better analysis of pointer
dereferencing.

In parallel, all the test cases are updated appropriately.
Cases where we have a store to *B++ can now be analyzed!

llvm-svn: 168474
2012-11-21 23:50:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel a6f86fc6fa Phi speculation improvement for BasicAA
This is a partial solution to PR14351. It removes some of the special
significance of the first incoming phi value in the phi aliasing checking logic
in BasicAA. In the context of a loop, the old logic assumes that the first
incoming value is the interesting one (meaning that it is the one that comes
from outside the loop), but this is often not the case.  With this change, we
now test first the incoming value that comes from a block other than the parent
of the phi being tested.

llvm-svn: 168245
2012-11-17 02:33:15 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 3eb156306a DependenceAnalysis: Print all dependency pairs when dumping. Update all testcases.
Part of a patch by Preston Briggs.

llvm-svn: 167827
2012-11-13 12:12:02 +00:00
Nadav Rotem f036ca466e CostModel: add another known vector trunc optimization.
llvm-svn: 167488
2012-11-06 21:17:17 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 0914f0b262 Cost Model: add tables for some avx type-conversion hacks.
llvm-svn: 167480
2012-11-06 19:33:53 +00:00
Nadav Rotem c378a8067d CostModel: Add tables for the common x86 compares.
llvm-svn: 167421
2012-11-05 23:48:20 +00:00
Nadav Rotem ae79765676 Code Model: Improve the accuracy of the zext/sext/trunc vector cost estimation.
llvm-svn: 167412
2012-11-05 22:20:53 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 856ffa6677 Cost Model: Normalize the insert/extract index when splitting types
llvm-svn: 167402
2012-11-05 21:12:13 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 020be9dc29 Cost Model: teach the cost model about expanding integers.
llvm-svn: 167401
2012-11-05 21:11:10 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 7411623fd8 Implement the cost of abnormal x86 instruction lowering as a table.
llvm-svn: 167395
2012-11-05 19:32:46 +00:00
Richard Osborne a1fffcf73a Don't infer whether a value is captured in the current function from the
'nocapture' attribute.

The nocapture attribute only specifies that no copies are made that
outlive the function. This isn't the same as there being no copies at all.
This fixes PR14045.

llvm-svn: 167381
2012-11-05 10:48:24 +00:00
Nadav Rotem c2345cbe73 X86 CostModel: Add support for a some of the common arithmetic instructions for SSE4, AVX and AVX2.
llvm-svn: 167347
2012-11-03 00:39:56 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 23848f8f1d Add a stub for the x86 cost model impl. Implement a basic cost rule for inserting/extracting from XMM registers.
llvm-svn: 167333
2012-11-02 23:27:16 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 13da94734c CostModel: add support for Vector Insert and Extract.
llvm-svn: 167329
2012-11-02 22:31:56 +00:00
Nadav Rotem a6b91ac307 Add a cost model analysis that allows us to estimate the cost of IR-level instructions.
llvm-svn: 167324
2012-11-02 21:48:17 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 6dc1e2f287 Remove LoopDependenceAnalysis.
It was unmaintained and not much more than a stub. The new DependenceAnalysis
pass is both more general and complete.

llvm-svn: 166810
2012-10-26 20:25:01 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 59b61b9e2c dependence analysis
Patch from Preston Briggs <preston.briggs@gmail.com>.

This is an updated version of the dependence-analysis patch, including an MIV
test based on Banerjee's inequalities.

It's a fairly complete implementation of the paper

    Practical Dependence Testing
    Gina Goff, Ken Kennedy, and Chau-Wen Tseng
    PLDI 1991

It cannot yet propagate constraints between coupled RDIV subscripts (discussed
in Section 5.3.2 of the paper).

It's organized as a FunctionPass with a single entry point that supports testing
for dependence between two instructions in a function. If there's no dependence,
it returns null. If there's a dependence, it returns a pointer to a Dependence
which can be queried about details (what kind of dependence, is it loop
independent, direction and distance vector entries, etc). I haven't included
every imaginable feature, but there's a good selection that should be adequate
for supporting many loop transformations. Of course, it can be extended as
necessary.

Included in the patch file are many test cases, commented with C code showing
the loops and array references.

llvm-svn: 165708
2012-10-11 07:32:34 +00:00
James Molloy 77639e2c72 Add default JIT LIT variable.
Patch by David Tweed!

llvm-svn: 164996
2012-10-02 10:57:08 +00:00
Duncan Sands 8598a0ec80 Now that invoke of an intrinsic is possible (for the llvm.do.nothing intrinsic)
teach the callgraph logic to not create callgraph edges to intrinsics for invoke
instructions; it already skips this for call instructions.  Fixes PR13903.

llvm-svn: 164707
2012-09-26 17:16:01 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 8dc34cfb99 BasicAA: Recognize cyclic NoAlias phis
Enhances basic alias analysis to recognize phis whose first incoming values are
NoAlias and whose other incoming values are just the phi node itself through
some amount of recursion.

Example: With this change basicaa reports that ptr_phi and ptr_phi2 do not alias
each other.

bb:
 ptr = ptr2 + 1

loop:
  ptr_phi = phi [bb, ptr], [loop, ptr_plus_one]
  ptr2_phi = phi [bb, ptr2], [loop, ptr2_plus_one]
  ...
  ptr_plus_one = gep ptr_phi, 1
  ptr2_plus_one = gep ptr2_phi, 1

This enables the elimination of one load in code like the following:

extern int foo;

int test_noalias(int *ptr, int num, int* coeff) {
  int *ptr2 = ptr;
  int result = (*ptr++) * (*coeff--);
  while (num--) {
    *ptr2++ = *ptr;
    result +=  (*coeff--) * (*ptr++);
  }
  *ptr = foo;
  return result;
}

Part 2/2 of fix for PR13564.

llvm-svn: 163319
2012-09-06 14:41:53 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 76dca58c66 BasicAA: GEPs of NoAlias'ing base ptr with equivalent indices are NoAlias
If we can show that the base pointers of two GEPs don't alias each other using
precise analysis and the indices and base offset are equal then the two GEPs
also don't alias each other.
This is primarily needed for the follow up patch that analyses NoAlias'ing PHI
nodes.

Part 1/2 of fix for PR13564.

llvm-svn: 163317
2012-09-06 14:31:51 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 87abb0ee34 llvm/test/Analysis/Profiling: Mark 3 of them as REQUIRES: loadable_module.
FIXME: profile_rt.dll could be built on win32.
llvm-svn: 162811
2012-08-29 00:37:46 +00:00
Manman Ren abbb01abea Profile: set branch weight metadata with data generated from profiling.
This patch implements ProfileDataLoader which loads profile data generated by
-insert-edge-profiling and updates branch weight metadata accordingly.

Patch by Alastair Murray.

llvm-svn: 162799
2012-08-28 22:21:25 +00:00
Manman Ren cf10446ffa BranchProb: modify the definition of an edge in BranchProbabilityInfo to handle
the case of multiple edges from one block to another.

A simple example is a switch statement with multiple values to the same
destination. The definition of an edge is modified from a pair of blocks to
a pair of PredBlock and an index into the successors.

Also set the weight correctly when building SelectionDAG from LLVM IR,
especially when converting a Switch.
IntegersSubsetMapping is updated to calculate the weight for each cluster.

llvm-svn: 162572
2012-08-24 18:14:27 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 2f47a3fb07 Fix broken check lines.
I really need to find a way to automate this, but I can't come up with a regex
that has no false positives while handling tricky cases like custom check
prefixes.

llvm-svn: 162097
2012-08-17 12:28:26 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 5d4e205874 MemoryDependenceAnalysis attempts to find the first memory dependency for function calls.
Currently, if GetLocation reports that it did not find a valid pointer (this is the case for volatile load/stores),
we ignore the result. This patch adds code to handle the cases where we did not obtain a valid pointer.

rdar://11872864  PR12899

llvm-svn: 161802
2012-08-13 23:03:43 +00:00
Nick Lewycky fb78083b1c Stay rational; don't assert trying to take the square root of a negative value.
If it's negative, the loop is already proven to be infinite. Fixes PR13489!

llvm-svn: 161107
2012-08-01 09:14:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ff123d5c63 Fix the remaining TCL-style quotes found in the testsuite. This is
another mechanical change accomplished though the power of terrible Perl
scripts.

I have manually switched some "s to 's to make escaping simpler.

While I started this to fix tests that aren't run in all configurations,
the massive number of tests is due to a really frustrating fragility of
our testing infrastructure: things like 'grep -v', 'not grep', and
'expected failures' can mask broken tests all too easily.

Essentially, I'm deeply disturbed that I can change the testsuite so
radically without causing any change in results for most platforms. =/

llvm-svn: 159547
2012-07-02 19:09:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5da53436d5 Convert the uses of '|&' to use '2>&1 |' instead, which works on old
versions of Bash. In addition, I can back out the change to the lit
built-in shell test runner to support this.

This should fix the majority of fallout on Darwin, but I suspect there
will be a few straggling issues.

llvm-svn: 159544
2012-07-02 18:37:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a5a29f970e Convert all tests using TCL-style quoting to use shell-style quoting.
This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.

If anyone is maintaining large out-of-tree test trees, feel free to poke
me and I'll send you the steps I used to convert things, as well as
answer any painful questions etc. IRC works best for this type of thing
I find.

Once converted, switch the LLVM lit config to use ShTests the same as
Clang. In addition to being able to delete large amounts of Python code
from 'lit', this will also simplify the entire test suite and some of
lit's architecture.

Finally, the test suite runs 33% faster on Linux now. ;]
For my 16-hardware-thread (2x 4-core xeon e5520): 36s -> 24s

llvm-svn: 159525
2012-07-02 12:47:22 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 474112d82c If the step value is a constant zero, the loop isn't going to terminate. Fixes
the assert reported in PR13228!

llvm-svn: 159393
2012-06-28 23:44:57 +00:00
Andrew Trick a3f9043196 SCEV: Handle a corner case reducing AddRecExpr * AddRecExpr
If integer overflow causes one of the terms to reach zero, that can
force the entire expression to zero.

Fixes PR12929: cast<Ty>() argument of incompatible type

llvm-svn: 157673
2012-05-30 03:35:20 +00:00
Andrew Trick 7fa4e0fea6 SCEV: Add MarkPendingLoopPredicates to avoid recursive isImpliedCond.
getUDivExpr attempts to simplify by checking for overflow.
isLoopEntryGuardedByCond then evaluates the loop predicate which
may lead to the same getUDivExpr causing endless recursion.

Fixes PR12868: clang 3.2 segmentation fault.

llvm-svn: 157092
2012-05-19 00:48:25 +00:00
Bill Wendling 1981c0e533 FileCheck-ize tests.
llvm-svn: 155434
2012-04-24 10:45:44 +00:00
Bill Wendling 4cf911c0cd FileCheck-ize these tests.
llvm-svn: 155433
2012-04-24 10:36:42 +00:00
Bill Wendling cd6df16cb4 FileCheck-ize these tests. Harden some of them.
llvm-svn: 155432
2012-04-24 09:15:38 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer e364d195e9 Revert "SCEV: When expanding a GEP the final addition to the base pointer has NUW but not NSW."
This isn't right either, reverting for now.

llvm-svn: 154910
2012-04-17 06:33:57 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer e1f4ca1b0f SCEV: When expanding a GEP the final addition to the base pointer has NUW but not NSW.
Found by inspection.

llvm-svn: 154262
2012-04-07 17:19:26 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 5054ee82cc Handle intrinsics in GlobalsModRef. Fixes pr12351.
llvm-svn: 153604
2012-03-28 21:31:24 +00:00
Andrew Trick 7004e4b95e SCEV fix: Handle loop invariant loads.
Fixes PR11882: NULL dereference in ComputeLoadConstantCompareExitLimit.

llvm-svn: 153480
2012-03-26 22:33:59 +00:00
Andrew Trick bd11257df7 Test scalar evolution directly instead of testing the result of
canonical indvars.

llvm-svn: 153256
2012-03-22 17:09:31 +00:00
Eli Friedman 0774902a00 Duncan pointed out that if the alignment isn't explicitly specified, it defaults to the ABI alignment. Given that, make this code a bit more aggressive in such cases.
llvm-svn: 151584
2012-02-27 23:16:46 +00:00
Eli Friedman 8bc169c3c5 Teach BasicAA about the LLVM IR rules that allow reading past the end of an object given sufficient alignment. Fixes PR12098.
llvm-svn: 151553
2012-02-27 20:46:07 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 94df267db3 Change the implementation of dominates(inst, inst) to one based on what the
verifier does. This correctly handles invoke.
Thanks to Duncan, Andrew and Chris for the comments.
Thanks to Joerg for the early testing.

llvm-svn: 151469
2012-02-26 02:19:19 +00:00
Eli Bendersky 924f9a671d Replace all instances of dg.exp file with lit.local.cfg, since all tests are run with LIT now and now Dejagnu. dg.exp is no longer needed.
Patch reviewed by Daniel Dunbar. It will be followed by additional cleanup patches.

llvm-svn: 150664
2012-02-16 06:28:33 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 4c378a4453 Change CaptureTracking to pass a Use* instead of a Value* when a value is
captured. This allows the tracker to look at the specific use, which may be
especially interesting for function calls.

Use this to fix 'nocapture' deduction in FunctionAttrs. The existing one does
not iterate until a fixpoint and does not guarantee that it produces the same
result regardless of iteration order. The new implementation builds up a graph
of how arguments are passed from function to function, and uses a bottom-up walk
on the argument-SCCs to assign nocapture. This gets us nocapture more often, and
does so rather efficiently and independent of iteration order.

llvm-svn: 147327
2011-12-28 23:24:21 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b024aa021d Make the unreachable probability much much heavier. The previous
probability wouldn't be considered "hot" in some weird loop structures
or other compounding probability patterns. This makes it much harder to
confuse, but isn't really a principled fix. I'd actually like it if we
could model a zero probability, as it would make this much easier to
reason about. Suggestions for how to do this better are welcome.

llvm-svn: 147142
2011-12-22 09:26:37 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6b0e34c445 Manually upgrade the test suite to specify the flag to cttz and ctlz.
I followed three heuristics for deciding whether to set 'true' or
'false':

- Everything target independent got 'true' as that is the expected
  common output of the GCC builtins.
- If the target arch only has one way of implementing this operation,
  set the flag in the way that exercises the most of codegen. For most
  architectures this is also the likely path from a GCC builtin, with
  'true' being set. It will (eventually) require lowering away that
  difference, and then lowering to the architecture's operation.
- Otherwise, set the flag differently dependending on which target
  operation should be tested.

Let me know if anyone has any issue with this pattern or would like
specific tests of another form. This should allow the x86 codegen to
just iteratively improve as I teach the backend how to differentiate
between the two forms, and everything else should remain exactly the
same.

llvm-svn: 146370
2011-12-12 11:59:10 +00:00
Andrew Trick d25089f8e0 SCEV fix. In general, Add/Mul expressions should not inherit NSW/NUW.
This reverts r139450, fixes r139453, and adds much needed comments and a
unit test.

llvm-svn: 145367
2011-11-29 02:16:38 +00:00
Andrew Trick 5ec136c57e Filecheckize.
llvm-svn: 145363
2011-11-29 02:05:23 +00:00
Chris Lattner 6a144a2227 Upgrade syntax of tests using volatile instructions to use 'load volatile' instead of 'volatile load', which is archaic.
llvm-svn: 145171
2011-11-27 06:54:59 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 0485d51a76 Don't forget to check FlagNW when determining whether an AddRecExpr will wrap
or not. Patch by Brendon Cahoon!

llvm-svn: 144173
2011-11-09 07:11:37 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 652f576a70 2>&1 doesn't work here, it just creates an empty file called "&1"
llvm-svn: 143117
2011-10-27 18:27:45 +00:00
Duncan Sands a370f3e34e Restore commits 142790 and 142843 - they weren't breaking the build
bots.  Original commit messages:
- Reapply r142781 with fix. Original message:

  Enhance SCEV's brute force loop analysis to handle multiple PHI nodes in the
  loop header when computing the trip count.

  With this, we now constant evaluate:
    struct ListNode { const struct ListNode *next; int i; };
    static const struct ListNode node1 = {0, 1};
    static const struct ListNode node2 = {&node1, 2};
    static const struct ListNode node3 = {&node2, 3};
    int test() {
      int sum = 0;
      for (const struct ListNode *n = &node3; n != 0; n = n->next)
        sum += n->i;
      return sum;
    }

- Now that we look at all the header PHIs, we need to consider all the header PHIs
  when deciding that the loop has stopped evolving. Fixes miscompile in the gcc
  torture testsuite!

llvm-svn: 142919
2011-10-25 12:28:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 32f46e7c07 Fix the API usage in loop probability heuristics. It was incorrectly
classifying many edges as exiting which were in fact not. These mainly
formed edges into sub-loops. It was also not correctly classifying all
returning edges out of loops as leaving the loop. With this match most
of the loop heuristics are more rational.

Several serious regressions on loop-intesive benchmarks like perlbench's
loop tests when built with -enable-block-placement are fixed by these
updated heuristics. Unfortunately they in turn uncover some other
regressions. There are still several improvemenst that should be made to
loop heuristics including trip-count, and early back-edge management.

llvm-svn: 142917
2011-10-25 09:47:41 +00:00
Duncan Sands 805c5b92c8 Speculatively revert commits 142790 and 142843 to see if it fixes
the dragonegg and llvm-gcc self-host buildbots.  Original commit
messages:
- Reapply r142781 with fix. Original message:

  Enhance SCEV's brute force loop analysis to handle multiple PHI nodes in the
  loop header when computing the trip count.

  With this, we now constant evaluate:
    struct ListNode { const struct ListNode *next; int i; };
    static const struct ListNode node1 = {0, 1};
    static const struct ListNode node2 = {&node1, 2};
    static const struct ListNode node3 = {&node2, 3};
    int test() {
      int sum = 0;
      for (const struct ListNode *n = &node3; n != 0; n = n->next)
        sum += n->i;
      return sum;
    }

- Now that we look at all the header PHIs, we need to consider all the header PHIs
when deciding that the loop has stopped evolving. Fixes miscompile in the gcc
torture testsuite!

llvm-svn: 142916
2011-10-25 09:26:43 +00:00
Nick Lewycky a58fb48a55 Now that we look at all the header PHIs, we need to consider all the header PHIs
when deciding that the loop has stopped evolving. Fixes miscompile in the gcc
torture testsuite!

llvm-svn: 142843
2011-10-24 21:02:38 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7111f4564c Remove return heuristics from the static branch probabilities, and
introduce no-return or unreachable heuristics.

The return heuristics from the Ball and Larus paper don't work well in
practice as they pessimize early return paths. The only good hitrate
return heuristics are those for:
 - NULL return
 - Constant return
 - negative integer return

Only the last of these three can possibly require significant code for
the returning block, and even the last is fairly rare and usually also
a constant. As a consequence, even for the cold return paths, there is
little code on that return path, and so little code density to be gained
by sinking it. The places where sinking these blocks is valuable (inner
loops) will already be weighted appropriately as the edge is a loop-exit
branch.

All of this aside, early returns are nearly as common as all three of
these return categories, and should actually be predicted as taken!
Rather than muddy the waters of the static predictions, just remain
silent on returns and let the CFG itself dictate any layout or other
issues.

However, the return heuristic was flagging one very important case:
unreachable. Unfortunately it still gave a 1/4 chance of the
branch-to-unreachable occuring. It also didn't do a rigorous job of
finding those blocks which post-dominate an unreachable block.

This patch builds a more powerful analysis that should flag all branches
to blocks known to then reach unreachable. It also has better worst-case
runtime complexity by not looping through successors for each block. The
previous code would perform an N^2 walk in the event of a single entry
block branching to N successors with a switch where each successor falls
through to the next and they finally fall through to a return.

Test case added for noreturn heuristics. Also doxygen comments improved
along the way.

llvm-svn: 142793
2011-10-24 12:01:08 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 9be7f277e4 Reapply r142781 with fix. Original message:
Enhance SCEV's brute force loop analysis to handle multiple PHI nodes in the
  loop header when computing the trip count.

  With this, we now constant evaluate:
    struct ListNode { const struct ListNode *next; int i; };
    static const struct ListNode node1 = {0, 1};
    static const struct ListNode node2 = {&node1, 2};
    static const struct ListNode node3 = {&node2, 3};
    int test() {
      int sum = 0;
      for (const struct ListNode *n = &node3; n != 0; n = n->next)
        sum += n->i;
      return sum;
    }

llvm-svn: 142790
2011-10-24 06:57:05 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 9d28c26d77 Speculatively revert r142781. Bots are showing
Assertion `i_nocapture < OperandTraits<PHINode>::operands(this) && "getOperand() out of range!"' failed.
coming out of indvars.

llvm-svn: 142786
2011-10-24 04:00:25 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 1700007ecc Enhance SCEV's brute force loop analysis to handle multiple PHI nodes in the
loop header when computing the trip count.

With this, we now constant evaluate:
  struct ListNode { const struct ListNode *next; int i; };
  static const struct ListNode node1 = {0, 1};
  static const struct ListNode node2 = {&node1, 2};
  static const struct ListNode node3 = {&node2, 3};
  int test() {
    int sum = 0;
    for (const struct ListNode *n = &node3; n != 0; n = n->next)
      sum += n->i;
    return sum;
  }

llvm-svn: 142781
2011-10-23 23:43:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1c8ace0e89 Teach the BranchProbabilityInfo pass to print its results, and use that
to bring it under direct test instead of merely indirectly testing it in
the BlockFrequencyInfo pass.

The next step is to start adding tests for the various heuristics
employed, and to start fixing those heuristics once they're under test.

llvm-svn: 142778
2011-10-23 21:21:50 +00:00
Nick Lewycky a6674c7fc9 Make SCEV's brute force analysis stronger in two ways. Firstly, we should be
able to constant fold load instructions where the argument is a constant.
Second, we should be able to watch multiple PHI nodes through the loop; this
patch only supports PHIs in loop headers, more can be done here.

With this patch, we now constant evaluate:
  static const int arr[] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
  int test() {
    int sum = 0;
    for (int i = 0; i < 5; ++i) sum += arr[i];
    return sum;
  }

llvm-svn: 142731
2011-10-22 19:58:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth deac50cba9 Generalize the reading of probability metadata to work for both branches
and switches, with arbitrary numbers of successors. Still optimized for
the common case of 2 successors for a conditional branch.

Add a test case for switch metadata showing up in the BlockFrequencyInfo pass.

llvm-svn: 142493
2011-10-19 10:32:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d27a7a947b Teach the BranchProbabilityInfo analysis pass to read any metadata
encoding of probabilities. In the absense of metadata, it continues to
fall back on static heuristics.

This allows __builtin_expect, after lowering through llvm.expect
a branch instruction's metadata, to actually enter the branch
probability model. This is one component of resolving PR2577.

llvm-svn: 142492
2011-10-19 10:30:30 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 343fad44ea Add pass printing support to BlockFrequencyInfo pass. The implementation
layer already had support for printing the results of this analysis, but
the wiring was missing.

Now that printing the analysis works, actually bring some of this
analysis, and the BranchProbabilityInfo analysis that it wraps, under
test! I'm planning on fixing some bugs and doing other work here, so
having a nice place to add regression tests and a way to observe the
results is really useful.

llvm-svn: 142491
2011-10-19 10:12:41 +00:00