Summary:
This pass is unnecessary and overly conservative. It was motivated by
situations like
def %vreg0:SGPR_32
...
if-block:
..
def %vreg1:SGPR_32
...
else-block:
...
use %vreg0:SGPR_32
...
and similar situations with uses after the non-uniform control flow, where
we are not allowed to assign %vreg0 and %vreg1 to the same physical register,
even though in the original, thread/workitem-based CFG, it looks like the
live ranges of these registers do not overlap.
However, by the time register allocation runs, we have moved to a wave-based
CFG that accurately represents the fact that the wave may run through both
the if- and the else-block. So the live ranges of %vreg0 and %vreg1 already
overlap even without the SIFixSGPRLiveRanges pass.
In addition to proving this change correct, I have tested it with Piglit
and a small number of other tests.
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: MatzeB, arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19041
llvm-svn: 266345
Summary:
I've been carrying this change around with me for a while, because the if ()
managed to confuse me while following the code. All callers ensure that the
assertion holds.
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19042
llvm-svn: 266344
FastRegAlloc works only at the basic-block level and spills all live-out
registers. Unfortunately for a stack-based cmpxchg near the spill slots, this
can perpetually clear the exclusive monitor, which means the cmpxchg will never
succeed.
I believe the only way to handle this within LLVM is by expanding the loop
post-regalloc. We don't want this in general because it severely limits the
optimisations that can be done, so we limit this to -O0 compilations.
It's an ugly hack, and about the one good point in the whole mess is that we
can treat all cmpxchg operations in the most naive way possible (seq_cst, no
clrex faff) without affecting correctness.
Should fix PR25526.
llvm-svn: 266339
Summary:
For GL_ARB_compute_shader we need to support workgroup sizes of at least 1024. However, if we want to allow large workgroup sizes, we may need to use less registers, as we have to run more waves per SIMD.
This patch adds an attribute to specify the maximum work group size the compiled program needs to support. It defaults, to 256, as that has no wave restrictions.
Reducing the number of registers available is done similarly to how the registers were reserved for chips with the sgpr init bug.
Reviewers: mareko, arsenm, tstellarAMD, nhaehnle
Subscribers: FireBurn, kerberizer, llvm-commits, arsenm
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18340
Patch By: Bas Nieuwenhuizen
llvm-svn: 266337
Summary:
The code previously always used s1 as it was using the user + system SGPR
information for compute kernels. This is incorrect for Mesa shaders though,
The register should be the next SGPR after all user and system SGPR's.
We use that Mesa adds arguments for all input and system SGPR's and
take the next available SGPR for the scratch wave offset register.
Signed-off-by: Bas Nieuwenhuizen <bas@basnieuwenhuizen.nl>
Reviewers: mareko, arsenm, nhaehnle, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: qcolombet, arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18941
Patch By: Bas Nieuwenhuizen
llvm-svn: 266336
Summary:
Add a print method to Predicated Scalar Evolution which prints all interesting
transformations done by PSE.
Loop Access Analysis will now print this as part of the analysis output.
We now use this to check the exact expression transformations that were done
by PSE in LAA.
The additional checking also acts as white-box testing for the getAsAddRec method.
Reviewers: anemet, sanjoy
Subscribers: sanjoy, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18792
llvm-svn: 266334
Alias 'jic $reg, 0' to 'jrc $reg' and 'jialc $reg, 0' to 'jalrc $reg' like
binutils.
This patch was previous committed as r266055 as seemed to have caused some spurious
test failures. They did not reappear after further local testing.
llvm-svn: 266301
The behavior of {MIN,MAX}NAN differs from that of {MIN,MAX}NUM when only
one of the inputs is NaN: -NUM will return the non-NaN argument while
-NAN would return NaN.
It is desirable to lower to @llvm.{min,max}num to -NAN if they don't
have a native instruction for -NUM. Notably, ARMv7 NEON's vmin has the
-NAN semantics.
N.B. Of course, it is only safe to do this if the intrinsic call is
marked nnan.
llvm-svn: 266279
This code was creating a new type in the global context, regardless
of which context the user is sitting in, what can possibly go wrong?
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266275
At some point, ARM stopped getting any benefit from ConstantHoisting because
the pass called a different variant of getIntImmCost. Reimplementing the
correct variant revealed some problems, however:
+ ConstantHoisting was modifying switch statements. This is simply invalid,
the cases must remain integer constants no matter the notional cost.
+ ConstantHoisting was mangling alloca instructions in the entry block. These
should be handled by FrameLowering, so constants actually have a cost of 0.
Worse, the resulting bitcasts meant they became dynamic allocas.
rdar://25707382
llvm-svn: 266260
Fix a major bug from r265456. Although it's now much rarer, ValueMapper
sometimes has to duplicate cycles. The
might-transitively-reference-a-temporary counts don't decrement on their
own when there are cycles, and you need to call MDNode::resolveCycles to
fix it.
r265456 was checking the input nodes to see if they were unresolved.
This is useless; they should never be unresolved. Instead we should
check the output nodes and resolve cycles on them.
llvm-svn: 266258
Summary: LLVMAttribute has outlived its utility and is becoming a problem for C API users that what to use all the LLVM attributes. In order to help moving away from LLVMAttribute in a smooth manner, this diff introduce LLVMGetAttrKindIDInContext, which can be used instead of the enum values.
Reviewers: Wallbraker, whitequark, joker.eph, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18749
llvm-svn: 266257
It is very likely that the swiftself parameter is alive throughout most
functions function so putting it into a callee save register should
avoid spills for the callers with only a minimum amount of extra spills
in the callees.
Currently the generated code is correct but unnecessarily spills and
reloads arguments passed in callee save registers, I will address this
in upcoming patches.
This also adds a missing check that for tail calls the preserved value
of the caller must be the same as the callees parameter.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18901
llvm-svn: 266253
It is very likely that the swiftself parameter is alive throughout most
functions function so putting it into a callee save register should
avoid spills for the callers with only a minimum amount of extra spills
in the callees.
Currently the generated code is correct but unnecessarily spills and
reloads arguments passed in callee save registers, I will address this
in upcoming patches.
This also adds a missing check that for tail calls the preserved value
of the caller must be the same as the callees parameter.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18902
llvm-svn: 266252
It is very likely that the swiftself parameter is alive throughout most
functions function so putting it into a callee save register should
avoid spills for the callers with only a minimum amount of extra spills
in the callees.
Currently the generated code is correct but unnecessarily spills and
reloads arguments passed in callee save registers, I will address this
in upcoming patches.
This also adds a missing check that for tail calls the preserved value
of the caller must be the same as the callees parameter.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19007
llvm-svn: 266251
And update the existing test cases in test/Object/macho-invalid.test
to use llvm-objdump with the -macho option to produce these
error messages and stop producing the generic "Invalid data
was encountered while parsing the file" message.
Working from the beginning of the file, if the mach header is too large for
the size of the file and then if the load commands that follow extend past
the end of the file these two errors now generate correct error messages.
Both of these have existing test cases in test/Object/macho-invalid.test .
But the first with macho-invalid-header it will never trigger the error message
"mach header extends past the end of the file" using any of the llvm tools as
they all use identify_magic() which rejects files with the correct magic number
that are too small in size. So I tested this by hacking that code and seeing the
error message down in parseHeader() really does happen. So in case there
is ever code in llvm that directly calls createMachOObjectFile() this error
message will be correctly produced.
The second error message of "load commands extends past the end of the file"
is triggered by a number of existing tests cases in test/Object/macho-invalid.test .
Also other tests trigger different error messages now like "ilocalsym plus
nlocalsym in LC_DYSYMTAB load command extends past the end of the
symbol table".
There are two existing test cases that still get the "Invalid data was encountered ..."
error messages that I will tackle next. But they will involve a bit of pluming an
Expect<...> up through the call stack and I want to do those as separate changes.
FYI, for those test cases that were trying to test specific errors that now get
different errors I’ll fix those in follow on changes and create new test cases
for those so they test the error they were meant to test.
llvm-svn: 266248
Summary:
When we are spilling SGPRs to scratch memory, we usually don't have
free SGPRs to do the address calculation, so we need to re-use the
ScratchOffset register for the calculation.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18917
llvm-svn: 266244
Since we can't emit diagnostics for missing "jmp 1f" labels until the end of
the file, we need to be able to restore the context used to calculate
file/line. This is basically the "# line file" directive that's being used at
the time the expression is seen.
rdar://25706972
llvm-svn: 266238
LLVM optimization passes may reduce a profiled target expression
to a constant. Removing runtime calls at such instrumentation points
would help speedup the runtime of the instrumented program.
llvm-svn: 266229
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17850
This patch implements the following instructions:
cmprb, cmpeqb, cnttzw, cnttzw., cnttzd, cnttzd.
llvm-svn: 266228
Disable LDP/STP for quads on Exynos M1 as they are not as efficient as pairs
of regular LDR/STR.
Patch by Abderrazek Zaafrani <a.zaafrani@samsung.com>.
llvm-svn: 266223
This patch fixes a bug (PR26827) when using anti-aliasing in store
merging. This sets the chain users of the component stores to point to
the new store instead of the component stores chain parent.
Reviewers: jyknight
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18909
llvm-svn: 266217
Summary:
To be able to work accurately on the reference graph when taking decision
about internalizing, promoting, renaming, etc. We need to have the alias
information explicit.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18836
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266214
Tests added along with implemented feature.
Note that there is a small leftover of unecessary MI sheduling issue
(more info in the review). CodeGen/AMDGPU/salu-to-valu.ll updated to fix
the false regression.
TODO: Support for TTMP quads, comma-separated syntax in "[]" and more.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17825
llvm-svn: 266205
Summary:
This is a special case for MIPS64 because the architecture requires
properly 32-bit sign-extended values in the register containers.
Additionaly, we merge consecutive trunc + AssertZExt nodes in order
to avoid unnecessary sign-extensions when the extension comes from a
type smaller than i32.
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: dsanders, sdardis, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18893
llvm-svn: 266203
This patch fixes calculating of builtin_object_size if it depends on a
condition. Before this patch compiler did not know how to calculate the
object size when it finds a condition that cannot be eliminated.
This patch enables calculating of builtin_object_size even in case when
condition cannot be eliminated by choosing minimum or maximum value as a
result from condition. Choosing minimum or maximum value from condition
is based on the second argument of __builtin_object_size function.
Patch by Strahinja Petrovic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18438
llvm-svn: 266193
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17137
This patch was reverted after the revertion of dependant patch http://reviews.llvm.org/D17068.
There was the problem with test-suite failure.
The problem is hopefully solved with dependant patch so this patch is commited again.
llvm-svn: 266179
Remove an ad-hoc transform in InstCombine and replace it with more
general machinery (ValueTracking, InstructionSimplify and VectorUtils).
This fixes PR27332.
llvm-svn: 266175
It is now only doing the update to the llvm.compiler_used global.
The client has to call separately the internalization stage.
Hopefully the code is simpler to understand this way.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266174
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17068
This changes contains fix for failing test-suite. So, this patch should hopefully work now.
llvm-svn: 266171
This will save a bunch of copies / initialization of intermediate
datastructure, and (hopefully) simplify the code.
This also abstract the symbol preservation mechanism outside of the
Internalization pass into the client code, which is not forced
to keep a map of strings for instance (ThinLTO will prefere hashes).
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266163
two fixes with one about error verify-regalloc reported, and
another about live range update of phi after rematerialization.
r265547:
Replace analyzeSiblingValues with new algorithm to fix its compile
time issue. The patch is to solve PR17409 and its duplicates.
analyzeSiblingValues is a N x N complexity algorithm where N is
the number of siblings generated by reg splitting. Although it
causes siginificant compile time issue when N is large, it is also
important for performance since it removes redundent spills and
enables rematerialization.
To solve the compile time issue, the patch removes analyzeSiblingValues
and replaces it with lower cost alternatives containing two parts. The
first part creates a new spill hoisting method in postOptimization of
register allocation. It does spill hoisting at once after all the spills
are generated instead of inside every instance of selectOrSplit. The
second part queries the define expr of the original register for
rematerializaiton and keep it always available during register allocation
even if it is already dead. It deletes those dead instructions only in
postOptimization. With the two parts in the patch, it can remove
analyzeSiblingValues without sacrificing performance.
Patches on top of r265547:
r265610 "Fix the compare-clang diff error introduced by r265547."
r265639 "Fix the sanitizer bootstrap error in r265547."
r265657 "InlineSpiller.cpp: Escap \@ in r265547. [-Wdocumentation]"
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15302
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18934
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18935
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18936
llvm-svn: 266162
Summary:
It seems like this was broken in r252327. I thought we had test cases
for this, but it's really hard to tirgger spills of this exact register
size since they aren't used very much.
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Subscribers: nhaehnle, arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19021
llvm-svn: 266152
This state is no longer useful and not guaranteed to be valid in later
codegen passes. For example, see the added test, which would print a
savepoint of %bb.-1 without this change, and crashes with a
use-after-free error under ASan if you apply the recycling allocator
patch from llvm.org/PR26808.
llvm-svn: 266150
This bug was introduced with:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL262269
AVX masked loads are specified to set vector lanes to zero when the high bit of the mask
element for that lane is zero:
"If the mask is 0, the corresponding data element is set to zero in the load form of these
instructions, and unmodified in the store form." --Intel manual
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19017
llvm-svn: 266148
Summary:
For correct handling of alias to nameless
function, we need to be able to refer them through a GUID in the summary.
Here we name them using a hash of the non-private global names in the module.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Subscribers: joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18883
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266132
This fixes two use-after-frees in selectLEA64_32Addr. If matchAddress
matches an ADD with an AND as an operand, and that AND hits one of the
"heroic transforms" that folds masks and shifts, we end up with N
pointing to an SDNode that was deleted. Make sure we're done accessing
it before that.
Found by ASan with the recycling allocator changes in llvm.org/PR26808.
llvm-svn: 266130
Summary:
They correspond to BUFFER_LOAD/STORE_DWORD[_X2,X3,X4] and mostly behave like
llvm.amdgcn.buffer.load/store.format. They will be used by Mesa for SSBO and
atomic counters at least when robust buffer access behavior is desired.
(These instructions perform no format conversion and do buffer range checking
per component.)
As a side effect of sharing patterns with llvm.amdgcn.buffer.store.format,
it has become trivial to add support for the f32 and v2f32 variants of that
intrinsic, so the patch does so.
Also DAG-ify (and fix) some tests that I noticed intermittent failures in
while developing this patch.
Some tests were (temporarily) adjusted for the required mayLoad/hasSideEffects
changes to the BUFFER_STORE_DWORD* instructions. See also
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18291.
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD, mareko
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18292
llvm-svn: 266126
Summary:
The function import pass was computing all the imports for all the
modules in the index, and only using the imports for the current module.
Change this to instead compute only for the given module. This means
that the exports list can't be populated, but they weren't being used
anyway.
Longer term, the linker can collect all the imports and export lists
and serialize them out for consumption by the distributed backend
processes which use this pass.
Reviewers: joker.eph
Subscribers: llvm-commits, joker.eph
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18945
llvm-svn: 266125
(Recommit of r266002, with r266011, r266016, and not accidentally
including an extra unused/uninitialized element in LibcallRoutineNames)
AtomicExpandPass can now lower atomic load, atomic store, atomicrmw, and
cmpxchg instructions to __atomic_* library calls, when the target
doesn't support atomics of a given size.
This is the first step towards moving all atomic lowering from clang
into llvm. When all is done, the behavior of __sync_* builtins,
__atomic_* builtins, and C11 atomics will be unified.
Previously LLVM would pass everything through to the ISelLowering
code. There, unsupported atomic instructions would turn into __sync_*
library calls. Because of that behavior, Clang currently avoids emitting
llvm IR atomic instructions when this would happen, and emits __atomic_*
library functions itself, in the frontend.
This change makes LLVM able to emit __atomic_* libcalls, and thus will
eventually allow clang to depend on LLVM to do the right thing.
It is advantageous to do the new lowering to atomic libcalls in
AtomicExpandPass, before ISel time, because it's important that all
atomic operations for a given size either lower to __atomic_*
libcalls (which may use locks), or native instructions which won't. No
mixing and matching.
At the moment, this code is enabled only for SPARC, as a
demonstration. The next commit will expand support to all of the other
targets.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18200
llvm-svn: 266115
Summary:
We will be able to handle this case much better once the hazard recognizer
is finished, but this conservative implementation fixes a hang with the piglit
test:
spec/arb_arrays_of_arrays/execution/sampler/fs-nested-struct-arrays-nonconst-nested-arra
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18988
llvm-svn: 266105
This helps clean up some of the mess when expanding unaligned 64-bit
loads when changed to be promote to v2i32, and fixes situations
where or x, 0 was emitted after splitting 64-bit ors during moveToVALU.
I think this could be a generic combine but I'm not sure.
llvm-svn: 266104
Add a check to catch violations. ~60 tests were broken and prevented
this change to be committed. Adrian and I (thanks Adrian!) went
through them in the last week or so updating. The check can be
done more efficiently but I'd still like to get this in ASAP to
avoid more broken tests to be checked in (if any).
PR: 27101
llvm-svn: 266102
This code was specific to vector operations with scalar operands:
all the opcodes in FoldValue (via FoldConstantArithmetic) can't
match those criteria.
Replace it with an assert if that ever changes: at that point,
we might need to add back a splat BUILD_VECTOR.
llvm-svn: 266100
Following up to a similar fix in MergeFunctions: r266022. This patch keeps both in sync, it would be nice to not have to do this. It doesn't look like there's an easy way to test this code directly at the moment: AFAICT all currect uses of isSameOperationAs are looking at instructions deep inside a function. IndVarSimplify/pr24952.ll and InstMerge/st_sink_* look at alloca inadvertently but are brittle tests.
llvm-svn: 266099
Previously, we were using isGCRelocate predicates. Using a subclass of IntrinsicInst is far more idiomatic. The refactoring also enables a couple of minor simplifications and code sharing.
llvm-svn: 266098
Summary:
Under certain circumstances, multi-level breaks (or what is understood by
the control flow passes as such) could be miscompiled in a way that causes
infinite loops, by emitting incorrect control flow intrinsics.
This fixes a hang in
dEQP-GLES3.functional.shaders.loops.while_dynamic_iterations.conditional_continue_vertex
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18967
llvm-svn: 266088
This is a resubmittion of 263158 change.
This patch fixes the problem which occurs when loop-vectorize tries to use @llvm.masked.load/store intrinsic for a non-default addrspace pointer. It fails with "Calling a function with a bad signature!" assertion in CallInst constructor because it tries to pass a non-default addrspace pointer to the pointer argument which has default addrspace.
The fix is to add pointer type as another overloaded type to @llvm.masked.load/store intrinsics.
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17270
llvm-svn: 266086
Summary:
In getUnderlyingObjectsForInstr(): Don't give up on instructions with
multiple MMOs, instead look through all the MMOs and if they all meet
the conservative criteria previously used for single MMO instructions,
then return all of the underlying objects derived from the MMOs.
The change to ScheduleDAGInstrs::buildSchedGraph() is needed to avoid
the case where multiple underlying objects are present and are related
in such a way that successive iterations of the loop end up adding a
dependency from an instruction to itself.
Reviewers: atrick, hfinkel
Subscribers: MatzeB, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18093
llvm-svn: 266084
This patch enables assembler support for .set arch=octeon.
It will fix issues with inline assembler when this directive is used.
Patch by Strahinja Petrovic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18548
llvm-svn: 266081
They broke the msan bot.
Original message:
Add __atomic_* lowering to AtomicExpandPass.
AtomicExpandPass can now lower atomic load, atomic store, atomicrmw,and
cmpxchg instructions to __atomic_* library calls, when the target
doesn't support atomics of a given size.
This is the first step towards moving all atomic lowering from clang
into llvm. When all is done, the behavior of __sync_* builtins,
__atomic_* builtins, and C11 atomics will be unified.
Previously LLVM would pass everything through to the ISelLowering
code. There, unsupported atomic instructions would turn into __sync_*
library calls. Because of that behavior, Clang currently avoids emitting
llvm IR atomic instructions when this would happen, and emits __atomic_*
library functions itself, in the frontend.
This change makes LLVM able to emit __atomic_* libcalls, and thus will
eventually allow clang to depend on LLVM to do the right thing.
It is advantageous to do the new lowering to atomic libcalls in
AtomicExpandPass, before ISel time, because it's important that all
atomic operations for a given size either lower to __atomic_*
libcalls (which may use locks), or native instructions which won't. No
mixing and matching.
At the moment, this code is enabled only for SPARC, as a
demonstration. The next commit will expand support to all of the other
targets.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18200
llvm-svn: 266062
On z13, if eliminateFrameIndex() chooses LE (and not LEY), immediately
transform that LE to LDE32 to avoid partial register dependencies.
LEY should be generally preferred for big offsets over an expansion
into LAY + LDE32.
Reviewed by Ulrich Weigand.
llvm-svn: 266060
Summary:
Alias 'jic $reg, 0' to 'jrc $reg' and 'jialc $reg, 0' to 'jalrc $reg' like
binutils.
Reviewers: dsanders
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18856
llvm-svn: 266055
This is intended to be shared by the ThinLTOCodeGenerator.
Note that there is a change in the way the verifier is run, previously
it was ran as a Pass on the merged module during internalization.
While now the verifier is called explicitely on the merged module
outside of the internalize "pass pipeline".
What remains strange in the API is the fact that `DisableVerify` in
the API does not disable this initial verifier.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19000
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266047
Resolve Bug 27046 (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27046).
The PPCInstrInfo::optimizeCompareInstr function could create a new use of
CR0, even if CR0 were previously dead. This patch marks CR0 live if a use of
CR0 is created.
Author: Tom Jablin (tjablin)
Reviewers: hfinkel kbarton cycheng
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18884
llvm-svn: 266040
In the ELFv2 ABI, we are not required to save all CR fields. If only one
nonvolatile CR field is clobbered, use mfocrf instead of mfcr to
selectively save the field, because mfocrf has short latency compares to
mfcr.
Thanks Nemanja's invaluable hint!
Reviewers: nemanjai tjablin hfinkel kbarton
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17749
llvm-svn: 266038
`allocsize` is a function attribute that allows users to request that
LLVM treat arbitrary functions as allocation functions.
This patch makes LLVM accept the `allocsize` attribute, and makes
`@llvm.objectsize` recognize said attribute.
The review for this was split into two patches for ease of reviewing:
D18974 and D14933. As promised on the revisions, I'm landing both
patches as a single commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14933
llvm-svn: 266032
Although repairing definitions is not mandatory for correctness (only
phis would be impacted because of the RPO traversal), not repairing
might go against the cost model. Therefore, just repair when it is
possible.
llvm-svn: 266025
r237193 fix handling of alloca size / align in MergeFunctions, but only tested one and didn't follow FunctionComparator::cmpOperations's usual comparison pattern. It also didn't update Instruction.cpp:haveSameSpecialState which I'll do separately.
llvm-svn: 266022
Use the MachineFunctionProperty mechanism to indicate whether the
liveness info is accurate instead of a bool flag on MRI.
Keeps the MRI accessor function for convenience. NFC
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18767
llvm-svn: 266020
This is more robust to changes in the link ordering.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18946
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266018
It doesn't like implicitly calling the ArrayRef constructor with a
returned array -- it appears to decays the returned value to a pointer,
first, before trying to make an ArrayRef out of it.
llvm-svn: 266011
The call to processPHI already erased MI from its parent, so MI isn't
even valid here, making the getParent() call a use-after-free in
addition to being redundant.
Found by ASan with the ArrayRecycler changes in llvm.org/pr26808.
llvm-svn: 266008
Add StackProtector to SafeStack. This adds limited protection against
data corruption in the caller frame. Current implementation treats
all stack protector levels as -fstack-protector-all.
llvm-svn: 266004
This is better for a few reasons:
+ It matches the other tooling for iOS.
+ It matches EABI in more cases (i.e. Thumb-mode, and in practice we don't
use ARM mode).
+ It leads to infinitesimally smaller code (0.2%, yay!).
rdar://25369506
llvm-svn: 266003
AtomicExpandPass can now lower atomic load, atomic store, atomicrmw, and
cmpxchg instructions to __atomic_* library calls, when the target
doesn't support atomics of a given size.
This is the first step towards moving all atomic lowering from clang
into llvm. When all is done, the behavior of __sync_* builtins,
__atomic_* builtins, and C11 atomics will be unified.
Previously LLVM would pass everything through to the ISelLowering
code. There, unsupported atomic instructions would turn into __sync_*
library calls. Because of that behavior, Clang currently avoids emitting
llvm IR atomic instructions when this would happen, and emits __atomic_*
library functions itself, in the frontend.
This change makes LLVM able to emit __atomic_* libcalls, and thus will
eventually allow clang to depend on LLVM to do the right thing.
It is advantageous to do the new lowering to atomic libcalls in
AtomicExpandPass, before ISel time, because it's important that all
atomic operations for a given size either lower to __atomic_*
libcalls (which may use locks), or native instructions which won't. No
mixing and matching.
At the moment, this code is enabled only for SPARC, as a
demonstration. The next commit will expand support to all of the other
targets.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18200
llvm-svn: 266002
xor/and/or (bitcast(A), bitcast(B)) -> bitcast(op (A,B)) was only being combined at the AfterLegalizeTypes stage, this patch permits the combine to occur anytime before then as well.
The main aim with this to improve the ability to recognise bitmasks that can be converted to shuffles.
I had to modify a number of AVX512 mask tests as the basic bitcast to/from scalar pattern was being stripped out, preventing testing of the mmask bitops. By replacing the bitcasts with loads we can get almost the same result.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18944
llvm-svn: 265998
Before, ELF at least managed a diagnostic but it was a completely untraceable
"undefined symbol" error. MachO had a variety of even worse behaviours: crash,
emit corrupt file, or an equally bad message.
llvm-svn: 265984
This patch ensures that when we detect first-order recurrences, we reject a phi
node if its previous value is also a phi node. During vectorization the initial
and previous values of the recurrence are shuffled together to create the value
for the current iteration. However, phi nodes are not widened like other
instructions. This fixes PR27246.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18971
llvm-svn: 265983
MachineFrameInfo does not need to be able to distinguish between the
user asking us not to realign the stack and the target telling us it
doesn't support stack realignment. Either way, fixed stack objects have
their alignment clamped.
llvm-svn: 265971
We need just a couple of logic tweaks to consolidate the shl and lshr cases.
This is step 5 of refactoring to solve PR26760:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26760
llvm-svn: 265965
This is the straightforward fix for PR26760:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26760
But we still need to make some changes to generalize this helper function
and then send the lshr case into here.
llvm-svn: 265960
Summary:
The motivation for this new function is to move an invalid assumption
about the relationship between the names of register definitions in
tablegen files and their assembly names into TargetRegisterInfo, so that
we can begin working on fixing this assumption.
The current problem is that if you have a register definition in
TableGen like:
def MYReg0 : Register<"r0", 0>;
The function TargetLowering::getRegForInlineAsmConstraint() derives the
assembly name from the tablegen name: "MyReg0" rather than the given
assembly name "r0". This is working, because on most targets the
tablegen name and the assembly names are case insensitive matches for
each other (e.g. def EAX : X86Reg<"eax", ...>
getRegAsmName() will allow targets to override this default assumption and
return the correct assembly name.
Reviewers: echristo, hfinkel
Subscribers: SamWot, echristo, hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15614
llvm-svn: 265955
This change follows up defaults for GCC and Clang, so LLVM does not differ
from them. While number of the test files are touched with this change, they
all keep the old (expected) behaviour with the explicit option:
"-relocation-model=pic"
The tests that have not been touched are insensitive to relocation model.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17995
llvm-svn: 265949
This should fix bot failure:
http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/i686-mingw32-RA-on-linux/builds/9873
The bitcode writer unfortunately still needs the Analysis library, as it
replaces old dependence on BFI etc with dependence on new
ModuleSummaryAnalysis pass.
llvm-svn: 265945
The note about conditional returns can now be removed, as they are
implemented. Let's also add 2 new ones in exchange.
Author: koriakin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18962
llvm-svn: 265944
Summary:
This is the first step in also serializing the index out to LLVM
assembly.
The per-module summary written to bitcode is moved out of the bitcode
writer and to a new analysis pass (ModuleSummaryIndexWrapperPass).
The pass itself uses a new builder class to compute index, and the
builder class is used directly in places where we don't have a pass
manager (e.g. llvm-as).
Because we are computing summaries outside of the bitcode writer, we no
longer can use value ids created by the bitcode writer's
ValueEnumerator. This required changing the reference graph edge type
to use a new ValueInfo class holding a union between a GUID (combined
index) and Value* (permodule index). The Value* are converted to the
appropriate value ID during bitcode writing.
Also, this enables removal of the BitWriter library's dependence on the
Analysis library that was previously required for the summary computation.
Reviewers: joker.eph
Subscribers: joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18763
llvm-svn: 265941
When we see a .arch or .cpu directive, we should try to avoid switching
ARM/Thumb mode if possible.
If we do have to switch modes, we also need to emit the correct mapping
symbol for the new ISA. We did not do this previously, so could emit
ARM code with Thumb mapping symbols (or vice-versa).
The GAS behaviour is to always stay in the same mode, and to emit an
error on any instructions seen when the current mode is not available on
the current target. We can't represent that situation easily (we assume
that Thumb mode is available if ModeThumb is set), so we differ from the
GAS behaviour when switching to a target that can't support the old
mode. I've added a warning for when this implicit mode-switch occurs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18955
llvm-svn: 265936
This adds a conditional variant of CallBR instruction, CallBCR. Also,
it can be fused with integer comparisons, resulting in one of the new
C*BCall instructions.
In addition to CallBRCL limitations, this has another one: it won't
trigger if the function to call isn't already in %r1 - see f22 in the
test for an example (it's also why the loads in tests are volatile).
Author: koriakin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18928
llvm-svn: 265933
These are fused compare-and-branches, so they obviously don't use CC.
Author: koriakin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18927
llvm-svn: 265932
Restrict the max length of long nops for Lakemont to 7. Experiments on MCU
benchmarks (Dhrystone, Coremark) show that this is the most optimal length.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18897
llvm-svn: 265924
Summary:
If we can prove that an op.with.overflow intrinsic does not overflow, we
can get rid of the intrinsic, and replace it with non-wrapping
arithmetic.
Reviewers: atrick, regehr
Subscribers: sanjoy, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18685
llvm-svn: 265913
Summary:
This change teaches SCEV to see reduce `(extractvalue
0 (op.with.overflow X Y))` into `op X Y` (with a no-wrap tag if
possible).
Reviewers: atrick, regehr
Subscribers: mcrosier, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18684
llvm-svn: 265912
Extend the existing lowering of vXi8 multiplies to support v64i8 on avx512bw targets.
I added the Lower512IntArith helper function to help with this - not sure how often this could be used in the future, but it seemed better than putting all that logic inside LowerMUL.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18937
llvm-svn: 265902
Vectorization cost of uniform load wasn't correctly calculated.
As a result, a simple loop that loads a uniform value wasn't vectorized.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18940
llvm-svn: 265901
Raw function pointer collected by value
profile data may be from external functions
that are not instrumented. They won't have
mapping data to be used by the deserializer.
Force the value to be 0 in this case.
llvm-svn: 265890
Summary:
After we make the adjustment, we can assume that for local allocas, but
not for stack parameters, the return address, or any other fixed stack
object (which has a negative offset and therefore lies prior to the
adjusted SP).
Fixes PR26662.
Reviewers: hfinkel, qcolombet, rnk
Subscribers: rnk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18471
llvm-svn: 265886
This patch drops the debug info for all DISubprograms that are
(a) not attached to an llvm::Function and
(b) not indirectly reachable via inline scopes from any surviving Function and
(c) not reachable from a type (i.e.: member functions).
Background: I'm currently working on a patch to reverse the pointers
between DICompileUnit and DISubprogram (for more info check Duncan's RFC
on lazy-loading of debug info metadata
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-March/097419.html).
The idea is to remove the list of subprograms from DICompileUnit and
instead point to the owning compile unit from each DISubprogram.
After doing this all DISubprograms fulfilling the above criteria will be
implicitly dropped unless we go through an extra effort to preserve them.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18477
<rdar://problem/25256815>
llvm-svn: 265876
This patch adds support for decoding XOP VPPERM instruction when it represents a basic shuffle.
The mask decoding required the existing MCInstrLowering code to be updated to support binary shuffles - the implementation now matches what is done in X86InstrComments.cpp.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18441
llvm-svn: 265874
Sample-based profiling and optimization remarks currently remove
DICompileUnits from llvm.dbg.cu to suppress the emission of debug info
from them. This is somewhat of a hack and only borderline legal IR.
This patch uses the recently introduced NoDebug emission kind in
DICompileUnit to achieve the same result without breaking the Verifier.
A nice side-effect of this change is that it is now possible to combine
NoDebug and regular compile units under LTO.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18808
<rdar://problem/25427165>
llvm-svn: 265861
This is a cleanup patch for SSP support in LLVM. There is no functional change.
llvm.stackprotectorcheck is not needed, because SelectionDAG isn't
actually lowering it in SelectBasicBlock; rather, it adds check code in
FinishBasicBlock, ignoring the position where the intrinsic is inserted
(See FindSplitPointForStackProtector()).
llvm-svn: 265851
This is in preparation for tail duplication during block placement. See D18226.
This needs to be a utility class for 2 reasons. No passes may run after block
placement, and also, tail-duplication affects subsequent layout decisions, so
it must be interleaved with placement, and can't be separated out into its own
pass. The original pass is still useful, and now runs by delegating to the
utility class.
llvm-svn: 265842
In Memcpy lowering we had missed a dependence from the load of the
operation to successor operations. This causes us to potentially
construct an in initial DAG with a memory dependence not fully
represented in the chain sub-DAG but rather require looking at the
entire DAG breaking alias analysis by allowing incorrect repositioning
of memory operations.
To work around this, r200033 changed DAGCombiner::GatherAllAliases to be
conservative if any possible issues to happen. Unfortunately this check
forbade many non-problematic situations as well. For example, it's
common for incoming argument lowering to add a non-aliasing load hanging
off of EntryNode. Then, if GatherAllAliases visited EntryNode, it would
find that other (unvisited) use of the EntryNode chain, and just give up
entirely. Furthermore, the check was incomplete: it would not actually
detect all such potentially problematic DAG constructions, because
GatherAllAliases did not guarantee to visit all chain nodes going up to
the root EntryNode. This is in general fine -- giving up early will just
miss a potential optimization, not generate incorrect results. But, for
this non-chain dependency detection code, it's possible that you could
have a load attached to a higher-up chain node than any which were
visited. If that load aliases your store, but the only dependency is
through the value operand of a non-aliasing store, it would've been
missed by this code, and potentially reordered.
With the dependence added, this check can be removed and Alias Analysis
can be much more aggressive. This fixes code quality regression in the
Consecutive Store Merge cleanup (D14834).
Test Change:
ppc64-align-long-double.ll now may see multiple serializations
of its stores
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18062
llvm-svn: 265836
Strip out the remapping parts of IRLinker::linkFunctionBody and put them
in ValueMapper.cpp under the name Mapper::remapFunction (with a
top-level entry-point llvm::RemapFunction).
This is a nice cleanup on its own since it puts the remapping code
together and shares a single Mapper context for the entire
IRLinker::linkFunctionBody Call. Besides that, this will make it easier
to break the co-recursion between IRMover.cpp and ValueMapper.cpp in
follow ups.
llvm-svn: 265835
Use Mapper::mapValue instead of llvm::MapValue from
Mapper::remapInstruction when mapping an incoming block for a PHINode
(follow-up to r265832). This will implicitly pass along the
Materializer argument, but when this code was added in r133513 there was
no Materializer argument. I suspect this call to MapValue was just
missed in r182776 since it's not observable (basic blocks can't be
materialized, and they don't reference other values).
llvm-svn: 265833
Add Mapper::remapInstruction, move the guts of llvm::RemapInstruction
into it, and use the same Mapper for most of the calls to MapValue and
MapMetadata. There should be no functionality change here.
I left off the call to MapValue that wasn't passing in a Materializer
argument (for basic blocks of PHINodes). It shouldn't change
functionality either, but I'm suspicious enough to commit separately.
llvm-svn: 265832
This is a cleanup after clarifying the meaning of RF_IgnoreMissingLocals
in r265628 and truly limiting it to locals in r265768.
This should have no functionality change, since the only context that
the flag has an effect is when we could hit function-local Value and
Metadata, and we were already passing it in those contexts.
llvm-svn: 265831
Prevent the Metadata side-table in ValueMap from growing unnecessarily
when RF_NoModuleLevelChanges. As a drive-by, make ValueMap::hasMD,
which apparently had no users until I used it here for testing, actually
compile.
llvm-svn: 265828
Stop adding MDString to the Metadata section of the ValueMap in
MapMetadata. It blows up the size of the map for no benefit, since we
can always return quickly anyway.
There is a potential follow-up that I don't think I'll push on right
away, but maybe someone else is interested: stop checking for a
pre-mapped MDString, and move the `isa<MDString>()` checks in
Mapper::mapSimpleMetadata and MDNodeMapper::getMappedOp in front of the
`VM.getMappedMD()` calls. While this would preclude explicitly
remapping MDStrings it would probably be a little faster.
llvm-svn: 265827
Summary:
The llvm cos intrinsic currently does not propagate undef's. This change
transforms cos(undef) to null value or 0.
There are 2 test cases added as well.
Patch by Anna Thomas!
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18863
llvm-svn: 265825
This adds a conditional variant of CallJG instruction, CallBRCL.
It can be used for conditional sibling calls. Unfortunately, due
to IfCvt limitations, it only really works well for functions without
arguments.
Author: koriakin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18864
llvm-svn: 265814
When assigning the register banks of an instruction, it is best to know
all the constraints of the input to have a good idea of how this will
impact the cost of the whole function.
llvm-svn: 265812
Do not give that much importance to the current register bank of an
operand. This is likely just a side effect of the current execution and
it is properly wise to prefer a register bank that can be extracted from
the information available statically (like encoding constraints and
type).
llvm-svn: 265810
We had a select of a cast of a select but attempted to replace the outer
select with the inner select dispite their incompatible types.
Patch by Anton Korobeynikov!
This fixes PR27236.
llvm-svn: 265805
Add verbose information when checking if the current and the desired
register banks match.
Detail what happens when we assign a register bank.
llvm-svn: 265804
Two or more identical assumes are occasionally next to each other in a
basic block.
While our generic machinery will turn a redundant assume into a no-op,
it is not super cheap.
We can perform a simpler check to achieve the same result for this case.
llvm-svn: 265801
InstCombine cannot effectively remove redundant assumptions without them
registered in the assumption cache. The vectorizer can create identical
assumptions but doesn't register them with the cache, resulting in
slower compile times because InstCombine tries to reason about a lot
more assumptions.
Fix this by registering the cloned assumptions.
llvm-svn: 265800
virtual registers.
Generic virtual registers:
- May not have a register class
- May not have a register bank
- If they do not have a register class they must have a size
- If they have a register bank, the size of the register bank must be
greater or equal to the size of the virtual register (basically check
that the virtual register will fit into that register class)
llvm-svn: 265798
For now, we put the register bank in the Class field since a register
may only have one of those at a given time. The downside of that
representation is that if a register class and a register bank have the
same name, we will not be able to distinguish them.
llvm-svn: 265796
Added ISelDAGToDAG functions to enable selection of the smlawb, smlawt,
smulwb and smulwt instructions for the ARM backend. Also updated the smul
CodeGen test and removed the smulw one.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18892
llvm-svn: 265793
It caused PR27275: "ARM: Bad machine code: Using an undefined physical register"
Also reverting the following commits that were landed on top:
r265610 "Fix the compare-clang diff error introduced by r265547."
r265639 "Fix the sanitizer bootstrap error in r265547."
r265657 "InlineSpiller.cpp: Escap \@ in r265547. [-Wdocumentation]"
llvm-svn: 265790
This re-commits r265535 which was reverted in r265541 because it
broke the windows bots. The problem was that we had a PointerIntPair
which took a pointer to a struct allocated with new. The problem
was that new doesn't provide sufficient alignment guarantees.
This pattern was already present before r265535 and it just happened
to work. To fix this, we now separate the PointerToIntPair from the
ExitNotTakenInfo struct into a pointer and a bool.
Original commit message:
Summary:
When the backedge taken codition is computed from an icmp, SCEV can
deduce the backedge taken count only if one of the sides of the icmp
is an AddRecExpr. However, due to sign/zero extensions, we sometimes
end up with something that is not an AddRecExpr.
However, we can use SCEV predicates to produce a 'guarded' expression.
This change adds a method to SCEV to get this expression, and the
SCEV predicate associated with it.
In HowManyGreaterThans and HowManyLessThans we will now add a SCEV
predicate associated with the guarded backedge taken count when the
analyzed SCEV expression is not an AddRecExpr. Note that we only do
this as an alternative to returning a 'CouldNotCompute'.
We use new feature in Loop Access Analysis and LoopVectorize to analyze
and transform more loops.
Reviewers: anemet, mzolotukhin, hfinkel, sanjoy
Subscribers: flyingforyou, mcrosier, atrick, mssimpso, sanjoy, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17201
llvm-svn: 265786
As discussed on D18441 - auto brief is used so we don't need /brief, we don't need to include the function name and added some missing descriptions.
llvm-svn: 265785
This is the same change on PPC64 as r255821 on AArch64. I have even borrowed
his commit message.
The access function has a short entry and a short exit, the initialization
block is only run the first time. To improve the performance, we want to
have a short frame at the entry and exit.
We explicitly handle most of the CSRs via copies. Only the CSRs that are not
handled via copies will be in CSR_SaveList.
Frame lowering and prologue/epilogue insertion will generate a short frame
in the entry and exit according to CSR_SaveList. The majority of the CSRs will
be handled by register allcoator. Register allocator will try to spill and
reload them in the initialization block.
We add CSRsViaCopy, it will be explicitly handled during lowering.
1> we first set FunctionLoweringInfo->SplitCSR if conditions are met (the target
supports it for the given machine function and the function has only return
exits). We also call TLI->initializeSplitCSR to perform initialization.
2> we call TLI->insertCopiesSplitCSR to insert copies from CSRsViaCopy to
virtual registers at beginning of the entry block and copies from virtual
registers to CSRsViaCopy at beginning of the exit blocks.
3> we also need to make sure the explicit copies will not be eliminated.
Author: Tom Jablin (tjablin)
Reviewers: hfinkel kbarton cycheng
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17533
llvm-svn: 265781
This reverts commit r265765, reapplying r265759 after changing a call from
LocalAsMetadata::get to ValueAsMetadata::get (and adding a unit test). When a
local value is mapped to a constant (like "i32 %a" => "i32 7"), the new debug
intrinsic operand may no longer be pointing at a local.
http://lab.llvm.org:8080/green/job/clang-stage1-configure-RA_build/19020/
The previous coommit message follows:
--
This is a partial re-commit -- maybe more of a re-implementation -- of
r265631 (reverted in r265637).
This makes RF_IgnoreMissingLocals behave (almost) consistently between
the Value and the Metadata hierarchy. In particular:
- MapValue returns nullptr or "metadata !{}" for missing locals in
MetadataAsValue/LocalAsMetadata bridging paris, depending on
the RF_IgnoreMissingLocals flag.
- MapValue doesn't memoize LocalAsMetadata-related results.
- MapMetadata no longer deals with LocalAsMetadata or
RF_IgnoreMissingLocals at all. (This wasn't in r265631 at all, but
I realized during testing it would make the patch simpler with no
loss of generality.)
r265631 went too far, making both functions universally ignore
RF_IgnoreMissingLocals. This broke building (e.g.) compiler-rt.
Reassociate (and possibly other passes) don't currently maintain
dominates-use invariants for metadata operands, resulting in IR like
this:
define void @foo(i32 %arg) {
call void @llvm.some.intrinsic(metadata i32 %x)
%x = add i32 1, i32 %arg
}
If the inliner chooses to inline @foo into another function, then
RemapInstruction will call `MapValue(metadata i32 %x)` and assert that
the return is not nullptr.
I've filed PR27273 to add a Verifier check and fix the underlying
problem in the optimization passes.
As a workaround, return `!{}` instead of nullptr for unmapped
LocalAsMetadata when RF_IgnoreMissingLocals is unset. Otherwise, match
the behaviour of r265631.
Original commit message:
ValueMapper: Make LocalAsMetadata match function-local Values
Start treating LocalAsMetadata similarly to function-local members of
the Value hierarchy in MapValue and MapMetadata.
- Don't memoize them.
- Return nullptr if they are missing.
This also cleans up ConstantAsMetadata to stop listening to the
RF_IgnoreMissingLocals flag.
llvm-svn: 265768
Summary:
Fixes PR26774.
If you're aware of the issue, feel free to skip the "Motivation"
section and jump directly to "This patch".
Motivation:
I define "refinement" as discarding behaviors from a program that the
optimizer has license to discard. So transforming:
```
void f(unsigned x) {
unsigned t = 5 / x;
(void)t;
}
```
to
```
void f(unsigned x) { }
```
is refinement, since the behavior went from "if x == 0 then undefined
else nothing" to "nothing" (the optimizer has license to discard
undefined behavior).
Refinement is a fundamental aspect of many mid-level optimizations done
by LLVM. For instance, transforming `x == (x + 1)` to `false` also
involves refinement since the expression's value went from "if x is
`undef` then { `true` or `false` } else { `false` }" to "`false`" (by
definition, the optimizer has license to fold `undef` to any non-`undef`
value).
Unfortunately, refinement implies that the optimizer cannot assume
that the implementation of a function it can see has all of the
behavior an unoptimized or a differently optimized version of the same
function can have. This is a problem for functions with comdat
linkage, where a function can be replaced by an unoptimized or a
differently optimized version of the same source level function.
For instance, FunctionAttrs cannot assume a comdat function is
actually `readnone` even if it does not have any loads or stores in
it; since there may have been loads and stores in the "original
function" that were refined out in the currently visible variant, and
at the link step the linker may in fact choose an implementation with
a load or a store. As an example, consider a function that does two
atomic loads from the same memory location, and writes to memory only
if the two values are not equal. The optimizer is allowed to refine
this function by first CSE'ing the two loads, and the folding the
comparision to always report that the two values are equal. Such a
refined variant will look like it is `readonly`. However, the
unoptimized version of the function can still write to memory (since
the two loads //can// result in different values), and selecting the
unoptimized version at link time will retroactively invalidate
transforms we may have done under the assumption that the function
does not write to memory.
Note: this is not just a problem with atomics or with linking
differently optimized object files. See PR26774 for more realistic
examples that involved neither.
This patch:
This change introduces a new set of linkage types, predicated as
`GlobalValue::mayBeDerefined` that returns true if the linkage type
allows a function to be replaced by a differently optimized variant at
link time. It then changes a set of IPO passes to bail out if they see
such a function.
Reviewers: chandlerc, hfinkel, dexonsmith, joker.eph, rnk
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18634
llvm-svn: 265762
This patch closes a gap in the DWARF backend that caused LLVM to drop
debug info for floating point variables that were constant for part of
their scope. Floating point constants are emitted as one or more
DW_OP_constu joined via DW_OP_piece.
This fixes a regression caught by the LLDB testsuite that I introduced
in r262247 when we stopped blindly expanding the range of singular
DBG_VALUEs to span the entire scope and started to emit location lists
with accurate ranges instead.
Also deletes a now-impossible testcase (debug-loc-empty-entries).
<rdar://problem/25448338>
llvm-svn: 265760
This is a partial re-commit -- maybe more of a re-implementation -- of
r265631 (reverted in r265637).
This makes RF_IgnoreMissingLocals behave (almost) consistently between
the Value and the Metadata hierarchy. In particular:
- MapValue returns nullptr or "metadata !{}" for missing locals in
MetadataAsValue/LocalAsMetadata bridging paris, depending on
the RF_IgnoreMissingLocals flag.
- MapValue doesn't memoize LocalAsMetadata-related results.
- MapMetadata no longer deals with LocalAsMetadata or
RF_IgnoreMissingLocals at all. (This wasn't in r265631 at all, but
I realized during testing it would make the patch simpler with no
loss of generality.)
r265631 went too far, making both functions universally ignore
RF_IgnoreMissingLocals. This broke building (e.g.) compiler-rt.
Reassociate (and possibly other passes) don't currently maintain
dominates-use invariants for metadata operands, resulting in IR like
this:
define void @foo(i32 %arg) {
call void @llvm.some.intrinsic(metadata i32 %x)
%x = add i32 1, i32 %arg
}
If the inliner chooses to inline @foo into another function, then
RemapInstruction will call `MapValue(metadata i32 %x)` and assert that
the return is not nullptr.
I've filed PR27273 to add a Verifier check and fix the underlying
problem in the optimization passes.
As a workaround, return `!{}` instead of nullptr for unmapped
LocalAsMetadata when RF_IgnoreMissingLocals is unset. Otherwise, match
the behaviour of r265631.
Original commit message:
ValueMapper: Make LocalAsMetadata match function-local Values
Start treating LocalAsMetadata similarly to function-local members of
the Value hierarchy in MapValue and MapMetadata.
- Don't memoize them.
- Return nullptr if they are missing.
This also cleans up ConstantAsMetadata to stop listening to the
RF_IgnoreMissingLocals flag.
llvm-svn: 265759
specific type.
This will be used to find the default mapping of the instruction.
Also, this information is recorded, instead of computed, because it is
expensive from a type to know which register bank maps it.
Indeed, we need to iterate through all the register classes of all the
register banks to find the one that maps the given type.
llvm-svn: 265736
from a register.
On top of duplicating the logic, it was buggy! It would assert on
physical registers, since MachineRegisterInfo does not have any
information regarding register classes/banks for them.
llvm-svn: 265727
Summary:
EHPad BB are not entered the classic way and therefor do not need to be placed after their predecessors. This patch make sure EHPad BB are not chosen amongst successors to form chains, and are selected as last resort when selecting the best candidate.
EHPad are scheduled in reverse probability order in order to have them flow into each others naturally.
Reviewers: chandlerc, majnemer, rafael, MatzeB, escha, silvas
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17625
llvm-svn: 265726
Standard load/store instructions with GLC bit set.
Reviewers: tstellardAMD, arsenm
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18760
llvm-svn: 265709
The pass walk through the machine function and assign the register banks
using the default mapping. In other words, there is no attempt to reduce
cross register copies.
llvm-svn: 265707
the mapping of an instruction on register bank.
For most instructions, it is possible to guess the mapping of the
instruciton by using the encoding constraints.
It remains instructions without encoding constraints.
For copy-like instructions, we try to propagate the information we get
from the other operands. Otherwise, the target has to give this
information.
llvm-svn: 265703
helper class.
The default constructor creates invalid (isValid() == false) instances
and may be used to communicate that a mapping was not found.
llvm-svn: 265699
A virtual register may have either a register bank or a register class.
This is represented by a PointerUnion between the related classes.
Typically, a virtual register went through the following states
regarding register class and register bank:
1. Creation: None is set. Virtual registers are fully generic.
2. Register bank assignment: Register bank is set. Virtual registers
live into a register bank, but we do not know the constraints they need
to fulfil.
3. Instruction selection: Register class is set. Virtual registers are
bound by encoding constraints.
To map these states to GlobalISel, the IRTranslator implements #1,
RegBankSelect #2, and Select #3.
llvm-svn: 265696
Return is now considered a predicable instruction, and is converted
to a newly-added CondReturn (which maps to BCR to %r14) instruction by
the if conversion pass.
Also, fused compare-and-branch transform knows about conditional
returns, emitting the proper fused instructions for them.
This transform triggers on a *lot* of tests, hence the huge diffstat.
The changes are mostly jX to br %r14 -> bXr %r14.
Author: koriakin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17339
llvm-svn: 265689
As suggested by Chandler in his review comments for D18662, this
follow-on patch renames some variables in GetLoadValueForLoad and
CoerceAvailableValueToLoadType to hopefully make it more obvious
which variables hold value sizes and which hold load/store sizes.
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 265687
When GVN wants to re-interpret an already available value in a smaller
type, it needs to right-shift the value on big-endian systems to ensure
the correct bytes are accessed. The shift value is the difference of
the sizes of the two types.
This is correct as long as both types occupy multiples of full bytes.
However, when one of them is a sub-byte type like i1, this no longer
holds true: we still need to shift, but only to access the correct
*byte*. Accessing bits within the byte requires no shift in either
endianness; e.g. an i1 resides in the least-significant bit of its
containing byte on both big- and little-endian systems.
Therefore, the appropriate shift value to be used is the difference of
the *storage* sizes of the two types. This is already handled correctly
in one place where such a shift takes place (GetStoreValueForLoad), but
is incorrect in two other places: GetLoadValueForLoad and
CoerceAvailableValueToLoadType.
This patch changes both places to use the storage size as well.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18662
llvm-svn: 265684
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18562
A large number of testcases has been modified so they pass after this test.
One testcase is deleted, because I realized even after undoing the original
change that was committed with this testcase, the testcase still passes. So
I removed it. The change to one other testcase (test/CodeGen/PowerPC/pr25802.ll)
is an arbitrary change to keep it passing. Given the original intention of the
testcase, and the fact that fixing it will require some time to change the testcase,
we concluded that this quick change will be enough.
llvm-svn: 265683
Summary: This makes it possible to insert nops at the end of blocks.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18549
llvm-svn: 265678
For VGPR_32 operand disassembler expects a VGPR register encoded as 0..255 (enum8 src operand).
readfirstlane/readline actually has enum9 operand and this change fixes VGPR_32 to VS_32 (enum9 encoding).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18696
llvm-svn: 265670
This patch add support for GCC attribute((ifunc("resolver"))) for
targets that use ELF as object file format. In general ifunc is a
special kind of function alias with type @gnu_indirect_function. Patch
for Clang http://reviews.llvm.org/D15524
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15525
llvm-svn: 265667