The value of 'i' is always the smaller of DstParts and SrcParts so we can just use that fact to write all the code in terms of SrcParts and DstParts.
llvm-svn: 302408
Currently multiply is implemented in operator*=. Operator* makes a copy and uses operator*= to modify the copy.
Operator*= itself allocates a temporary buffer to hold the multiply result as it computes it. Then copies it to the buffer in *this.
Operator*= attempts to bound the size of the result based on the number of active bits in its inputs. It also has a couple special cases to handle 0 inputs without any memory allocations or multiply operations. The best case is that it calculates a single word regardless of input bit width. The worst case is that it calculates the a 2x input width result and drop the upper bits.
Since operator* uses operator*= it incurs two allocations, one for a copy of *this and one for the temporary allocation. Neither of these allocations are kept after the method operation is done.
The main usage in the backend appears to be ConstantRange::multiply which uses operator* rather than operator*=.
This patch moves the multiply operation to operator* and implements operator*= using it. This avoids the copy in operator*. operator* now allocates a result buffer sized the same width as its inputs no matter what. This buffer will be used as the buffer for the returned APInt. Finally, we reuse tcMultiply to implement the multiply operation. This function is capable of not calculating additional upper words that will be discarded.
This change does lose the special optimizations for the inputs using less words than their size implies. But it also removed the getActiveBits calls from all multiplies. If we think those optimizations are important we could look at providing additional bounds to tcMultiply to limit the computations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32830
llvm-svn: 302171
Currently several places assume the VAL member is always at least the same size as pVal. In particular for a memcpy in the move assignment operator. While this is a true assumption, it isn't good practice to assume this.
This patch gives the union a name so we can write the memcpy in terms of the union itself. This also adds a similar memcpy to the move constructor where we previously just copied using VAL directly.
This patch is mostly just a mechanical addition of the U in front of VAL and pVAL everywhere. But several constructors had to be modified since we can't directly initializer a field of named union from the initializer list.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30629
llvm-svn: 302040
This replaces a hand written copy loop with a call to memcpy for both zext and sext.
For sext, it replaces multiple if/else blocks propagating sign information forward. Now we just do a copy, a sign extension on the last copied word, a memset, and clearUnusedBits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32417
llvm-svn: 301201
This patch adds an in place version of ashr to match lshr and shl which were recently added.
I've tried to make this similar to the lshr code with additions to handle the sign extension. I've also tried to do this with less if checks than the current ashr code by sign extending the original result to a word boundary before doing any of the shifting. This removes a lot of the complexity of determining where to fill in sign bits after the shifting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32415
llvm-svn: 301198
Previously single word would always return 0 regardless of the original sign. Multi word would return all 0s or all 1s based on the original sign. Now single word takes into account the sign as well.
llvm-svn: 301159
The current code is trying to be clever with shifts to avoid needing to clear unused bits. But it looks like the compiler is unable to optimize out the unused bit handling in the APInt constructor. Given this its better to just use SignExtend64 and have more readable code.
llvm-svn: 301133
This reverts commit r301105, 4, 3 and 1, as a follow up of the previous
revert, which broke even more bots.
For reference:
Revert "[APInt] Use operator<<= where possible. NFC"
Revert "[APInt] Use operator<<= instead of shl where possible. NFC"
Revert "[APInt] Use ashInPlace where possible."
PR32754.
llvm-svn: 301111
For single word, shift by BitWidth was always returning 0, but for multiword it was based on original sign. Now single word matches multi word.
llvm-svn: 301094
Currently sle and ule have to call slt/ult and eq to get the proper answer. This results in extra code for both calls and additional scans of multiword APInts.
This patch replaces slt/ult with a compareSigned/compare that can return -1, 0, or 1 so we can cover all the comparison functions with a single call.
While I was there I removed the activeBits calls and other checks at the start of the slow part of ult. Both of the activeBits calls potentially scan through each of the APInts separately. I can't imagine that's any better than just scanning them in parallel and doing the compares. Now we just share the code with tcCompare.
These changes seem to be good for about a 7-8k reduction on the size of the opt binary on my local x86-64 build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32339
llvm-svn: 300995
This question comes up in many places in SimplifyDemandedBits. This makes it easy to ask without allocating additional temporary APInts.
The BitVector class provides a similar functionality through its (IMHO badly named) test(const BitVector&) method. Though its output polarity is reversed.
I've provided one example use case in this patch. I plan to do more as a follow up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32258
llvm-svn: 300851
Summary: This is a simple question we should be able to answer without creating a temporary to hold the AND result. We can also get an early out as soon as we find a word that intersects.
Reviewers: RKSimon, hans, spatel, davide
Reviewed By: hans, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32253
llvm-svn: 300812
This patch uses lshrInPlace to replace code where the object that lshr is called on is being overwritten with the result.
This adds an lshrInPlace(const APInt &) version as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32155
llvm-svn: 300566
This merges the two different multiword shift right implementations into a single version located in tcShiftRight. lshrInPlace now calls tcShiftRight for the multiword case.
I retained the memmove fast path from lshrInPlace and used a memset for the zeroing. The for loop is basically tcShiftRight's implementation with the zeroing and the intra-shift of 0 removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32114
llvm-svn: 300503
This was throwing an assert because we determined the intra-word shift amount by subtracting the size of the full word shift from the total shift amount. But we failed to account for the fact that we clipped the full word shifts by total words first. To fix this just calculate the intra-word shift as the remainder of dividing by bits per word.
llvm-svn: 300405
Switch from Euclid's algorithm to Stein's algorithm for computing GCD. This
avoids the (expensive) APInt division operation in favour of bit operations.
Remove all memory allocation from within the GCD loop by tweaking our `lshr`
implementation so it can operate in-place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31968
llvm-svn: 300252
Summary:
APInt is currently implemented with an unsigned BitWidth field first and then a uint_64/pointer union. Due to the 64-bit size of the union there is a hole after the bitwidth.
Putting the union first allows the class to be packed. Making it 12 bytes instead of 16 bytes. An APSInt goes from 20 bytes to 16 bytes.
This shows a 4k reduction on the size of the opt binary on my local x86-64 build. So this enables some other improvement to the code as well.
Reviewers: dblaikie, RKSimon, hans, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32001
llvm-svn: 300171
This patch is one step to attempt to unify the main APInt interface and the tc functions used by APFloat.
This patch adds a WordType to APInt and uses that in all the tc functions. I've added temporary typedefs to APFloat to alias it to integerPart to keep the patch size down. I'll work on removing that in a future patch.
In future patches I hope to reuse the tc functions to implement some of the main APInt functionality.
I may remove APINT_ from BITS_PER_WORD and WORD_SIZE constants so that we don't have the repetitive APInt::APINT_ externally.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31523
llvm-svn: 299341
Summary:
GreatestComonDivisor currently makes a copy of both its inputs. Then in the loop we do one move and two copies, plus any allocation the urem call does.
This patch changes it to take its inputs by value so that we can do a move of any rvalue inputs instead of copying. Then in the loop we do 3 move assignments and no copies. This way the only possible allocations we have in the loop is from the urem call.
Reviewers: dblaikie, RKSimon, hans
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31572
llvm-svn: 299314