Commit Graph

11239 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 66f0b16360 [LPM] Fix PR18642, a pretty nasty bug in IndVars that "never mattered"
because of the inside-out run of LoopSimplify in the LoopPassManager and
the fact that LoopSimplify couldn't be "preserved" across two
independent LoopPassManagers.

Anyways, in that case, IndVars wasn't correctly preserving an LCSSA PHI
node because it thought it was rewriting (via SCEV) the incoming value
to a loop invariant value. While it may well be invariant for the
current loop, it may be rewritten in terms of an enclosing loop's
values. This in and of itself is fine, as the LCSSA PHI node in the
enclosing loop for the inner loop value we're rewriting will have its
own LCSSA PHI node if used outside of the enclosing loop. With me so
far?

Well, the current loop and the enclosing loop may share an exiting
block and exit block, and when they do they also share LCSSA PHI nodes.
In this case, its not valid to RAUW through the LCSSA PHI node.

Expected crazy test included.

llvm-svn: 200372
2014-01-29 04:40:19 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 1aab75ab49 LoopVectorizer: Don't count the induction variable multiple times
When estimating register pressure, don't count the induction variable mulitple
times. It is unlikely to be unrolled. This is currently disabled and hidden
behind a flag ("enable-ind-var-reg-heur").

llvm-svn: 200371
2014-01-29 04:36:12 +00:00
Rafael Espindola ab73c493ea Fix pr14893.
When simplifycfg moves an instruction, it must drop metadata it doesn't know
is still valid with the preconditions changes. In particular, it must drop
the range and tbaa metadata.

The patch implements this with an utility function to drop all metadata not
in a white list.

llvm-svn: 200322
2014-01-28 16:56:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b783628560 [vectorizer] Completely disable the block frequency guidance of the loop
vectorizer, placing it behind an off-by-default flag.

It turns out that block frequency isn't what we want at all, here or
elsewhere. This has been I think a nagging feeling for several of us
working with it, but Arnold has given some really nice simple examples
where the results are so comprehensively wrong that they aren't useful.

I'm planning to email the dev list with a summary of why its not really
useful and a couple of ideas about how to better structure these types
of heuristics.

llvm-svn: 200294
2014-01-28 09:10:41 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 26af2cae05 Update optimization passes to handle inalloca arguments
Summary:
I searched Transforms/ and Analysis/ for 'ByVal' and updated those call
sites to check for inalloca if appropriate.

I added tests for any change that would allow an optimization to fire on
inalloca.

Reviewers: nlewycky

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2449

llvm-svn: 200281
2014-01-28 02:38:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d84f776e8a [LPM] Fix PR18616 where the shifts to the loop pass manager to extract
LCSSA from it caused a crasher with the LoopUnroll pass.

This crasher is really nasty. We destroy LCSSA form in a suprising way.
When unrolling a loop into an outer loop, we not only need to restore
LCSSA form for the outer loop, but for all children of the outer loop.
This is somewhat obvious in retrospect, but hey!

While this seems pretty heavy-handed, it's not that bad. Fundamentally,
we only do this when we unroll a loop, which is already a heavyweight
operation. We're unrolling all of these hypothetical inner loops as
well, so their size and complexity is already on the critical path. This
is just adding another pass over them to re-canonicalize.

I have a test case from PR18616 that is great for reproducing this, but
pretty useless to check in as it relies on many 10s of nested empty
loops that get unrolled and deleted in just the right order. =/ What's
worse is that investigating this has exposed another source of failure
that is likely to be even harder to test. I'll try to come up with test
cases for these fixes, but I want to get the fixes into the tree first
as they're causing crashes in the wild.

llvm-svn: 200273
2014-01-28 01:25:38 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 18865db3c1 LoopVectorize: Support conditional stores by scalarizing
The vectorizer takes a loop like this and widens all instructions except for the
store. The stores are scalarized/unrolled and hidden behind an "if" block.

  for (i = 0; i < 128; ++i) {
    if (a[i] < 10)
      a[i] += val;
  }

  for (i = 0; i < 128; i+=2) {
    v = a[i:i+1];
    v0 = (extract v, 0) + 10;
    v1 = (extract v, 1) + 10;
    if (v0 < 10)
      a[i] = v0;
    if (v1 < 10)
      a[i] = v1;
  }

The vectorizer relies on subsequent optimizations to sink instructions into the
conditional block where they are anticipated.

The flag "vectorize-num-stores-pred" controls whether and how many stores to
handle this way. Vectorization of conditional stores is disabled per default for
now.

This patch also adds a change to the heuristic when the flag
"enable-loadstore-runtime-unroll" is enabled (off by default). It unrolls small
loops until load/store ports are saturated. This heuristic uses TTI's
getMaxUnrollFactor as a measure for load/store ports.

I also added a second flag -enable-cond-stores-vec. It will enable vectorization
of conditional stores. But there is no cost model for vectorization of
conditional stores in place yet so this will not do good at the moment.

rdar://15892953

Results for x86-64 -O3 -mavx +/- -mllvm -enable-loadstore-runtime-unroll
-vectorize-num-stores-pred=1 (before the BFI change):

 Performance Regressions:
   Benchmarks/Ptrdist/yacr2/yacr2 7.35% (maze3() is identical but 10% slower)
   Applications/siod/siod         2.18%
 Performance improvements:
   mesa                          -4.42%
   libquantum                    -4.15%

 With a patch that slightly changes the register heuristics (by subtracting the
 induction variable on both sides of the register pressure equation, as the
 induction variable is probably not really unrolled):

 Performance Regressions:
   Benchmarks/Ptrdist/yacr2/yacr2  7.73%
   Applications/siod/siod          1.97%

 Performance Improvements:
   libquantum                    -13.05% (we now also unroll quantum_toffoli)
   mesa                           -4.27%

llvm-svn: 200270
2014-01-28 01:01:53 +00:00
Manman Ren f1cb16e481 PGO branch weight: keep halving the weights until they can fit into
uint32.

When folding branches to common destination, the updated branch weights
can exceed uint32 by more than factor of 2. We should keep halving the
weights until they can fit into uint32.

llvm-svn: 200262
2014-01-27 23:39:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e24f3973eb [vectorize] Initial version of respecting PGO in the vectorizer: treat
cold loops as-if they were being optimized for size.

Nothing fancy here. Simply test case included. The nice thing is that we
can now incrementally build on top of this to drive other heuristics.
All of the infrastructure work is done to get the profile information
into this layer.

The remaining work necessary to make this a fully general purpose loop
unroller for very hot loops is to make it a fully general purpose loop
unroller. Things I know of but am not going to have time to benchmark
and fix in the immediate future:

1) Don't disable the entire pass when the target is lacking vector
   registers. This really doesn't make any sense any more.
2) Teach the unroller at least and the vectorizer potentially to handle
   non-if-converted loops. This is trivial for the unroller but hard for
   the vectorizer.
3) Compute the relative hotness of the loop and thread that down to the
   various places that make cost tradeoffs (very likely only the
   unroller makes sense here, and then only when dealing with loops that
   are small enough for unrolling to not completely blow out the LSD).

I'm still dubious how useful hotness information will be. So far, my
experiments show that if we can get the correct logic for determining
when unrolling actually helps performance, the code size impact is
completely unimportant and we can unroll in all cases. But at least
we'll no longer burn code size on cold code.

One somewhat unrelated idea that I've had forever but not had time to
implement: mark all functions which are only reachable via the global
constructors rigging in the module as optsize. This would also decrease
the impact of any more aggressive heuristics here on code size.

llvm-svn: 200219
2014-01-27 13:11:50 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 9e709bce86 ConstantHoisting: We can't insert instructions directly in front of a PHI node.
Insert before the terminating instruction of the dominating block instead.

llvm-svn: 200218
2014-01-27 13:11:43 +00:00
Chandler Carruth edfa37effa [vectorizer] Add an override for the target instruction cost and use it
to stabilize a test that really is trying to test generic behavior and
not a specific target's behavior.

llvm-svn: 200215
2014-01-27 11:41:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2bb03ba605 [vectorizer] Simplify code to use existing helpers on the Function
object and fewer pointless variables.

Also, add a clarifying comment and a FIXME because the code which
disables *all* vectorization if we can't use implicit floating point
instructions just makes no sense at all.

llvm-svn: 200214
2014-01-27 11:27:37 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 147c23278f [vectorizer] Teach the loop vectorizer's unroller to only unroll by
powers of two. This is essentially always the correct thing given the
impact on alignment, scaling factors that can be used in addressing
modes, etc. Also, fix the management of the unroll vs. small loop cost
to more accurately model things with this world.

Enhance a test case to actually exercise more of the unroll machinery if
using synthetic constants rather than a specific target model. Before
this change, with the added flags this test will unroll 3 times instead
of either 2 or 4 (the two sensible answers).

While I don't expect this to make a huge difference, if there are lots
of loops sitting right on the edge of hitting the 'small unroll' factor,
they might change behavior. However, I've benchmarked moving the small
loop cost up and down in many various ways and by a huge factor (2x)
without seeing more than 0.2% code size growth. Small adjustments such
as the series that led up here have led to about 1% improvement on some
benchmarks, but it is very close to the noise floor so I mostly checked
that nothing regressed. Let me know if you see bad behavior on other
targets but I don't expect this to be a sufficiently dramatic change to
trigger anything.

llvm-svn: 200213
2014-01-27 11:12:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7f90b4530b [vectorizer] Add some flags which are useful for conducting experiments
with the unrolling behavior in the loop vectorizer. No functionality
changed at this point.

These are a bit hack-y, but talking with Hal, there doesn't seem to be
a cleaner way to easily experiment with different thresholds here and he
was also interested in them so I wanted to commit them. Suggestions for
improvement are very welcome here.

llvm-svn: 200212
2014-01-27 11:12:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 328998b2f7 [vectorizer] Fix a trivial oversight where we always requested the
number of vector registers rather than toggling between vector and
scalar register number based on VF. I don't have a test case as
I spotted this by inspection and on X86 it only makes a difference if
your target is lacking SSE and thus has *no* vector registers.

If someone wants to add a test case for this for ARM or somewhere else
where this is more significant, that would be awesome.

Also made the variable name a bit more sensible while I'm here.

llvm-svn: 200211
2014-01-27 11:12:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 56612b204a [vectorizer] Clean up the handling of unvectorized loop unrolling in the
LoopVectorize pass.

The logic here doesn't make much sense. We *only* unrolled if the
unvectorized loop was a reduction loop with a single basic block *and*
small loop body. The reduction part in particular doesn't make much
sense. Instead, if we just fall through to the vectorized unroll logic
it makes more sense of unrolling if there is a vectorized reduction that
could be hacked on by the SLP vectorizer *or* if the loop is small.

This is mostly a cleanup and nothing in the test suite really exercises
this, but I did run benchmarks across this change and saw no really
significant changes.

llvm-svn: 200198
2014-01-27 08:17:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3aebcb99f7 [LPM] Conclude my immediate work by making the LoopVectorizer
a FunctionPass. With this change the loop vectorizer no longer is a loop
pass and can readily depend on function analyses. In particular, with
this change we no longer have to form a loop pass manager to run the
loop vectorizer which simplifies the entire pass management of LLVM.

The next step here is to teach the loop vectorizer to leverage profile
information through the profile information providing analysis passes.

llvm-svn: 200074
2014-01-25 10:01:55 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8765cf702f [LPM] Make LCSSA a utility with a FunctionPass that applies it to all
the loops in a function, and teach LICM to work in the presance of
LCSSA.

Previously, LCSSA was a loop pass. That made passes requiring it also be
loop passes and unable to depend on function analysis passes easily. It
also caused outer loops to have a different "canonical" form from inner
loops during analysis. Instead, we go into LCSSA form and preserve it
through the loop pass manager run.

Note that this has the same problem as LoopSimplify that prevents
enabling its verification -- loop passes which run at the end of the loop
pass manager and don't preserve these are valid, but the subsequent loop
pass runs of outer loops that do preserve this pass trigger too much
verification and fail because the inner loop no longer verifies.

The other problem this exposed is that LICM was completely unable to
handle LCSSA form. It didn't preserve it and it actually would give up
on moving instructions in many cases when they were used by an LCSSA phi
node. I've taught LICM to support detecting LCSSA-form PHI nodes and to
hoist and sink around them. This may actually let LICM fire
significantly more because we put everything into LCSSA form to rotate
the loop before running LICM. =/ Now LICM should handle that fine and
preserve it correctly. The down side is that LICM has to require LCSSA
in order to preserve it. This is just a fact of life for LCSSA. It's
entirely possible we should completely remove LCSSA from the optimizer.

The test updates are essentially accomodating LCSSA phi nodes in the
output of LICM, and the fact that we now completely sink every
instruction in ashr-crash below the loop bodies prior to unrolling.

With this change, LCSSA is computed only three times in the pass
pipeline. One of them could be removed (and potentially a SCEV run and
a separate LoopPassManager entirely!) if we had a LoopPass variant of
InstCombine that ran InstCombine on the loop body but refused to combine
away LCSSA PHI nodes. Currently, this also prevents loop unrolling from
being in the same loop pass manager is rotate, LICM, and unswitch.

There is one thing that I *really* don't like -- preserving LCSSA in
LICM is quite expensive. We end up having to re-run LCSSA twice for some
loops after LICM runs because LICM can undo LCSSA both in the current
loop and the parent loop. I don't really see good solutions to this
other than to completely move away from LCSSA and using tools like
SSAUpdater instead.

llvm-svn: 200067
2014-01-25 04:07:24 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka f26beda7c7 Revert "Revert "Add Constant Hoisting Pass" (r200034)"
This reverts commit r200058 and adds the using directive for
ARMTargetTransformInfo to silence two g++ overload warnings.

llvm-svn: 200062
2014-01-25 02:02:55 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 4d67a2e85a Revert "Add Constant Hoisting Pass" (r200034)
This commit caused -Woverloaded-virtual warnings. The two new
TargetTransformInfo::getIntImmCost functions were only added to the superclass,
and to the X86 subclass. The other targets were not updated, and the
warning highlighted this by pointing out that e.g. ARMTTI::getIntImmCost was
hiding the two new getIntImmCost variants.

We could pacify the warning by adding "using TargetTransformInfo::getIntImmCost"
to the various subclasses, or turning it off, but I suspect that it's wrong to
leave the functions unimplemnted in those targets. The default implementations
return TCC_Free, which I don't think is right e.g. for ARM.

llvm-svn: 200058
2014-01-25 01:18:18 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 4f3df4ad64 Add Constant Hoisting Pass
Retry commit r200022 with a fix for the build bot errors. Constant expressions
have (unlike instructions) module scope use lists and therefore may have users
in different functions. The fix is to simply ignore these out-of-function uses.

llvm-svn: 200034
2014-01-24 20:18:00 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 09b0f88a7f InstCombine: Don't try to use aggregate elements of ConstantExprs.
PR18600.

llvm-svn: 200028
2014-01-24 19:02:37 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 50e7e80d00 Revert "Add Constant Hoisting Pass"
This reverts commit r200022 to unbreak the build bots.

llvm-svn: 200024
2014-01-24 18:40:30 +00:00
Juergen Ributzka 38b67d0caf Add Constant Hoisting Pass
This pass identifies expensive constants to hoist and coalesces them to
better prepare it for SelectionDAG-based code generation. This works around the
limitations of the basic-block-at-a-time approach.

First it scans all instructions for integer constants and calculates its
cost. If the constant can be folded into the instruction (the cost is
TCC_Free) or the cost is just a simple operation (TCC_BASIC), then we don't
consider it expensive and leave it alone. This is the default behavior and
the default implementation of getIntImmCost will always return TCC_Free.

If the cost is more than TCC_BASIC, then the integer constant can't be folded
into the instruction and it might be beneficial to hoist the constant.
Similar constants are coalesced to reduce register pressure and
materialization code.

When a constant is hoisted, it is also hidden behind a bitcast to force it to
be live-out of the basic block. Otherwise the constant would be just
duplicated and each basic block would have its own copy in the SelectionDAG.
The SelectionDAG recognizes such constants as opaque and doesn't perform
certain transformations on them, which would create a new expensive constant.

This optimization is only applied to integer constants in instructions and
simple (this means not nested) constant cast experessions. For example:
%0 = load i64* inttoptr (i64 big_constant to i64*)

Reviewed by Eric

llvm-svn: 200022
2014-01-24 18:23:08 +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
Chandler Carruth cc497b6ab5 [LPM] Fix a logic error in LICM spotted by inspection.
We completely skipped promotion in LICM if the loop has a preheader or
dedicated exits, but not *both*. We hoist if there is a preheader, and
sink if there are dedicated exits, but either hoisting or sinking can
move loop invariant code out of the loop!

I have no idea if this has a practical consequence. If anyone has ideas
for a test case, let me know.

llvm-svn: 199966
2014-01-24 02:24:47 +00:00
Chandler Carruth abfa3e5652 [cleanup] Use the type-based preservation method rather than a string
literal that bakes a pass name and forces parsing it in the pass
manager.

llvm-svn: 199963
2014-01-24 01:59:49 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 2a05ea5c0e Remove tail marker when changing an argument to an alloca.
Argument promotion can replace an argument of a call with an alloca. This
requires clearing the tail marker as it is very likely that the callee is now
using an alloca in the caller.

This fixes pr14710.

llvm-svn: 199909
2014-01-23 17:19:42 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aa7fa5e4b2 [LPM] Make LoopSimplify no longer a LoopPass and instead both a utility
function and a FunctionPass.

This has many benefits. The motivating use case was to be able to
compute function analysis passes *after* running LoopSimplify (to avoid
invalidating them) and then to run other passes which require
LoopSimplify. Specifically passes like unrolling and vectorization are
critical to wire up to BranchProbabilityInfo and BlockFrequencyInfo so
that they can be profile aware. For the LoopVectorize pass the only
things in the way are LoopSimplify and LCSSA. This fixes LoopSimplify
and LCSSA is next on my list.

There are also a bunch of other benefits of doing this:
- It is now very feasible to make more passes *preserve* LoopSimplify
  because they can simply run it after changing a loop. Because
  subsequence passes can assume LoopSimplify is preserved we can reduce
  the runs of this pass to the times when we actually mutate a loop
  structure.
- The new pass manager should be able to more easily support loop passes
  factored in this way.
- We can at long, long last observe that LoopSimplify is preserved
  across SCEV. This *halves* the number of times we run LoopSimplify!!!

Now, getting here wasn't trivial. First off, the interfaces used by
LoopSimplify are all over the map regarding how analysis are updated. We
end up with weird "pass" parameters as a consequence. I'll try to clean
at least some of this up later -- I'll have to have it all clean for the
new pass manager.

Next up I discovered a really frustrating bug. LoopUnroll *claims* to
preserve LoopSimplify. That's actually a lie. But the way the
LoopPassManager ends up running the passes, it always ran LoopSimplify
on the unrolled-into loop, rectifying this oversight before any
verification could kick in and point out that in fact nothing was
preserved. So I've added code to the unroller to *actually* simplify the
surrounding loop when it succeeds at unrolling.

The only functional change in the test suite is that we now catch a case
that was previously missed because SCEV and other loop transforms see
their containing loops as simplified and thus don't miss some
opportunities. One test case has been converted to check that we catch
this case rather than checking that we miss it but at least don't get
the wrong answer.

Note that I have #if-ed out all of the verification logic in
LoopSimplify! This is a temporary workaround while extracting these bits
from the LoopPassManager. Currently, there is no way to have a pass in
the LoopPassManager which preserves LoopSimplify along with one which
does not. The LPM will try to verify on each loop in the nest that
LoopSimplify holds but the now-Function-pass cannot distinguish what
loop is being verified and so must try to verify all of them. The inner
most loop is clearly no longer simplified as there is a pass which
didn't even *attempt* to preserve it. =/ Once I get LCSSA out (and maybe
LoopVectorize and some other fixes) I'll be able to re-enable this check
and catch any places where we are still failing to preserve
LoopSimplify. If this causes problems I can back this out and try to
commit *all* of this at once, but so far this seems to work and allow
much more incremental progress.

llvm-svn: 199884
2014-01-23 11:23:19 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 84de61148b Handle an addrspacecast case in memcpyopt
llvm-svn: 199836
2014-01-22 21:53:19 +00:00
Tim Northover bc6659c4e9 Loop strength reduce: fix function name.
llvm-svn: 199801
2014-01-22 13:27:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4de315430c [SROA] Fix a bug which could cause the common type finding to return
inconsistent results for different orderings of alloca slices. The
fundamental issue is that it is just always a mistake to return early
from this function. There is no effective early exit to leverage. This
patch stops trynig to do so and simplifies the code a bit as
a consequence.

Original diagnosis and patch by James Molloy with some name tweaks by me
in part reflecting feedback from Duncan Smith on the mailing list.

llvm-svn: 199771
2014-01-21 23:16:05 +00:00
Owen Anderson 1664dc8973 Fix all the remaining lost-fast-math-flags bugs I've been able to find. The most important of these are cases in the generic logic for combining BinaryOperators.
This logic hadn't been updated to handle FastMathFlags, and it took me a while to detect it because it doesn't show up in a simple search for CreateFAdd.

llvm-svn: 199629
2014-01-20 07:44:53 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer b80e1699b3 InstCombine: Modernize a bunch of cast combines.
Also make them vector-aware.

llvm-svn: 199608
2014-01-19 20:05:13 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 970f4959d4 InstCombine: Hoist 3 copies of AddOne/SubOne into a header.
llvm-svn: 199605
2014-01-19 16:56:10 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 7a74bd4703 InstCombine: Replace a hand-rolled version of isKnownToBeAPowerOfTwo with the real thing.
llvm-svn: 199604
2014-01-19 16:48:41 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 72196f3ae5 InstCombine: Teach most integer add/sub/mul/div combines how to deal with vectors.
llvm-svn: 199602
2014-01-19 15:24:22 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 76b15d04ff InstCombine: Refactor fmul/fdiv combines to handle vectors.
llvm-svn: 199598
2014-01-19 13:36:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1bf38c6a71 Fix a really nasty SROA bug with how we handled out-of-bounds memcpy
intrinsics.

Reported on the list by Evan with a couple of attempts to fix, but it
took a while to dig down to the root cause. There are two overlapping
bugs here, both centering around the circumstance of discovering
a memcpy operand which is known to be completely outside the bounds of
the alloca.

First, we need to kill the *other* side of the memcpy if it was added to
this alloca. Otherwise we'll factor it into our slicing and try to
rewrite it even though we know for a fact that it is dead. This is made
more tricky because we can visit the sides in either order. So we have
to both kill the other side and skip instructions marked as dead. The
latter really should be goodness in every case, but here is a matter of
correctness.

Second, we need to actually remove the *uses* of the alloca by the
memcpy when queuing it for later deletion. Otherwise it may still be
using the alloca when we go to promote it (if the rewrite re-uses the
existing alloca instruction). Do this by factoring out the
use-clobbering used when for nixing a Phi argument and re-using it
across the operands of a to-be-deleted instruction.

llvm-svn: 199590
2014-01-19 12:16:54 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer cc742dd9e4 LoopVectorizer: A reduction that has multiple uses of the reduction value is not
a reduction.

Really. Under certain circumstances (the use list of an instruction has to be
set up right - hence the extra pass in the test case) we would not recognize
when a value in a potential reduction cycle was used multiple times by the
reduction cycle.

Fixes PR18526.
radar://15851149

llvm-svn: 199570
2014-01-19 03:18:31 +00:00
Nick Lewycky a6a17d77d2 Don't refuse to transform constexpr(call(arg, ...)) to call(constexpr(arg), ...)) just because the function has multiple return values even if their return types are the same. Patch by Eduard Burtescu!
llvm-svn: 199564
2014-01-18 22:47:12 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer fea9ac99b0 InstCombine: Make the (fmul X, -1.0) -> (fsub -0.0, X) transform handle vectors too.
PR18532.

llvm-svn: 199553
2014-01-18 16:43:14 +00:00
Owen Anderson 48b842ef7c Fix more instances of dropped fast math flags when optimizing FADD instructions. All found by inspection (aka grep).
llvm-svn: 199528
2014-01-18 00:48:14 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 714c67c31e [asan] extend asan-coverage (still experimental).
- add a mode for collecting per-block coverage (-asan-coverage=2).
   So far the implementation is naive (all blocks are instrumented),
   the performance overhead on top of asan could be as high as 30%.
 - Make sure the one-time calls to __sanitizer_cov are moved to function buttom,
   which in turn required to copy the original debug info into the call insn.

Here is the performance data on SPEC 2006
(train data, comparing asan with asan-coverage={0,1,2}):

                             asan+cov0     asan+cov1      diff 0-1    asan+cov2       diff 0-2      diff 1-2
       400.perlbench,        65.60,        65.80,         1.00,        76.20,         1.16,         1.16
           401.bzip2,        65.10,        65.50,         1.01,        75.90,         1.17,         1.16
             403.gcc,         1.64,         1.69,         1.03,         2.04,         1.24,         1.21
             429.mcf,        21.90,        22.60,         1.03,        23.20,         1.06,         1.03
           445.gobmk,       166.00,       169.00,         1.02,       205.00,         1.23,         1.21
           456.hmmer,        88.30,        87.90,         1.00,        91.00,         1.03,         1.04
           458.sjeng,       210.00,       222.00,         1.06,       258.00,         1.23,         1.16
      462.libquantum,         1.73,         1.75,         1.01,         2.11,         1.22,         1.21
         464.h264ref,       147.00,       152.00,         1.03,       160.00,         1.09,         1.05
         471.omnetpp,       115.00,       116.00,         1.01,       140.00,         1.22,         1.21
           473.astar,       133.00,       131.00,         0.98,       142.00,         1.07,         1.08
       483.xalancbmk,       118.00,       120.00,         1.02,       154.00,         1.31,         1.28
            433.milc,        19.80,        20.00,         1.01,        20.10,         1.02,         1.01
            444.namd,        16.20,        16.20,         1.00,        17.60,         1.09,         1.09
          447.dealII,        41.80,        42.20,         1.01,        43.50,         1.04,         1.03
          450.soplex,         7.51,         7.82,         1.04,         8.25,         1.10,         1.05
          453.povray,        14.00,        14.40,         1.03,        15.80,         1.13,         1.10
             470.lbm,        33.30,        34.10,         1.02,        34.10,         1.02,         1.00
         482.sphinx3,        12.40,        12.30,         0.99,        13.00,         1.05,         1.06

llvm-svn: 199488
2014-01-17 11:00:30 +00:00
Quentin Colombet dc0b2ea2bc [opt][PassInfo] Allow opt to run passes that need target machine.
When registering a pass, a pass can now specify a second construct that takes as
argument a pointer to TargetMachine.
The PassInfo class has been updated to reflect that possibility.
If such a constructor exists opt will use it instead of the default constructor
when instantiating the pass.

Since such IR passes are supposed to be rare, no specific support has been
added to this commit to allow an easy registration of such a pass.
In other words, for such pass, the initialization function has to be
hand-written (see CodeGenPrepare for instance).

Now, codegenprepare can be tested using opt:
opt -codegenprepare -mtriple=mytriple input.ll

llvm-svn: 199430
2014-01-16 21:44:34 +00:00
Owen Anderson e7321660c1 Fix two cases where we could lose fast math flags when optimizing FADD expressions.
llvm-svn: 199427
2014-01-16 21:26:02 +00:00
Owen Anderson 4557a156e3 Fix an instance where we would drop fast math flags when performing an fdiv to reciprocal multiply transformation.
llvm-svn: 199425
2014-01-16 21:07:52 +00:00
Owen Anderson e8537fc7e0 Fix a bug in InstCombine where we failed to preserve fast math flags when optimizing an FMUL expression.
llvm-svn: 199424
2014-01-16 20:59:41 +00:00
Owen Anderson f74cfe031f Teach InstCombine that (fmul X, -1.0) can be simplified to (fneg X), which LLVM expresses as (fsub -0.0, X).
llvm-svn: 199420
2014-01-16 20:36:42 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 13665367a0 [asan] Remove -fsanitize-address-zero-base-shadow command line
flag from clang, and disable zero-base shadow support on all platforms
where it is not the default behavior.

- It is completely unused, as far as we know.
- It is ABI-incompatible with non-zero-base shadow, which means all
objects in a process must be built with the same setting. Failing to
do so results in a segmentation fault at runtime.
- It introduces a backward dependency of compiler-rt on user code,
which is uncommon and complicates testing.

This is the LLVM part of a larger change.

llvm-svn: 199371
2014-01-16 10:19:12 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 4744ac1733 Switch-to-lookup tables: set threshold to 3 cases
There has been an old FIXME to find the right cut-off for when it's worth
analyzing and potentially transforming a switch to a lookup table.

The switches always have two or more cases. I could not measure any speed-up
by transforming a switch with two cases. A switch with three cases gets a nice
speed-up, and I couldn't measure any compile-time regression, so I think this
is the right threshold.

In a Clang self-host, this causes 480 new switches to be transformed,
and reduces the final binary size with 8 KB.

llvm-svn: 199294
2014-01-15 05:00:27 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer dc4c9460a2 LoopVectorize: Only strip casts from integer types when replacing symbolic
strides

Fixes PR18480.

llvm-svn: 199291
2014-01-15 03:35:46 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 2d353d1a10 Do pointer cast simplifications on addrspacecast
llvm-svn: 199254
2014-01-14 20:00:45 +00:00
Matt Arsenault f08a44f903 Remove a check for an illegal condition.
Bitcasts can't be between address spaces anymore.

llvm-svn: 199253
2014-01-14 19:56:57 +00:00
Matt Arsenault e55a2c2e6b Make nocapture analysis work with addrspacecast
llvm-svn: 199246
2014-01-14 19:11:52 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 93be7c4fb3 Reapply "LTO: add API to set strategy for -internalize"
Reapply r199191, reverted in r199197 because it carelessly broke
Other/link-opts.ll.  The problem was that calling
createInternalizePass("main") would select
createInternalizePass(bool("main")) instead of
createInternalizePass(ArrayRef<const char *>("main")).  This commit
fixes the bug.

The original commit message follows.

Add API to LTOCodeGenerator to specify a strategy for the -internalize
pass.

This is a new attempt at Bill's change in r185882, which he reverted in
r188029 due to problems with the gold linker.  This puts the onus on the
linker to decide whether (and what) to internalize.

In particular, running internalize before outputting an object file may
change a 'weak' symbol into an internal one, even though that symbol
could be needed by an external object file --- e.g., with arclite.

This patch enables three strategies:

- LTO_INTERNALIZE_FULL: the default (and the old behaviour).
- LTO_INTERNALIZE_NONE: skip -internalize.
- LTO_INTERNALIZE_HIDDEN: only -internalize symbols with hidden
  visibility.

LTO_INTERNALIZE_FULL should be used when linking an executable.

Outputting an object file (e.g., via ld -r) is more complicated, and
depends on whether hidden symbols should be internalized.  E.g., for
ld -r, LTO_INTERNALIZE_NONE can be used when -keep_private_externs, and
LTO_INTERNALIZE_HIDDEN can be used otherwise.  However,
LTO_INTERNALIZE_FULL is inappropriate, since the output object file will
eventually need to link with others.

lto_codegen_set_internalize_strategy() sets the strategy for subsequent
calls to lto_codegen_write_merged_modules() and lto_codegen_compile*().

<rdar://problem/14334895>

llvm-svn: 199244
2014-01-14 18:52:17 +00:00
Nico Rieck 7157bb765e Decouple dllexport/dllimport from linkage
Representing dllexport/dllimport as distinct linkage types prevents using
these attributes on templates and inline functions.

Instead of introducing further mixed linkage types to include linkonce and
weak ODR, the old import/export linkage types are replaced with a new
separate visibility-like specifier:

  define available_externally dllimport void @f() {}
  @Var = dllexport global i32 1, align 4

Linkage for dllexported globals and functions is now equal to their linkage
without dllexport. Imported globals and functions must be either
declarations with external linkage, or definitions with
AvailableExternallyLinkage.

llvm-svn: 199218
2014-01-14 15:22:47 +00:00
Nico Rieck 9d2e0df049 Revert "Decouple dllexport/dllimport from linkage"
Revert this for now until I fix an issue in Clang with it.

This reverts commit r199204.

llvm-svn: 199207
2014-01-14 12:38:32 +00:00
Nico Rieck e43aaf7967 Decouple dllexport/dllimport from linkage
Representing dllexport/dllimport as distinct linkage types prevents using
these attributes on templates and inline functions.

Instead of introducing further mixed linkage types to include linkonce and
weak ODR, the old import/export linkage types are replaced with a new
separate visibility-like specifier:

  define available_externally dllimport void @f() {}
  @Var = dllexport global i32 1, align 4

Linkage for dllexported globals and functions is now equal to their linkage
without dllexport. Imported globals and functions must be either
declarations with external linkage, or definitions with
AvailableExternallyLinkage.

llvm-svn: 199204
2014-01-14 11:55:03 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 23c0ab53b2 Revert r199191, "LTO: add API to set strategy for -internalize"
Please update also Other/link-opts.ll, in next time.

llvm-svn: 199197
2014-01-14 09:40:18 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 43ea3478bf LTO: add API to set strategy for -internalize
Add API to LTOCodeGenerator to specify a strategy for the -internalize
pass.

This is a new attempt at Bill's change in r185882, which he reverted in
r188029 due to problems with the gold linker.  This puts the onus on the
linker to decide whether (and what) to internalize.

In particular, running internalize before outputting an object file may
change a 'weak' symbol into an internal one, even though that symbol
could be needed by an external object file --- e.g., with arclite.

This patch enables three strategies:

- LTO_INTERNALIZE_FULL: the default (and the old behaviour).
- LTO_INTERNALIZE_NONE: skip -internalize.
- LTO_INTERNALIZE_HIDDEN: only -internalize symbols with hidden
  visibility.

LTO_INTERNALIZE_FULL should be used when linking an executable.

Outputting an object file (e.g., via ld -r) is more complicated, and
depends on whether hidden symbols should be internalized.  E.g., for
ld -r, LTO_INTERNALIZE_NONE can be used when -keep_private_externs, and
LTO_INTERNALIZE_HIDDEN can be used otherwise.  However,
LTO_INTERNALIZE_FULL is inappropriate, since the output object file will
eventually need to link with others.

lto_codegen_set_internalize_strategy() sets the strategy for subsequent
calls to lto_codegen_write_merged_modules() and lto_codegen_compile*().

<rdar://problem/14334895>

llvm-svn: 199191
2014-01-14 06:37:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 73523021d0 [PM] Split DominatorTree into a concrete analysis result object which
can be used by both the new pass manager and the old.

This removes it from any of the virtual mess of the pass interfaces and
lets it derive cleanly from the DominatorTreeBase<> template. In turn,
tons of boilerplate interface can be nuked and it turns into a very
straightforward extension of the base DominatorTree interface.

The old analysis pass is now a simple wrapper. The names and style of
this split should match the split between CallGraph and
CallGraphWrapperPass. All of the users of DominatorTree have been
updated to match using many of the same tricks as with CallGraph. The
goal is that the common type remains the resulting DominatorTree rather
than the pass. This will make subsequent work toward the new pass
manager significantly easier.

Also in numerous places things became cleaner because I switched from
re-running the pass (!!! mid way through some other passes run!!!) to
directly recomputing the domtree.

llvm-svn: 199104
2014-01-13 13:07:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e509db410a [PM] Pull the generic graph algorithms and data structures for dominator
trees into the Support library.

These are all expressed in terms of the generic GraphTraits and CFG,
with no reliance on any concrete IR types. Putting them in support
clarifies that and makes the fact that the static analyzer in Clang uses
them much more sane. When moving the Dominators.h file into the IR
library I claimed that this was the right home for it but not something
I planned to work on. Oops.

So why am I doing this? It happens to be one step toward breaking the
requirement that IR verification can only be performed from inside of
a pass context, which completely blocks the implementation of
verification for the new pass manager infrastructure. Fixing it will
also allow removing the concept of the "preverify" step (WTF???) and
allow the verifier to cleanly flag functions which fail verification in
a way that precludes even computing dominance information. Currently,
that results in a fatal error even when you ask the verifier to not
fatally error. It's awesome like that.

The yak shaving will continue...

llvm-svn: 199095
2014-01-13 10:52:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5ad5f15cff [cleanup] Move the Dominators.h and Verifier.h headers into the IR
directory. These passes are already defined in the IR library, and it
doesn't make any sense to have the headers in Analysis.

Long term, I think there is going to be a much better way to divide
these matters. The dominators code should be fully separated into the
abstract graph algorithm and have that put in Support where it becomes
obvious that evn Clang's CFGBlock's can use it. Then the verifier can
manually construct dominance information from the Support-driven
interface while the Analysis library can provide a pass which both
caches, reconstructs, and supports a nice update API.

But those are very long term, and so I don't want to leave the really
confusing structure until that day arrives.

llvm-svn: 199082
2014-01-13 09:26:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 07baed53e8 Re-sort #include lines again, prior to moving headers around.
llvm-svn: 199080
2014-01-13 08:04:33 +00:00
Hans Wennborg ac114a3ce7 Switch-to-lookup tables: Don't require a result for the default
case when the lookup table doesn't have any holes.

This means we can build a lookup table for switches like this:

  switch (x) {
    case 0: return 1;
    case 1: return 2;
    case 2: return 3;
    case 3: return 4;
    default: exit(1);
  }

The default case doesn't yield a constant result here, but that doesn't matter,
since a default result is only necessary for filling holes in the lookup table,
and this table doesn't have any holes.

This makes us transform 505 more switches in a clang bootstrap, and shaves 164 KB
off the resulting clang binary.

llvm-svn: 199025
2014-01-12 00:44:41 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 66c742aeea LoopVectorizer: Enable strided memory accesses versioning per default
I saw no compile or execution time regressions on x86_64 -mavx -O3.

radar://13075509

llvm-svn: 199015
2014-01-11 20:40:34 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 41c409ce0d LoopVectorize.cpp: Appease MSC16.
Excuse me, I hope msc16 builders would be fine till its end day.
Introduce nullptr then. ;)

llvm-svn: 199001
2014-01-11 09:59:27 +00:00
Diego Novillo 9518b63bfc Extend and simplify the sample profile input file.
1- Use the line_iterator class to read profile files.

2- Allow comments in profile file. Lines starting with '#'
   are completely ignored while reading the profile.

3- Add parsing support for discriminators and indirect call samples.

   Our external profiler can emit more profile information that we are
   currently not handling. This patch does not add new functionality to
   support this information, but it allows profile files to provide it.

   I will add actual support later on (for at least one of these
   features, I need support for DWARF discriminators in Clang).

   A sample line may contain the following additional information:

   Discriminator. This is used if the sampled program was compiled with
   DWARF discriminator support
   (http://wiki.dwarfstd.org/index.php?title=Path_Discriminators). This
   is currently only emitted by GCC and we just ignore it.

   Potential call targets and samples. If present, this line contains a
   call instruction. This models both direct and indirect calls. Each
   called target is listed together with the number of samples. For
   example,

                    130: 7  foo:3  bar:2  baz:7

   The above means that at relative line offset 130 there is a call
   instruction that calls one of foo(), bar() and baz(). With baz()
   being the relatively more frequent call target.

   Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2355

4- Simplify format of profile input file.

   This implements earlier suggestions to simplify the format of the
   sample profile file. The symbol table is not necessary and function
   profiles do not need to know the number of samples in advance.

   Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2419

llvm-svn: 198973
2014-01-10 23:23:51 +00:00
Diego Novillo 0accb3d2bc Propagation of profile samples through the CFG.
This adds a propagation heuristic to convert instruction samples
into branch weights. It implements a similar heuristic to the one
implemented by Dehao Chen on GCC.

The propagation proceeds in 3 phases:

1- Assignment of block weights. All the basic blocks in the function
   are initial assigned the same weight as their most frequently
   executed instruction.

2- Creation of equivalence classes. Since samples may be missing from
   blocks, we can fill in the gaps by setting the weights of all the
   blocks in the same equivalence class to the same weight. To compute
   the concept of equivalence, we use dominance and loop information.
   Two blocks B1 and B2 are in the same equivalence class if B1
   dominates B2, B2 post-dominates B1 and both are in the same loop.

3- Propagation of block weights into edges. This uses a simple
   propagation heuristic. The following rules are applied to every
   block B in the CFG:

   - If B has a single predecessor/successor, then the weight
     of that edge is the weight of the block.

   - If all the edges are known except one, and the weight of the
     block is already known, the weight of the unknown edge will
     be the weight of the block minus the sum of all the known
     edges. If the sum of all the known edges is larger than B's weight,
     we set the unknown edge weight to zero.

   - If there is a self-referential edge, and the weight of the block is
     known, the weight for that edge is set to the weight of the block
     minus the weight of the other incoming edges to that block (if
     known).

Since this propagation is not guaranteed to finalize for every CFG, we
only allow it to proceed for a limited number of iterations (controlled
by -sample-profile-max-propagate-iterations). It currently uses the same
GCC default of 100.

Before propagation starts, the pass builds (for each block) a list of
unique predecessors and successors. This is necessary to handle
identical edges in multiway branches. Since we visit all blocks and all
edges of the CFG, it is cleaner to build these lists once at the start
of the pass.

Finally, the patch fixes the computation of relative line locations.
The profiler emits lines relative to the function header. To discover
it, we traverse the compilation unit looking for the subprogram
corresponding to the function. The line number of that subprogram is the
line where the function begins. That becomes line zero for all the
relative locations.

llvm-svn: 198972
2014-01-10 23:23:46 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer c2e9d759f2 LoopVectorizer: Handle strided memory accesses by versioning
for (i = 0; i < N; ++i)
   A[i * Stride1] += B[i * Stride2];

We take loops like this and check that the symbolic strides 'Strided1/2' are one
and drop to the scalar loop if they are not.

This is currently disabled by default and hidden behind the flag
'enable-mem-access-versioning'.

radar://13075509

llvm-svn: 198950
2014-01-10 18:20:32 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d48cdbf0c3 Put the functionality for printing a value to a raw_ostream as an
operand into the Value interface just like the core print method is.
That gives a more conistent organization to the IR printing interfaces
-- they are all attached to the IR objects themselves. Also, update all
the users.

This removes the 'Writer.h' header which contained only a single function
declaration.

llvm-svn: 198836
2014-01-09 02:29:41 +00:00
Hao Liu 26abebbb2c Fix a bug about generating undef operand when optimising shuffle vector and insert element in instruction combine.
llvm-svn: 198730
2014-01-08 03:06:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9aca918df9 Move the LLVM IR asm writer header files into the IR directory, as they
are part of the core IR library in order to support dumping and other
basic functionality.

Rename the 'Assembly' include directory to 'AsmParser' to match the
library name and the only functionality left their -- printing has been
in the core IR library for quite some time.

Update all of the #includes to match.

All of this started because I wanted to have the layering in good shape
before I started adding support for printing LLVM IR using the new pass
infrastructure, and commandline support for the new pass infrastructure.

llvm-svn: 198688
2014-01-07 12:34:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8a8cd2bab9 Re-sort all of the includes with ./utils/sort_includes.py so that
subsequent changes are easier to review. About to fix some layering
issues, and wanted to separate out the necessary churn.

Also comment and sink the include of "Windows.h" in three .inc files to
match the usage in Memory.inc.

llvm-svn: 198685
2014-01-07 11:48:04 +00:00
Andrew Trick e4a18605e0 Reapply r198654 "indvars: sink truncates outside the loop."
This doesn't seem to have actually broken anything. It was paranoia
on my part. Trying again now that bots are more stable.

This is a follow up of the r198338 commit that added truncates for
lcssa phi nodes. Sinking the truncates below the phis cleans up the
loop and simplifies subsequent analysis within the indvars pass.

llvm-svn: 198678
2014-01-07 06:59:12 +00:00
Andrew Trick 3c0ed08996 Revert "indvars: sink truncates outside the loop."
This reverts commit r198654.

One of the bots reported a SciMark failure.

llvm-svn: 198659
2014-01-07 01:50:58 +00:00
Andrew Trick 0b8e3b2cb4 indvars: sink truncates outside the loop.
This is a follow up of the r198338 commit that added truncates for
lcssa phi nodes. Sinking the truncates below the phis cleans up the
loop and simplifies subsequent analysis within the indvars pass.

llvm-svn: 198654
2014-01-07 01:02:55 +00:00
Andrew Trick b70d9780ac 80 col. comment.
llvm-svn: 198653
2014-01-07 01:02:52 +00:00
Andrew Trick 6796ab424c Reapply r198478 "Fix PR18361: Invalidate LoopDispositions after LoopSimplify hoists things."
Now with a fix for PR18384: ValueHandleBase::ValueIsDeleted.

We need to invalidate SCEV's loop info when we delete a block, even if no values are hoisted.

llvm-svn: 198631
2014-01-06 19:43:14 +00:00
Alp Toker f929e09b10 Add missed cleanup from r198456
All other uses of this macro in LLVM/clang have been moved to the function
definition so follow suite (and the usage advice) here too for consistency.

llvm-svn: 198516
2014-01-04 22:47:48 +00:00
Alp Toker 5e9f3265f8 Revert "Fix PR18361: Invalidate LoopDispositions after LoopSimplify hoists things."
This commit was the source of crasher PR18384:

While deleting: label %for.cond127
An asserting value handle still pointed to this value!
UNREACHABLE executed at llvm/lib/IR/Value.cpp:671!

Reverting to get the builders green, feel free to re-land after fixing up.
(Renato has a handy isolated repro if you need it.)

This reverts commit r198478.

llvm-svn: 198503
2014-01-04 17:00:45 +00:00
Andrew Trick aceac9746d Fix PR18361: Invalidate LoopDispositions after LoopSimplify hoists things.
getSCEV for an ashr instruction creates an intermediate zext
expression when it truncates its operand.

The operand is initially inside the loop, so the narrow zext
expression has a non-loop-invariant loop disposition.

LoopSimplify then runs on an outer loop, hoists the ashr operand, and
properly invalidate the SCEVs that are mapped to value.

The SCEV expression for the ashr is now an AddRec with the hoisted
value as the now loop-invariant start value.

The LoopDisposition of this wide value was properly invalidated during
LoopSimplify.

However, if we later get the ashr SCEV again, we again try to create
the intermediate zext expression. We get the same SCEV that we did
earlier, and it is still cached because it was never mapped to a
Value. When we try to create a new AddRec we abort because we're using
the old non-loop-invariant LoopDisposition.

I don't have a solution for this other than to clear LoopDisposition
when LoopSimplify hoists things.

I think the long-term strategy should be to perform LoopSimplify on
all loops before computing SCEV and before running any loop opts on
individual loops. It's possible we may want to rerun LoopSimplify on
individual loops, but it should rarely do anything, so rarely require
invalidating SCEV.

llvm-svn: 198478
2014-01-04 05:52:49 +00:00
Nico Weber 7408c7066a Add a LLVM_DUMP_METHOD macro.
The motivation is to mark dump methods as used in debug builds so that they can
be called from lldb, but to not do so in release builds so that they can be
dead-stripped.

There's lots of potential follow-up work suggested in the thread
"Should dump methods be LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_USED only in debug builds?" on cfe-dev,
but everyone seems to agreen on this subset.

Macro name chosen by fair coin toss.

llvm-svn: 198456
2014-01-03 22:53:37 +00:00
David Peixotto ea9ba446d5 Fix loop rerolling pass failure with non-consant loop lower bound
The loop rerolling pass was failing with an assertion failure from a
failed cast on loops like this:

  void foo(int *A, int *B, int m, int n) {
    for (int i = m; i < n; i+=4) {
      A[i+0] = B[i+0] * 4;
      A[i+1] = B[i+1] * 4;
      A[i+2] = B[i+2] * 4;
      A[i+3] = B[i+3] * 4;
    }
  }

The code was casting the SCEV-expanded code for the new
induction variable to a phi-node. When the loop had a non-constant
lower bound, the SCEV expander would end the code expansion with an
add insted of a phi node and the cast would fail.

It looks like the cast to a phi node was only needed to get the
induction variable value coming from the backedge to compute the end
of loop condition. This patch changes the loop reroller to compare
the induction variable to the number of times the backedge is taken
instead of the iteration count of the loop. In other words, we stop
the loop when the current value of the induction variable ==
IterationCount-1. Previously, the comparison was comparing the
induction variable value from the next iteration == IterationCount.

This problem only seems to occur on 32-bit targets. For some reason,
the loop is not rerolled on 64-bit targets.

PR18290

llvm-svn: 198425
2014-01-03 17:20:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel decb024c86 Disable compare sinking in CodeGenPrepare when multiple condition registers are available
As noted in the comment above CodeGenPrepare::OptimizeInst, which aggressively
sinks compares to reduce pressure on the condition register(s), for targets
such as PowerPC with multiple condition registers, this may not be the right
thing to do. This adds an HasMultipleConditionRegisters boolean to TLI, and
CodeGenPrepare::OptimizeInst is skipped when HasMultipleConditionRegisters is
true.

This functionality will be used by the PowerPC backend in an upcoming commit.
Especially when the PowerPC backend starts tracking individual condition
register bits as separate allocatable entities (which will happen in this
upcoming commit), this sinking from CodeGenPrepare::OptimizeInst is
significantly suboptimial.

llvm-svn: 198354
2014-01-02 21:13:43 +00:00
Andrew Trick b6bc783060 indvars: cleanup the IV visitor. It does more than gather sext/zext info.
llvm-svn: 198353
2014-01-02 21:12:11 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 461c8e0a8c Delete unread globals through addrspacecast
llvm-svn: 198346
2014-01-02 20:01:43 +00:00
Matt Arsenault da1deabb16 Fix addrspacecast with metadata globals
llvm-svn: 198345
2014-01-02 19:53:49 +00:00
Andrew Trick 020dd898fc indvars: insert truncate at loop boundary to avoid redundant IVs.
When widening an IV to remove s/zext, we generally try to eliminate
the original narrow IV. However, LCSSA phi nodes outside the loop were
still using the original IV. Clean this up more aggressively to avoid
redundancy in generated code.

llvm-svn: 198338
2014-01-02 19:29:38 +00:00
Nico Weber 1226531099 Set LLVM_EXPORTED_SYMBOL_FILE in CMakeLists whose corresponding Makefiles do so.
(unittests/ExecutionEngine/JIT/CMakeLists.txt is still missing for now, since
it handles export files in a strange way: It generates a .exports file from a
.def file instead of the other way round.)

llvm-svn: 198183
2013-12-29 23:06:49 +00:00
Alexander Potapenko 4f0335f863 [ASan] Fix the test for __asan_gen_ globals and actually fix http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17976
by setting the correct linkage (as stated in the bug).

llvm-svn: 198018
2013-12-25 16:46:27 +00:00
Alexander Potapenko daf96ae81b [ASan] Make sure none of the __asan_gen_ global strings end up in the symbol table, add a test.
This should fix http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17976
Another test checking for the global variables' locations and prefixes on Darwin will be committed separately.

llvm-svn: 198017
2013-12-25 14:22:15 +00:00
Andrew Trick 0ba77a0740 Add support to indvars for optimizing sadd.with.overflow.
Split sadd.with.overflow into add + sadd.with.overflow to allow
analysis and optimization. This should ideally be done after
InstCombine, which can perform code motion (eventually indvars should
run after all canonical instcombines). We want ISEL to recombine the
add and the check, at least on x86.

This is currently under an option for reducing live induction
variables: -liv-reduce. The next step is reducing liveness of IVs that
are live out of the overflow check paths. Once the related
optimizations are fully developed, reviewed and tested, I do expect
this to become default.

llvm-svn: 197926
2013-12-23 23:31:49 +00:00
Richard Sandiford 1fb5c13e3a Fix Scalarizer insertion point when replacing PHIs with insertelements
If the Scalarizer scalarized a vector PHI but could not scalarize
all uses of it, it would insert a series of insertelements to reconstruct
the vector PHI value from the scalar ones.  The problem was that it would
emit these insertelements immediately after the PHI, even if there were
other PHIs after it.

llvm-svn: 197909
2013-12-23 14:51:56 +00:00
Richard Sandiford 3548cbb980 Fix Scalarizer handling of vector GEPs with multiple index operands
The old code only worked for one index operand.  Also handle "inbounds".

llvm-svn: 197908
2013-12-23 14:45:00 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 530e207d8a [asan] don't unpoison redzones on function exit in use-after-return mode.
Summary:
Before this change the instrumented code before Ret instructions looked like:
  <Unpoison Frame Redzones>
  if (Frame != OriginalFrame) // I.e. Frame is fake
     <Poison Complete Frame>

Now the instrumented code looks like:
  if (Frame != OriginalFrame) // I.e. Frame is fake
     <Poison Complete Frame>
  else
     <Unpoison Frame Redzones>

Reviewers: eugenis

Reviewed By: eugenis

CC: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2458

llvm-svn: 197907
2013-12-23 14:15:08 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany ff7bde1582 [asan] produce fewer stores when poisoning stack shadow
llvm-svn: 197904
2013-12-23 09:24:36 +00:00
Justin Bogner 0ba3f211c4 Transforms: Don't create bad weights when eliminating dead cases
If we happen to eliminate every case in a switch that has branch
weights, we currently try to create metadata for the one remaining
branch, triggering an assert. Instead, we need to check that the
metadata we're trying to create is sensible.

llvm-svn: 197791
2013-12-20 08:21:30 +00:00
Kay Tiong Khoo e37d52095e Stay classy (and legal) LLVM. Remove links to 3rd party SMT solver whose links may not be permanent.
llvm-svn: 197713
2013-12-19 18:35:54 +00:00
Kay Tiong Khoo a570b5adb5 Improved fix for PR17827 (instcombine of shift/and/compare).
This change fixes the case of arithmetic shift right - do not attempt to fold that case.
This change also relaxes the conditions when attempting to fold the logical shift right and shift left cases.

No additional IR-level test cases included at this time. See http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17827 for proofs that these are correct transformations.

llvm-svn: 197705
2013-12-19 18:07:17 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov a284e559d7 [dfsan] Simplify code after r197677.
llvm-svn: 197679
2013-12-19 14:37:03 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov a9164e9e2a Add an explicit insert point argument to SplitBlockAndInsertIfThen.
Currently SplitBlockAndInsertIfThen requires that branch condition is an
Instruction itself, which is very inconvenient, because it is sometimes an
Operator, or even a Constant.

llvm-svn: 197677
2013-12-19 13:29:56 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 50b8302c55 LoopVectorizer: Don't if-convert constant expressions that can trap
A phi node operand or an instruction operand could be a constant expression that
can trap (division). Check that we don't vectorize such cases.

PR16729
radar://15653590

llvm-svn: 197449
2013-12-17 01:11:01 +00:00
Yi Jiang 6ab044ee35 Enable double to float shrinking optimizations for binary functions like 'fmin/fmax'. Fix radar:15283121
llvm-svn: 197434
2013-12-16 22:42:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel f59fd7dcb4 Fix a use-after-free error in GlobalOpt CleanupConstantGlobalUsers
GlobalOpt's CleanupConstantGlobalUsers function uses a worklist array to manage
constant users to be visited. The pointers in this array need to be weak
handles because when we delete a constant array, we may also be holding a
pointer to one of its elements (or an element of one of its elements if we're
dealing with an array of arrays) in the worklist.

Fixes PR17347.

llvm-svn: 197178
2013-12-12 20:45:24 +00:00
Hal Finkel 26fc4c29c6 Initialize the barrier pass llvm::initializeIPO
The barrier pass is a temporary hack, and should go away soon. Nevertheless, if
we don't initialize it, then opt will not understand -barrier, and this will
break bugpoint (because when it dumps the passes from the default pass manager
-barrier will be there).

llvm-svn: 197177
2013-12-12 20:45:08 +00:00
Yi Jiang f92a574246 Resubmit r196544: Apply transformation on OS X 10.9+ and iOS 7.0+: pow(10, x) ―> __exp10(x)
llvm-svn: 197109
2013-12-12 01:55:04 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 8bc9bfaa5a Prune redundant dependencies in LLVMBuild.txt.
llvm-svn: 196988
2013-12-11 00:30:57 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 30b2a9a59f [asan] Fix the coverage.cc test broken by r196939
It was failing because ASan was adding all of the following to one
function:
- dynamic alloca
- stack realignment
- inline asm

This patch avoids making the static alloca dynamic when coverage is
used.

ASan should probably not be inserting empty inline asm blobs to inhibit
duplicate tail elimination.

llvm-svn: 196973
2013-12-10 21:49:28 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 396d4d3c7e Add proper dependencies to LLVMBuild.txt in llvm/lib.
I'll prune redundant deps in LLVMBuild.txt, later.

llvm-svn: 196881
2013-12-10 05:39:34 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi e3afe2ef62 Whitespaces.
llvm-svn: 196880
2013-12-10 05:39:12 +00:00
Justin Bogner a41a7b3ee5 Transforms: Don't create bad branch weights when folding a switch
This avoids creating branch weight metadata of length one when we fold
cases into the default of a switch instruction, which was triggering
an assert.

llvm-svn: 196845
2013-12-10 00:13:41 +00:00
Manman Ren 2e06c8c777 Revert 196544 due to internal bot failures.
llvm-svn: 196732
2013-12-08 20:28:33 +00:00
Mark Seaborn 1b3dd3527e Fix inlining to not lose the "cleanup" clause from landingpads
This fixes PR17872.  This bug can lead to C++ destructors not being
called when they should be, when an exception is thrown.

llvm-svn: 196711
2013-12-08 00:51:21 +00:00
Mark Seaborn ef3dbb93ec Fix inlining to not produce duplicate landingpad clauses
Before this change, inlining one "invoke" into an outer "invoke" call
site can lead to the outer landingpad's catch/filter clauses being
copied multiple times into the resulting landingpad.  This happens:

 * when the inlined function contains multiple "resume" instructions,
   because forwardResume() copies the clauses but is called multiple
   times;

 * when the inlined function contains a "resume" and a "call", because
   HandleCallsInBlockInlinedThroughInvoke() copies the clauses but is
   redundant with forwardResume().

Fix this by deduplicating the code.

This problem doesn't lead to any incorrect execution; it's only
untidy.

This change will make fixing PR17872 a little easier.

llvm-svn: 196710
2013-12-08 00:50:58 +00:00
Jakub Staszak 3ab283c157 Don't #include heavy Dominators.h file in LoopInfo.h. This change reduces
overall time of LLVM compilation by ~1%.

llvm-svn: 196667
2013-12-07 21:20:17 +00:00
Matt Arsenault bbf18c6958 Fix assert with copy from global through addrspacecast
llvm-svn: 196638
2013-12-07 02:58:45 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith ce5f93efd5 Don't use isNullValue to evaluate ConstantExpr
ConstantExpr can evaluate to false even when isNullValue gives false.

Fixes PR18143.

llvm-svn: 196611
2013-12-06 21:48:36 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 152d48d360 [asan] fix ndebug build with strict warnings (-Wunused-variable)
llvm-svn: 196574
2013-12-06 09:26:09 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 4fb7801b3f [asan] rewrite asan's stack frame layout
Summary:
Rewrite asan's stack frame layout.
First, most of the stack layout logic is moved into a separte file
to make it more testable and (potentially) useful for other projects.
Second, make the frames more compact by using adaptive redzones
(smaller for small objects, larger for large objects).
Third, try to minimized gaps due to large alignments (this is hypothetical since
today we don't see many stack vars aligned by more than 32).

The frames indeed become more compact, but I'll still need to run more benchmarks
before committing, but I am sking for review now to get early feedback.

This change will be accompanied by a trivial change in compiler-rt tests
to match the new frame sizes.

Reviewers: samsonov, dvyukov

Reviewed By: samsonov

CC: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2324

llvm-svn: 196568
2013-12-06 09:00:17 +00:00
Yi Jiang 01cfa94212 Apply transformation on OS X 10.9+ and iOS 7.0+: pow(10, x) ―> __exp10(x)
llvm-svn: 196544
2013-12-05 22:42:50 +00:00
Renato Golin 729a3ae90a Add #pragma vectorize enable/disable to LLVM
The intended behaviour is to force vectorization on the presence
of the flag (either turn on or off), and to continue the behaviour
as expected in its absence. Tests were added to make sure the all
cases are covered in opt. No tests were added in other tools with
the assumption that they should use the PassManagerBuilder in the
same way.

This patch also removes the outdated -late-vectorize flag, which was
on by default and not helping much.

The pragma metadata is being attached to the same place as other loop
metadata, but nothing forbids one from attaching it to a function
(to enable #pragma optimize) or basic blocks (to hint the basic-block
vectorizers), etc. The logic should be the same all around.

Patches to Clang to produce the metadata will be produced after the
initial implementation is agreed upon and committed. Patches to other
vectorizers (such as SLP and BB) will be added once we're happy with
the pass manager changes.

llvm-svn: 196537
2013-12-05 21:20:02 +00:00
Michael Gottesman 2bf0173b16 Change std::deque => std::vector. No functionality change.
There is no reason to use std::deque here over std::vector. Thus given the
performance differences inbetween the two it makes sense to change deque to
vector.

llvm-svn: 196524
2013-12-05 18:42:12 +00:00
Rafael Espindola cdbde3aacc Fix non-deterministic behavior.
We use CSEBlocks to initialize a worklist:

SmallVector<BasicBlock *, 8> CSEWorkList(CSEBlocks.begin(), CSEBlocks.end());

so it must have a deterministic order.

llvm-svn: 196520
2013-12-05 18:28:01 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 7ee53cac80 SLPVectorizer: An in-tree vectorized entry cannot also be a scalar external use
We were creating external uses for scalar values in MustGather entries that also
had a ScalarToTreeEntry (they also are present in a vectorized tuple). This
meant we would keep a value 'alive' as a scalar and vectorized causing havoc.
This is not necessary because when we create a MustGather vector we explicitly
create external uses entries for the insertelement instructions of the
MustGather vector elements.

Fixes PR18129.

radar://15582184

llvm-svn: 196508
2013-12-05 15:14:40 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 2460c3fc73 [tsan] fix PR18146: sometimes a variable written into vptr could have an integer type (after other optimizations)
llvm-svn: 196507
2013-12-05 15:03:02 +00:00
Alp Toker f907b891da Correct word hyphenations
This patch tries to avoid unrelated changes other than fixing a few
hyphen-related ambiguities and contractions in nearby lines.

llvm-svn: 196471
2013-12-05 05:44:44 +00:00
Yuchen Wu c15bf89122 llvm-cov: Replace size() with empty() in bool check.
llvm-svn: 196400
2013-12-04 19:18:23 +00:00
Daniel Jasper 87a24d5c27 Un-revert r196358: "llvm-cov: Added support for function checksums."
And add the proper fix.

llvm-svn: 196367
2013-12-04 08:57:17 +00:00
Daniel Jasper c176b5d1d6 Revert r196358: "llvm-cov: Added support for function checksums."
This currently breaks clang/test/CodeGen/code-coverage.c. The root cause
is that the newly introduced access to Funcs[j] is out of bounds.

llvm-svn: 196365
2013-12-04 08:23:33 +00:00
Yuchen Wu 06655f3570 llvm-cov: Added support for function checksums.
The function checksums are hashed from the concatenation of the function
name and line number.

llvm-svn: 196358
2013-12-04 06:00:17 +00:00
Yunzhong Gao 9163e8bce6 Teach the internalize pass to skip dllexported symbols because they could be
referenced in a way that even the linker does not see.

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2280

llvm-svn: 196300
2013-12-03 18:05:14 +00:00
Kay Tiong Khoo d7b00cac10 Use local variable for repeated use rather than 'get' method. No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 196164
2013-12-02 22:23:32 +00:00
Kay Tiong Khoo 64b732005f Move variables to where they are used and give them better names. No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 196163
2013-12-02 22:20:40 +00:00
Kay Tiong Khoo 564560f911 Rename variables to be consistent (CST -> Cst). No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 196161
2013-12-02 22:11:56 +00:00
Mark Seaborn d91fa22b06 InlineFunction.cpp: Remove a return value that is always false
Remove some associated dead code.

This cleanup is associated with PR17872.

llvm-svn: 196147
2013-12-02 20:50:59 +00:00
Kay Tiong Khoo 5389f74655 Conservative fix for PR17827 - don't optimize a shift + and + compare sequence where the shift is logical unless the comparison is unsigned
llvm-svn: 196129
2013-12-02 18:43:59 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 08b9cf56be [tsan] fix instrumentation of vector vptr updates (https://code.google.com/p/thread-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=43)
llvm-svn: 196079
2013-12-02 08:07:15 +00:00
Bill Wendling cbcb02c35a Use accessor methods instead.
llvm-svn: 196006
2013-12-01 03:40:42 +00:00
Bill Wendling 2798f1ef58 Use 'unsigned char' to get this past gcc error message:
error: invalid conversion from 'unsigned char' to '{anonymous}::Sequence'

llvm-svn: 196004
2013-12-01 03:36:07 +00:00
Stephen Canon c454964c47 Rein in overzealous InstCombine of fptrunc(OP(fpextend, fpextend)).
llvm-svn: 195934
2013-11-28 21:38:05 +00:00
Nadav Rotem b0082d246a PR1860 - We can't save a list of ExtractElement instructions to CSE because some of these instructions
may be removed and optimized in future iterations. Instead we save a list of basic blocks that we need to CSE.

llvm-svn: 195791
2013-11-26 22:24:25 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer a2c8e008d2 LoopVectorizer: Truncate i64 trip counts of i32 phis if necessary
In signed arithmetic we could end up with an i64 trip count for an i32 phi.
Because it is signed arithmetic we know that this is only defined if the i32
does not wrap. It is therefore safe to truncate the i64 trip count to a i32
value.

Fixes PR18049.

llvm-svn: 195787
2013-11-26 22:11:23 +00:00
Diego Novillo c0dd1037c8 Refactor some code in SampleProfile.cpp
I'm adding new functionality in the sample profiler. This will
require more data to be kept around for each function, so I moved
the structure SampleProfile that we keep for each function into
a separate class.

There are no functional changes in this patch. It simply provides
a new home where to place all the new data that I need to propagate
weights through edges.

There are some other name and minor edits throughout.

llvm-svn: 195780
2013-11-26 20:37:33 +00:00
Nadav Rotem f9f8482e3a PR18060 - When we RAUW values with ExtractElement instructions in some cases
we generate PHI nodes with multiple entries from the same basic block but
with different values. Enabling CSE on ExtractElement instructions make sure
that all of the RAUWed instructions are the same.

llvm-svn: 195773
2013-11-26 17:29:19 +00:00
Stepan Dyatkovskiy abb8505dc5 PR17925 bugfix.
Short description.

This issue is about case of treating pointers as integers.
We treat pointers as different if they references different address space.
At the same time, we treat pointers equal to integers (with machine address
width). It was a point of false-positive. Consider next case on 32bit machine:

void foo0(i32 addrespace(1)* %p)
void foo1(i32 addrespace(2)* %p)
void foo2(i32 %p)

foo0 != foo1, while
foo1 == foo2 and foo0 == foo2.

As you can see it breaks transitivity. That means that result depends on order
of how functions are presented in module. Next order causes merging of foo0
and foo1: foo2, foo0, foo1
First foo0 will be merged with foo2, foo0 will be erased. Second foo1 will be
merged with foo2.
Depending on order, things could be merged we don't expect to.

The fix:
Forbid to treat any pointer as integer, except for those, who belong to address space 0.

llvm-svn: 195769
2013-11-26 16:11:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6378cf539f [PM] Split the CallGraph out from the ModulePass which creates the
CallGraph.

This makes the CallGraph a totally generic analysis object that is the
container for the graph data structure and the primary interface for
querying and manipulating it. The pass logic is separated into its own
class. For compatibility reasons, the pass provides wrapper methods for
most of the methods on CallGraph -- they all just forward.

This will allow the new pass manager infrastructure to provide its own
analysis pass that constructs the same CallGraph object and makes it
available. The idea is that in the new pass manager, the analysis pass's
'run' method returns a concrete analysis 'result'. Here, that result is
a 'CallGraph'. The 'run' method will typically do only minimal work,
deferring much of the work into the implementation of the result object
in order to be lazy about computing things, but when (like DomTree)
there is *some* up-front computation, the analysis does it prior to
handing the result back to the querying pass.

I know some of this is fairly ugly. I'm happy to change it around if
folks can suggest a cleaner interim state, but there is going to be some
amount of unavoidable ugliness during the transition period. The good
thing is that this is very limited and will naturally go away when the
old pass infrastructure goes away. It won't hang around to bother us
later.

Next up is the initial new-PM-style call graph analysis. =]

llvm-svn: 195722
2013-11-26 04:19:30 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 57458517ef Migrate metadata information from scalar to vector instructions during
SLP vectorization. Based on the code in BBVectorizer.

Fixes PR17741.

Patch by Raul Silvera, reviewed by Hal and Nadav. Reformatted by my
driving of clang-format. =]

llvm-svn: 195528
2013-11-23 00:48:34 +00:00
Yuchen Wu c87ca32163 llvm-cov: Split entry blocks in GCNOProfiling.cpp.
gcov expects every function to contain an entry block that
unconditionally branches into the next block. clang does not implement
basic blocks in this manner, so gcov did not output correct branch info
if the entry block branched to multiple blocks.

This change splits every function's entry block into an empty block and
a block with the rest of the instructions. The instrumentation code will
take care of the rest.

llvm-svn: 195513
2013-11-22 23:07:45 +00:00
Manman Ren cb14bbcc48 Debug Info: move StripDebugInfo from StripSymbols.cpp to DebugInfo.cpp.
We can share the implementation between StripSymbols and dropping debug info
for metadata versions that do not match.

Also update the comments to match the implementation. A follow-on patch will
drop the "Debug Info Version" module flag in StripDebugInfo.

llvm-svn: 195505
2013-11-22 22:06:31 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 6ea0aade26 StructurizeCFG: Fix verification failure with some loops.
If the beginning of the loop was also the entry block
of the function, branches were inserted to the entry block
which isn't allowed. If this occurs, create a new dummy
function entry block that branches to the start of the loop.

llvm-svn: 195493
2013-11-22 19:24:39 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 9fb6e0ba58 StructurizeCFG: Fix inverting a branch on an argument
llvm-svn: 195492
2013-11-22 19:24:37 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 6597992c69 Add a fixed version of r195470 back.
The fix is simply to use CurI instead of I when handling aliases to
avoid accessing a invalid iterator.

original message:

Convert linkonce* to weak* instead of strong.

Also refactor the logic into a helper function. This is an important improve
on mingw where the linker complains about mixed weak and strong symbols.
Converting to weak ensures that the symbol is not dropped, but keeps in a
comdat, making the linker happy.

llvm-svn: 195477
2013-11-22 17:58:12 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 77aa674cc4 Revert "Convert linkonce* to weak* instead of strong."
This reverts commit r195470.
Debugging failure in some bots.

llvm-svn: 195472
2013-11-22 17:09:34 +00:00
Richard Sandiford 8ee1b77de3 Add a Scalarizer pass.
llvm-svn: 195471
2013-11-22 16:58:05 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 5574032575 Convert linkonce* to weak* instead of strong.
Also refactor the logic into a helper function. This is an important improvement
on mingw where the linker complains about mixed weak and strong symbols.
Converting to weak ensures that the symbol is not dropped, but keeps in a
comdat, making the linker happy.

llvm-svn: 195470
2013-11-22 16:14:30 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 1756e1ea92 SLPVectorizer: Fix whitespace errors.
llvm-svn: 195468
2013-11-22 15:47:17 +00:00
Yi Jiang 79a2b0a6d1 SLP Vectorizer: Extract cost will only be added once even if the scalar has multiple external uses.
llvm-svn: 195406
2013-11-22 01:57:02 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 0be79e1ade Introduce two command-line flags for the instrumentation pass to control whether the labels of pointers should be ignored in load and store instructions
The new command line flags are -dfsan-ignore-pointer-label-on-store and -dfsan-ignore-pointer-label-on-load. Their default value matches the current labelling scheme.

Additionally, the function __dfsan_union_load is marked as readonly.

Patch by Lorenzo Martignoni!

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2187

llvm-svn: 195382
2013-11-21 23:20:54 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov cb5bdffc4e [msan] Propagate condition origin in select instruction.
llvm-svn: 195349
2013-11-21 12:00:24 +00:00
Yuchen Wu 2a9d96992d llvm-cov: Don't assume FileChecksum was generated.
For cases where emitProfileArcs() was called but emitProfileNotes() was
not, set the CfgChecksum to 0.

llvm-svn: 195311
2013-11-21 04:53:39 +00:00
Yuchen Wu 664dc7678b llvm-cov: Fixed some bugs related to file checksum.
Added call to update CfgChecksum. Made FileChecksum a vector, separate
for each source file.

llvm-svn: 195309
2013-11-21 04:01:05 +00:00
Yuchen Wu babe749125 llvm-cov: Added file checksum to gcno and gcda files.
Instead of permanently outputting "MVLL" as the file checksum, clang
will create gcno and gcda checksums by hashing the destination block
numbers of every arc. This allows for llvm-cov to check if the two gcov
files are synchronized.

Regenerated the test files so they contain the checksum. Also added
negative test to ensure error when the checksums don't match.

llvm-svn: 195191
2013-11-20 04:15:05 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 8bc4a0ba14 SLPVectorizer: Fix stale for Value pointer array
We are slicing an array of Value pointers and process those slices in a loop.
The problem is that we might invalidate a later slice by vectorizing a former
slice.

Use a WeakVH to track the pointer. If the pointer is deleted or RAUW'ed we can
tell.

The test case will only fail when running with libgmalloc.

radar://15498655

llvm-svn: 195162
2013-11-19 22:20:20 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer 5f7c48ebff SLPVectorizer: Fix whitespace errors
llvm-svn: 195161
2013-11-19 22:20:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a126200665 Fix an issue where SROA computed different results based on the relative
order of slices of the alloca which have exactly the same size and other
properties. This was found by a perniciously unstable sort
implementation used to flush out buggy uses of the algorithm.

The fundamental idea is that findCommonType should return the best
common type it can find across all of the slices in the range. There
were two bugs here previously:

1) We would accept an integer type smaller than a byte-width multiple,
   and if there were different bit-width integer types, we would accept
   the first one. This caused an actual failure in the testcase updated
   here when the sort order changed.
2) If we found a bad combination of types or a non-load, non-store use
   before an integer typed load or store we would bail, but if we found
   the integere typed load or store, we would use it. The correct
   behavior is to always use an integer typed operation which covers the
   partition if one exists.

While a clever debugging sort algorithm found problem #1 in our existing
test cases, I have no useful test case ideas for #2. I spotted in by
inspection when looking at this code.

llvm-svn: 195118
2013-11-19 09:03:18 +00:00
Michael Ilseman d930c19d20 Add support for software expansion of 64-bit integer division instructions.
Patch by Dmitri Shtilman!

llvm-svn: 195116
2013-11-19 06:54:19 +00:00
Adrian Prantl 8e10fdbc0f Debug info: Let LowerDbgDeclare perfom the dbg.declare -> dbg.value
lowering only for load/stores to scalar allocas. The resulting values
confuse the backend and don't add anything because we can describe
array-allocas with a dbg.declare intrinsic just fine.

rdar://problem/15464571

llvm-svn: 195052
2013-11-18 23:04:38 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov a788b940f7 [ASan] Fix PR17867 - make sure ASan doesn't crash if use-after-scope and use-after-return are combined.
llvm-svn: 195014
2013-11-18 14:53:55 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer b72cb4ec49 LoopVectorizer: Extend the induction variable to a larger type
In some case the loop exit count computation can overflow. Extend the type to
prevent most of those cases.

The problem is loops like:
int main ()
{
  int a = 1;
  char b = 0;
  lbl:
    a &= 4;
    b--;
    if (b) goto lbl;
  return a;
}

The backedge count is 255. The induction variable type is i8. If we add one to
255 to get the exit count we overflow to zero.

To work around this issue we extend the type of the induction variable to i32 in
the case of i8 and i16.

PR17532

llvm-svn: 195008
2013-11-18 13:14:32 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi f9c8339a4e Utils/LoopUnroll.cpp: Tweak (StringRef)OldName to be valid until it is used, since r194601.
eraseFromParent() invalidates OldName.

llvm-svn: 194970
2013-11-17 18:05:34 +00:00
Hal Finkel 29aeb20518 Add a loop rerolling flag to the PassManagerBuilder
This adds a boolean member variable to the PassManagerBuilder to control loop
rerolling (just like we have for unrolling and the various vectorization
options). This is necessary for control by the frontend. Loop rerolling remains
disabled by default at all optimization levels.

llvm-svn: 194966
2013-11-17 16:02:50 +00:00
Hal Finkel 66cd3f1ba3 Add the cold attribute to error-reporting call sites
Generally speaking, control flow paths with error reporting calls are cold.
So far, error reporting calls are calls to perror and calls to fprintf,
fwrite, etc. with stderr as the stream. This can be extended in the future.

The primary motivation is to improve block placement (the cold attribute
affects the static branch prediction heuristics).

llvm-svn: 194943
2013-11-17 02:06:35 +00:00
Hal Finkel 67107ea1af Fix ndebug-build unused variable in loop rerolling
llvm-svn: 194941
2013-11-17 01:21:54 +00:00
Hal Finkel bf45efde2d Add a loop rerolling pass
This adds a loop rerolling pass: the opposite of (partial) loop unrolling. The
transformation aims to take loops like this:

for (int i = 0; i < 3200; i += 5) {
  a[i]     += alpha * b[i];
  a[i + 1] += alpha * b[i + 1];
  a[i + 2] += alpha * b[i + 2];
  a[i + 3] += alpha * b[i + 3];
  a[i + 4] += alpha * b[i + 4];
}

and turn them into this:

for (int i = 0; i < 3200; ++i) {
  a[i] += alpha * b[i];
}

and loops like this:

for (int i = 0; i < 500; ++i) {
  x[3*i] = foo(0);
  x[3*i+1] = foo(0);
  x[3*i+2] = foo(0);
}

and turn them into this:

for (int i = 0; i < 1500; ++i) {
  x[i] = foo(0);
}

There are two motivations for this transformation:

  1. Code-size reduction (especially relevant, obviously, when compiling for
code size).

  2. Providing greater choice to the loop vectorizer (and generic unroller) to
choose the unrolling factor (and a better ability to vectorize). The loop
vectorizer can take vector lengths and register pressure into account when
choosing an unrolling factor, for example, and a pre-unrolled loop limits that
choice. This is especially problematic if the manual unrolling was optimized
for a machine different from the current target.

The current implementation is limited to single basic-block loops only. The
rerolling recognition should work regardless of how the loop iterations are
intermixed within the loop body (subject to dependency and side-effect
constraints), but the significant restriction is that the order of the
instructions in each iteration must be identical. This seems sufficient to
capture all current use cases.

This pass is not currently enabled by default at any optimization level.

llvm-svn: 194939
2013-11-16 23:59:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel 12100bf7e8 Apply the InstCombine fptrunc sqrt optimization to llvm.sqrt
InstCombine, in visitFPTrunc, applies the following optimization to sqrt calls:

  (fptrunc (sqrt (fpext x))) -> (sqrtf x)

but does not apply the same optimization to llvm.sqrt. This is a problem
because, to enable vectorization, Clang generates llvm.sqrt instead of sqrt in
fast-math mode, and because this optimization is being applied to sqrt and not
applied to llvm.sqrt, sometimes the fast-math code is slower.

This change makes InstCombine apply this optimization to llvm.sqrt as well.

This fixes the specific problem in PR17758, although the same underlying issue
(optimizations applied to libcalls are not applied to intrinsics) exists for
other optimizations in SimplifyLibCalls.

llvm-svn: 194935
2013-11-16 21:29:08 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 03f3e248eb InstCombine: fold (A >> C) == (B >> C) --> (A^B) < (1 << C) for constant Cs.
This is common in bitfield code.

llvm-svn: 194925
2013-11-16 16:00:48 +00:00
Arnold Schwaighofer dbb7b87d7a LoopVectorizer: Use abi alignment for accesses with no alignment
When we vectorize a scalar access with no alignment specified, we have to set
the target's abi alignment of the scalar access on the vectorized access.
Using the same alignment of zero would be wrong because most targets will have a
bigger abi alignment for vector types.

This probably fixes PR17878.

llvm-svn: 194876
2013-11-15 23:09:33 +00:00
Manman Ren bc37658a7f ArgumentPromotion: correctly transfer TBAA tags and alignments.
We used to use std::map<IndicesVector, LoadInst*> for OriginalLoads, and when we
try to promote two arguments, they will both write to OriginalLoads causing
created loads for the two arguments to have the same original load. And the same
tbaa tag and alignment will be put to the created loads for the two arguments.

The fix is to use std::map<std::pair<Argument*, IndicesVector>, LoadInst*>
for OriginalLoads, so each Argument will write to different parts of the map.

PR17906

llvm-svn: 194846
2013-11-15 20:41:15 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 0604c62d7b [asan] use GlobalValue::PrivateLinkage for coverage guard to save quite a bit of code size
llvm-svn: 194800
2013-11-15 09:52:05 +00:00
Bob Wilson da4147c743 Reapply "[asan] Poor man's coverage that works with ASan"
I was able to successfully run a bootstrapped LTO build of clang with
r194701, so this change does not seem to be the cause of our failing
buildbots.

llvm-svn: 194789
2013-11-15 07:16:09 +00:00
Matt Arsenault a9e95abcbf Add instcombine visitor for addrspacecast
llvm-svn: 194786
2013-11-15 05:45:08 +00:00
Bob Wilson ae73587c4b Revert "[asan] Poor man's coverage that works with ASan"
This reverts commit 194701. Apple's bootstrapped LTO builds have been failing,
and this change (along with compiler-rt 194702-194704) is the only thing on
the blamelist.  I will either reappy these changes or help debug the problem,
depending on whether this fixes the buildbots.

llvm-svn: 194780
2013-11-15 03:28:22 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany 6da3f74061 [asan] Poor man's coverage that works with ASan
llvm-svn: 194701
2013-11-14 13:27:41 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 585813e33d [msan] Fast path optimization for wrap-indirect-calls feature of MemorySanitizer.
Indirect call wrapping helps MSanDR (dynamic instrumentation companion tool
for MSan) to catch all cases where execution leaves a compiler-instrumented
module by allowing the tool to rewrite targets of indirect calls.

This change is an optimization that skips wrapping for calls when target is
inside the current module. This relies on the linker providing symbols at the
begin and end of the module code (or code + data, does not really matter).
Gold linker provides such symbols by default. GNU (BFD) linker needs a link
flag: -Wl,--defsym=__executable_start=0.

More info:
https://code.google.com/p/memory-sanitizer/wiki/MSanDR#Native_exec

llvm-svn: 194697
2013-11-14 12:29:04 +00:00
Jakub Staszak 86a7492f0d Use StringRef instead of std::string
llvm-svn: 194601
2013-11-13 20:09:11 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov aa19c0a1c3 Fix -Wdelete-non-virtual-dtor warnings by making SampleProfile methods non-virtual
llvm-svn: 194568
2013-11-13 13:09:39 +00:00
Diego Novillo 8d6568b56b SampleProfileLoader pass. Initial setup.
This adds a new scalar pass that reads a file with samples generated
by 'perf' during runtime. The samples read from the profile are
incorporated and emmited as IR metadata reflecting that profile.

The profile file is assumed to have been generated by an external
profile source. The profile information is converted into IR metadata,
which is later used by the analysis routines to estimate block
frequencies, edge weights and other related data.

External profile information files have no fixed format, each profiler
is free to define its own. This includes both the on-disk representation
of the profile and the kind of profile information stored in the file.
A common kind of profile is based on sampling (e.g., perf), which
essentially counts how many times each line of the program has been
executed during the run.

The SampleProfileLoader pass is organized as a scalar transformation.
On startup, it reads the file given in -sample-profile-file to
determine what kind of profile it contains.  This file is assumed to
contain profile information for the whole application. The profile
data in the file is read and incorporated into the internal state of
the corresponding profiler.

To facilitate testing, I've organized the profilers to support two file
formats: text and native. The native format is whatever on-disk
representation the profiler wants to support, I think this will mostly
be bitcode files, but it could be anything the profiler wants to
support. To do this, every profiler must implement the
SampleProfile::loadNative() function.

The text format is mostly meant for debugging. Records are separated by
newlines, but each profiler is free to interpret records as it sees fit.
Profilers must implement the SampleProfile::loadText() function.

Finally, the pass will call SampleProfile::emitAnnotations() for each
function in the current translation unit. This function needs to
translate the loaded profile into IR metadata, which the analyzer will
later be able to use.

This patch implements the first steps towards the above design. I've
implemented a sample-based flat profiler. The format of the profile is
fairly simplistic. Each sampled function contains a list of relative
line locations (from the start of the function) together with a count
representing how many samples were collected at that line during
execution. I generate this profile using perf and a separate converter
tool.

Currently, I have only implemented a text format for these profiles. I
am interested in initial feedback to the whole approach before I send
the other parts of the implementation for review.

This patch implements:

- The SampleProfileLoader pass.
- The base ExternalProfile class with the core interface.
- A SampleProfile sub-class using the above interface. The profiler
  generates branch weight metadata on every branch instructions that
  matches the profiles.
- A text loader class to assist the implementation of
  SampleProfile::loadText().
- Basic unit tests for the pass.

Additionally, the patch uses profile information to compute branch
weights based on instruction samples.

This patch converts instruction samples into branch weights. It
does a fairly simplistic conversion:

Given a multi-way branch instruction, it calculates the weight of
each branch based on the maximum sample count gathered from each
target basic block.

Note that this assignment of branch weights is somewhat lossy and can be
misleading. If a basic block has more than one incoming branch, all the
incoming branches will get the same weight. In reality, it may be that
only one of them is the most heavily taken branch.

I will adjust this assignment in subsequent patches.

llvm-svn: 194566
2013-11-13 12:22:21 +00:00
Nadav Rotem ea186b9515 Update the docs to match the function name.
llvm-svn: 194537
2013-11-13 01:12:01 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 0ed2fdb5af Fold (iszero(A&K1) | iszero(A&K2)) -> (A&(K1|K2)) != (K1|K2) if we know that K1 and K2 are 'one-hot' (only one bit is on).
llvm-svn: 194525
2013-11-12 22:38:59 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 53d32211b7 FoldBranchToCommonDest merges branches into a single branch with or/and of the condition. It has a heuristics for estimating when some of the dependencies are processed by out-of-order processors. This patch adds another rule to the heuristics that says that if the "BonusInstruction" that we speculatively execute is used by the condition of the second branch then it is okay to hoist it. This change exposes more opportunities for other passes to transform the code. It does not matter that much that we if-convert the code because the selectiondag builder splits or/and branches into multiple branches when profitable.
llvm-svn: 194524
2013-11-12 22:37:16 +00:00
Rafael Espindola dd8757abbc Corruptly merge constants with explicit and implicit alignments.
Constant merge can merge a constant with implicit alignment with one that has
explicit alignment. Before this change it was assuming that the explicit
alignment was higher than the implicit one, causing the result to be under
aligned in some cases.

Fixes pr17815.

Patch by Chris Smowton!

llvm-svn: 194506
2013-11-12 20:21:43 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 7c30260ab3 SimplifyCFG: Use existing constant folding logic when forming switch tables.
Both simpler and more powerful than the hand-rolled folding logic.

llvm-svn: 194475
2013-11-12 12:24:36 +00:00
Shuxin Yang f1ec34bdfd Correct a glitch in r194424 which may invalidate iterator.
llvm-svn: 194457
2013-11-12 08:33:03 +00:00
Yuchen Wu 062f24c973 llvm-cov: Added call to update run/program counts.
Also updated test files that were generated from this change.

llvm-svn: 194453
2013-11-12 04:59:08 +00:00
Shuxin Yang 3168ab3376 Fix PR17952.
The symptom is that an assertion is triggered. The assertion was added by
me to detect the situation when value is propagated from dead blocks.
(We can certainly get rid of assertion; it is safe to do so, because propagating
 value from dead block to alive join node is certainly ok.)

  The root cause of this bug is : edge-splitting is conducted on the fly,
the edge being split could be a dead edge, therefore the block that 
split the critial edge needs to be flagged "dead" as well.

  There are 3 ways to fix this bug:
  1) Get rid of the assertion as I mentioned eariler 
  2) When an dead edge is split, flag the inserted block "dead".
  3) proactively split the critical edges connecting dead and live blocks when
     new dead blocks are revealed.

  This fix go for 3) with additional 2 LOC.

  Testing case was added by Rafael the other day.

llvm-svn: 194424
2013-11-11 22:00:23 +00:00
Renato Golin 3f67a7de36 Move debug message in vectorizer
No functional change, just better reporting.

llvm-svn: 194388
2013-11-11 16:27:35 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 560e089355 [msan] Propagate origin for insertvalue, extractvalue.
llvm-svn: 194374
2013-11-11 13:37:10 +00:00
Bill Wendling fed6c220ec Revert "Resurrect r191017 " GVN proceeds in the presence of dead code" plus a fix to PR17307 & 17308."
This causes PR17852.

This reverts commit d93e8a06b2ca09ab18f390cd514b7443e2e571f7.

Conflicts:
	test/Transforms/GVN/cond_br2.ll

llvm-svn: 194348
2013-11-10 07:34:34 +00:00