This moves the EnableLinkOnceODROutlining flag from TargetPassConfig.cpp into
MachineOutliner.cpp. It also removes OutlineFromLinkOnceODRs from the
MachineOutliner constructor. This is now handled by the moved command-line
flag.
llvm-svn: 330373
Summary:
Patch adds initial emission of the debug info for NVPTX target.
Currently, only .file and .loc directives are emitted, everything else is
commented out to not break the compilation of Cuda.
Reviewers: echristo, jlebar, tra, jholewinski
Subscribers: mgorny, aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41827
llvm-svn: 330271
Summary:
A change to use divergence analysis in the AMDGPU backend was getting formal
arguments incorrect (not tagged as divergent) unless they were VGPR0, VGPR1 or
VGPR2
For graphics shaders it is possible to have more than these passed in as VGPR
Modified the checking code to check for any VGPR registers passed in as formal
arguments.
Also, some intrinsics that are sources of divergence may have been lowered
during instruction selection and are missed on subsequent calls to
isSDNodeSourceOfDivergence - added the relevant AMDGPUISD checks as well.
Finally, the FunctionLoweringInfo tracks virtual registers that are live across
basic block boundaries. This is used to check for divergence of CopyFromRegister
registers using the DivergenceAnalysis analysis. For multiple blocks the lazily
evaluated inverted map VirtReg2Value was not cleared when the ValueMap map was.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45372
Change-Id: I112f3bd6dfe0f62e63ce9b43b893982778e4bee3
llvm-svn: 330257
Summary:
Previously we crashed for the combination of the two features because we
tried to reference the dwo CU from the main object file. The fix
consists of two items:
- reference the skeleton CU from the name index (the consumer is
expected to use the skeleton CU to find the real data).
- use the main object file string pool for the strings in the index
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45566
llvm-svn: 330249
Summary:
Add an LLVM intrinsic for type discriminated event logging with XRay.
Similar to the existing intrinsic for custom events, but also accepts
a type tag argument to allow plugins to be aware of different types
and semantically interpret logged events they know about without
choking on those they don't.
Relies on a symbol defined in compiler-rt patch D43668. I may wait
to submit before I can see demo everything working together including
a still to come clang patch.
Reviewers: dberris, pelikan, eizan, rSerge, timshen
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45633
llvm-svn: 330219
When emitting CodeView debug information, compiler-generated thunk routines
should be emitted using S_THUNK32 symbols instead of S_GPROC32_ID symbols so
Visual Studio can properly step into the user code. This initial support only
handles standard thunk ordinals.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43838
llvm-svn: 330132
TargetSchedModel now always delegates to MCSchedModel the computation of
instruction latency and reciprocal throughput.
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 330099
This is a transform that I limited in instcombine in rL329821 because it was
creating more instructions in IR when the cast has multiple uses.
But if the cast is free, then we can do the transform regardless of other
uses because it improves the potential throughput of the calculation by
removing a dependency on the fneg.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45598
llvm-svn: 330098
This change is exposing UB in source code - as was warned/predicted. :)
See D44909 for discussion. Reverting while we figure out how to fix things.
llvm-svn: 329920
There are cases when individual NodeSets can be equal with respect to
the ordering criteria. Since they are stored in an ordered container,
use stable_sort to preserve the relative order of equal NodeSets.
This should remove non-determinism discovered by shuffling done in
llvm::sort with expensive checks enabled.
llvm-svn: 329915
Don't assume SelectionDAG is non-null as the targets can use it with a
null pointer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44611
llvm-svn: 329908
This patch makes tryCandidate() virtual and some utility functions like
tryLess(), tryGreater(), ... externally available (used to be static).
This makes it possible for a target to derive a new MachineSchedStrategy from
GenericScheduler and reuse most parts.
It was necessary to wrap functions with the same names in
AMDGPU/SIMachineScheduler in a local namespace.
Review: Andy Trick, Florian Hahn
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43329
llvm-svn: 329884
Operand 0 should have the same type of the result. So if the result type needs to be promoted, operand 0 needs to be promoted unconditionally.
llvm-svn: 329883
Most importantly, we should not replace slashes with backslashes
because that would invalidate the path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45473
llvm-svn: 329838
This is causing compilation timeouts on code with long sequences of
local values and calls (i.e. foo(1); foo(2); foo(3); ...). It turns out
that code coverage instrumentation is a great way to create sequences
like this, which how our users ran into the issue in practice.
Intel has a tool that detects these kinds of non-linear compile time
issues, and Andy Kaylor reported it as PR37010.
The current sinking code scans the whole basic block once per local
value sink, which happens before emitting each call. In theory, local
values should only be introduced to be used by instructions between the
current flush point and the last flush point, so we should only need to
scan those instructions.
llvm-svn: 329822
Summary:
Darwin dynamic linker can handle weak symbols in ConstDataSection.
ReadonReadOnlyWithRel symbols should be emitted in ConstDataSection
instead of normal DataSection.
rdar://problem/39298457
Reviewers: dexonsmith, kledzik
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45472
llvm-svn: 329752
Summary:
This type is created on-demand and used as the base type for array
ranges. Since it is "special", its construction did not go through the
createTypeDIE function and so it was never inserted into the accelerator
table, although it clearly belongs there.
I add an explicit addAccelType call to insert it into the table.
During review, we also decided to rename the type to something more
unique to avoid confusion in case the user has own "sizetype" type. The
new name for the type size __ARRAY_SIZE_TYPE__.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45445
llvm-svn: 329705
The key idea is to lower COPY nodes populating EFLAGS by scanning the
uses of EFLAGS and introducing dedicated code to preserve the necessary
state in a GPR. In the vast majority of cases, these uses are cmovCC and
jCC instructions. For such cases, we can very easily save and restore
the necessary information by simply inserting a setCC into a GPR where
the original flags are live, and then testing that GPR directly to feed
the cmov or conditional branch.
However, things are a bit more tricky if arithmetic is using the flags.
This patch handles the vast majority of cases that seem to come up in
practice: adc, adcx, adox, rcl, and rcr; all without taking advantage of
partially preserved EFLAGS as LLVM doesn't currently model that at all.
There are a large number of operations that techinaclly observe EFLAGS
currently but shouldn't in this case -- they typically are using DF.
Currently, they will not be handled by this approach. However, I have
never seen this issue come up in practice. It is already pretty rare to
have these patterns come up in practical code with LLVM. I had to resort
to writing MIR tests to cover most of the logic in this pass already.
I suspect even with its current amount of coverage of arithmetic users
of EFLAGS it will be a significant improvement over the current use of
pushf/popf. It will also produce substantially faster code in most of
the common patterns.
This patch also removes all of the old lowering for EFLAGS copies, and
the hack that forced us to use a frame pointer when EFLAGS copies were
found anywhere in a function so that the dynamic stack adjustment wasn't
a problem. None of this is needed as we now lower all of these copies
directly in MI and without require stack adjustments.
Lots of thanks to Reid who came up with several aspects of this
approach, and Craig who helped me work out a couple of things tripping
me up while working on this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45146
llvm-svn: 329657
Lower is slightly odd. It often doesn't change the type but the lowerings
do use the new type to decide what code to create. Treat it like a mutation
but provide convenience functions that re-use the existing type.
Re-uses the existing tests:
test/CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel/legalize-rem.mir
test/CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel//legalize-mul.mir
test/CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel//legalize-cmpxchg-with-success.mir
llvm-svn: 329623
This allows MachineMemOperand::getSize()'s result to be fed directly into
MachineMemOperand::MachineMemOperand() without a narrowing type conversion
warning.
llvm-svn: 329602
building.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D45067
This change attempts to do two things:
1) It separates out the state that is stored in the
MachineIRBuilder(InsertionPt, MF, MRI, InsertFunction etc) into a
separate object called MachineIRBuilderState.
2) Add the ability to constant fold operations while building instructions
(optionally). MachineIRBuilder is now refactored into a MachineIRBuilderBase
which contains lots of non foldable build methods and their implementation.
Instructions which can be constant folded/transformed are now in a class
called FoldableInstructionBuilder which uses CRTP to use the implementation
of the derived class for buildBinaryOps. Additionally buildInstr in the derived
class can be used to implement other kinds of transformations.
Also because of separation of state, given a MachineIRBuilder in an API,
if one wishes to use another MachineIRBuilder, a new one can be
constructed from the state locally. For eg,
void doFoo(MachineIRBuilder &B) {
MyCustomBuilder CustomB(B.getState());
// Use CustomB for building.
}
reviewed by : aemerson
llvm-svn: 329596
Without the fast math flags, the llvm.experimental.vector.reduce.fadd/fmul intrinsic expansions must be expanded in order.
This patch scalarizes the reduction, applying the accumulator at the start of the sequence: ((((Acc + Scl[0]) + Scl[1]) + Scl[2]) + ) ... + Scl[NumElts-1]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45366
llvm-svn: 329585
This patch fixes an issue exposed on the SystemZ build bots when committing
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL327856. The hoisting was temporarily disabled with
an option. This patch now re-enables hoisting and checks that we only hoist a
store instruction when all its operands are either constant caller preserved
registers or immediates.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45286
llvm-svn: 329577
Summary:
If an input DICompileUnit is completely empty (e.g., the result of
running "clang -g" on an empty file), we don't bother emitting an empty
DWARF CU. When we do that, we must make sure we don't also emit a DWARF v5
name index, as DWARF specifies that each index must reference at least
one compilation unit.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45435
llvm-svn: 329575
Summary:
We were emitting accelerator entries for functions with no name, which
is contrary to the DWARF v5 spec: "All other (i.e., *not*
DW_TAG_namespace) debugging information entries without a DW_AT_name
attribute are excluded." Besides that, a name table entry with an empty
string as a key is fairly useless.
We can sometimes end up with functions which have a DW_AT_linkage_name but no
DW_AT_name. One such example is the global-constructor-initialization functions,
which C++ compilers synthesize for each compilation unit with global
constructors.
A very strict reading of the DWARF v5 spec would suggest that we should not even
emit the accelerator entry for the linkage name in this case, but I don't think
we should go that far.
I found this when running the dwarf verifier over llvm codebase compiled
with DWARF v5 accelerator tables.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: vleschuk, clayborg, echristo, probinson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45367
llvm-svn: 329552
Recommitting r329283, third time lucky...
If the SRL node is only used by an AND, we may be able to set the
ExtVT to the width of the mask, making the AND redundant. To support
this, another check has been added in isLegalNarrowLoad which queries
whether the load is valid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41350
llvm-svn: 329551
Summary:
Currently MachineLoopInfo is used in only two places:
1) for computing IsBasicBlockInsideInnermostLoop field of MCCodePaddingContext, and it is never used.
2) in emitBasicBlockLoopComments, which is called only if `isVerbose()` is true.
Despite that, we currently have a dependency on MachineLoopInfo, which makes
pass manager to compute it and MachineDominator Tree. This patch removes the
use (1) and makes the use (2) lazy, thus avoiding some redundant
recomputations.
Reviewers: opaparo, gadi.haber, rafael, craig.topper, zvi
Subscribers: rengolin, javed.absar, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44812
llvm-svn: 329542
The TargetSchedModel is always initialized using the TargetSubtargetInfo's
MCSchedModel and TargetInstrInfo, so we don't need to extract those and
pass 3 parameters to init().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44789
llvm-svn: 329540
In our real world application, we found the following optimization is missed in DAGCombiner
(zext (and/or/xor (shl/shr (load x), cst), cst)) -> (and/or/xor (shl/shr (zextload x), (zext cst)), (zext cst))
If the user of original zext is an add, it may enable further lea optimization on x86.
This patch add a new function CombineZExtLogicopShiftLoad to do this optimization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44402
llvm-svn: 329516
Should fix UBSan bot by also checking there's no "uwtable" attribute
before skipping. Otherwise the unwind table will be useless since its
moves expect CSRs to actually be preserved.
A noreturn nounwind function can be expected to never return in any way, and by
never returning it will also never have to restore any callee-saved registers
for its caller. This makes it possible to skip spills of those registers during
function entry, saving some stack space and time in the process. This is rather
useful for embedded targets with limited stack space.
Should fix PR9970.
Patch mostly by myeisha (pmb).
llvm-svn: 329494
Summary:
The 'strong' StackProtector heuristic takes into consideration call instructions.
Certain intrinsics, such as lifetime.start, can cause the
StackProtector to protect functions that do not need to be protected.
Specifically, a volatile variable, (not optimized away), but belonging to a stack
allocation will encourage a llvm.lifetime.start to be inserted during
compilation. Because that intrinsic is a 'call' the strong StackProtector
will see that the alloca'd variable is being passed to a call instruction, and
insert a stack protector. In this case the intrinsic isn't really lowered to a
call. This can cause unnecessary stack checking, at the cost of additional
(wasted) CPU cycles.
In the future we should rely on TargetTransformInfo::isLoweredToCall, but as of
now that routine considers all intrinsics as not being lowerable. That needs
to be corrected, and such a change is on my list of things to get moving on.
As a side note, the updated stack-protector-dbginfo.ll test always seems to
pass. I never see the dbg.declare/dbg.value reaching the
StackProtector::HasAddressTaken, but I don't see any code excluding dbg
intrinsic calls either, so I think it's the safest thing to do.
Reviewers: void, timshen
Reviewed By: timshen
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45331
llvm-svn: 329450
Summary:
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before sorting.
This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined sorting
order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to llvm::sort.
Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the required patches.
Reviewers: bogner, rnk, MatzeB, RKSimon
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45133
llvm-svn: 329435
MFI.LocalFrameSize was not serialized.
It is usually set from LocalStackSlotAllocation, so if that pass doesn't
run it is impossible do deduce it from the stack objects. Until now, this
information was lost.
llvm-svn: 329382
A noreturn nounwind function can be expected to never return in any way, and by
never returning it will also never have to restore any callee-saved registers
for its caller. This makes it possible to skip spills of those registers during
function entry, saving some stack space and time in the process. This is rather
useful for embedded targets with limited stack space.
Should fix PR9970.
Patch by myeisha (pmb).
llvm-svn: 329287
The MachineOutliner has a bunch of target hooks that will call llvm_unreachable
if the target doesn't implement them. Therefore, if you enable the outliner on
such a target, it'll just crash. It'd be much better if it'd just *not* run
the outliner at all in this case.
This commit adds a hook to TargetInstrInfo that returns false by default.
Targets that implement the hook make it return true. The outliner checks the
return value of this hook to decide whether or not to continue.
llvm-svn: 329220
Some compilers do not like having an enum type and a variable with the
same name (AccelTableKind). I rename the variable to TheAccelTableKind.
Suggestions for a better name welcome.
llvm-svn: 329202
- MSVC was not OK with a static_assert referencing a non-static member
variable, even though it was just in a sizeof(expression). I move the
assert into the emit function, where it is probably more useful.
- Tests were failing in builds which did not have the X86 target
configured. Since this functionality is not target-specific, I have
removed the target specifiers from the .ll files.
llvm-svn: 329201
Summary:
This patch adds a DwarfAccelTableEmitter class, which generates an
accelerator table, as specified in DWARF v5 standard. At the moment it
only generates a DIE offset column and (if we are indexing more than one
compile unit) a CU column.
Indexing type units is not currently supported, as we don't even have
the ability to generate DWARF v5-compatible compile units.
The implementation is not data-source agnostic like the one generating
apple tables. This was not necessary as we currently only have one user
of this code, and without a second user it was not obvious to me how to
best abstract this. (The difference between these tables and the apple
ones is that they need a lot more metadata about the debug info they are
indexing).
The generation is triggered by the --accel-tables argument, which
supersedes the --dwarf-accel-tables arg -- the latter was a simple
on-off switch, but not we can choose between two kinds of accelerator
tables we can generate.
This is tested by parsing the generated tables with llvm-dwarfdump and
the DWARFVerifier, and I've also checked that GNU readelf is able to
make sense of the tables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43286
llvm-svn: 329179
Recommitting rL321259. Previosuly this caused an issue with PPCBE but
I didn't receieve a reproducer and didn't have the time to follow up.
If the issue appears again, please provide a reproducer so I can fix
it.
Original commit message:
If the SRL node is only used by an AND, we may be able to set the
ExtVT to the width of the mask, making the AND redundant. To support
this, another check has been added in isLegalNarrowLoad which queries
whether the load is valid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41350
llvm-svn: 329160
The linkage type on outlined functions was private before. This meant that if
you set a breakpoint in an outlined function, the debugger wouldn't be able to
give a sane name to the outlined function.
This commit changes the linkage type to internal and updates any tests that
relied on the prefixes on the names of outlined functions.
llvm-svn: 329116
Summary:
This change declare that PostRAMachineSinking and ShrinkWrap require NoVRegs
property, so now the MachineFunctionPass can enforce this check.
These passes are disabled in NVPTX & WebAssembly.
Reviewers: dschuff, jlebar, tra, jgravelle-google, MatzeB, sebpop, thegameg, mcrosier
Reviewed By: dschuff, thegameg
Subscribers: jholewinski, jfb, sbc100, aheejin, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45183
llvm-svn: 329095
When running dsymutil as part of your build system, it can be desirable
for warnings to be part of the end product, rather than just being
emitted to the output stream. This patch upstreams that functionality.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44639
llvm-svn: 328965
fptosi / fptoui round towards zero, and that's the same behavior as ISD::FTRUNC,
so replace a pair of casts with the equivalent node. We don't have to account for
special cases (NaN, INF) because out-of-range casts are undefined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44909
llvm-svn: 328921
Summary:
Tail duplication easily breaks the structure of CFG, e.g. duplicating on
a region entry. If the structure is intended to be preserved, then we
may want to configure tail duplication, or disable it for structured
CFG. From our benchmark results disabling it doesn't cause performance
regression.
Notice that this currently affects AMDGPU backend. In the next patch, I
also plan to turn on requiresStructuredCFG for NVPTX.
All unit tests still pass.
Reviewers: jlebar, arsenm
Subscribers: jholewinski, sanjoy, wdng, tpr, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45008
llvm-svn: 328884
The code has bugs dealing with -0.0.
Since D44550 introduced FABS pattern folding in InstCombine,
this patch removes the now-redundant code that causes
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36600.
Patch by Mikhail Dvoretckii!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44683
llvm-svn: 328872
MachineCopyPropagation::CopyPropagateBlock has a bunch of special
handling for COPY instructions. This handling assumes that COPY
instructions do not modify the source of the copy; this is wrong if
the COPY destination overlaps the source.
To fix the bug, check explicitly for this situation, and fall back to
the generic instruction handling.
This bug can't happen for most register classes because they don't
have this sort of overlap, but there are a few register classes
where this is possible. The testcase uses the AArch64 QQQQ register
class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44911
llvm-svn: 328851
Currently EVT is in the IR layer only because of Function.cpp needing a very small piece of the functionality of EVT::getEVTString(). The rest of EVT is used in codegen making CodeGen a better place for it.
The previous code converted a Type* to EVT and then called getEVTString. This was only expected to handle the primitive types from Type*. Since there only a few primitive types, we can just print them as strings directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45017
llvm-svn: 328806
DWARF v5 specifies that the root file (also given in the DW_AT_name
attribute of the compilation unit DIE) should be emitted explicitly to
the line table's list of files. This makes the line table more
independent of the .debug_info section.
We emit the new syntax only for DWARF v5 and later.
Fixes the bug found by asan. Also XFAIL the new test for Darwin, which
is stuck on DWARF v2, and fix up other tests so they stop failing on
Windows. Last but not least, don't break "clang -g" of an assembler
file that has .file directives in it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44054
llvm-svn: 328805
Summary: Mark CFG is preserved since this pass do not make any change in CFG.
Reviewers: sebpop, mzolotukhin, mcrosier
Reviewed By: mzolotukhin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44845
llvm-svn: 328727
This reverts commit r328676.
Commit r328676 broke the -no-integrated-as flag necessary to build Linux kernel with Clang:
$ cat t.c
void foo() {}
$ clang -no-integrated-as -c t.c -g
/tmp/t-dcdec5.s: Assembler messages:
/tmp/t-dcdec5.s:8: Error: file number less than one
clang-7.0: error: assembler command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
llvm-svn: 328699
Summary:
RegisterCoalescer::removePartialRedundancy tries to hoist B = A from
BB0/BB2 to BB1:
BB1:
...
BB0/BB2: ----
B = A; |
... |
A = B; |
|-------
|
It does so if a number of conditions are fulfilled. However, it failed
to check if B was used by any of the terminators in BB1. Since we must
insert B = A before the terminators (since it's not a terminator itself),
this means that we could erroneously insert a new definition of B before a
use of it.
Reviewers: wmi, qcolombet
Reviewed By: wmi
Subscribers: MatzeB, llvm-commits, sdardis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44918
llvm-svn: 328689
DWARF v5 specifies that the root file (also given in the DW_AT_name
attribute of the compilation unit DIE) should be emitted explicitly to
the line table's list of files. This makes the line table more
independent of the .debug_info section.
Fixes the bug found by asan. Also XFAIL the new test for Darwin, which
is stuck on DWARF v2, and fix up other tests so they stop failing on
Windows. Last but not least, don't break "clang -g" of an assembler
file that has .file directives in it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44054
llvm-svn: 328676
If a given split type unit does not have source locations, don't have
it refer to the split line table.
If no split type unit refers to the split line table, don't emit the
line table at all.
This will save a little space on rare occasions, but also refactors
things a bit to improve which class is responsible for what.
Responding to review comments on r326395.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44220
llvm-svn: 328670
Summary:
Rev 327580 "[CodeGen] Use MIR syntax for MachineMemOperand printing"
broke -print-machineinstrs for us on AMDGPU, because we have custom
pseudo source values, and MIR serialization does not implement that.
This commit at least restores the functionality of -print-machineinstrs,
even if it does not properly implement the missing MIR serialization
functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44871
Change-Id: I44961c0b90bf6d48c01484ed7a4e466fd300db66
llvm-svn: 328668
Summary: When a node is about to be erased from ReplacedValues, we should also remap its corresponding values in PromotedFloats.
Patch by Yan Luo (Yan.Luo2@synopsys.com)
Reviewers: pirama
Reviewed By: pirama
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44872
llvm-svn: 328644
First, we change the heuristic that is used to ignore the recurrent
node-sets in the node ordering. In certain cases it's not important
to focus on the recurrent node-sets. Instead, the algorithm begins
by considering all the instructions in the node ordering step.
Second, a minor change to the bottom up traversal, which needs to
consider loop carried dependences (modeled as anti dependences).
Previously, these instructions were skipped, which caused problems
because the instruction ends up having both predecessors and
sucessors in the schedule.
Third, consider anti-dependences as a tie breaker when choosing
between instructions in the node ordering. We want to make sure
that the source of the anti-dependence does not end up with both
predecesssors and sucessors in the final node ordering.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328554
The pipeliner must add a loop carried dependence between two memory
operations if the base register is not an affine (linear) exression.
The current implementation doesn't check how the base register is
defined, which allows non-affine expressions, and then the pipeliner
does not add a loop carried dependence when one is needed.
This patch adds code to isLoopCarriedOrder that checks if the base
register of the memory operations is defined by a phi, and the loop
definition for the phi is a constant increment value. This is a very
simple check for a linear expression.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328550
The pipeliner is not adding a dependence edge for a loop carried
dependence, and ends up scheduling a load from iteration n prior
to an aliased store in iteration n-1.
The code that adds the loop carried dependences in the pipeliner
doesn't check if the memory objects for loads and stores are
"identified" (i.e., distinct) objects. If they are not, then the
code that adds the dependences needs to be conservative. The
objects can be used to check dependences only when they are
distinct objects.
The code that checks for loop carried dependences has been updated
to classify loads and stores that are not identified as "unknown"
values. A store with an "unknown" value can potentially create
a loop carried dependence with any pending load.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328547
The phi renaming code in the pipeliner uses the wrong value when
rewriting phi uses, which results in an undefined value. In this
case, the original phi is no longer needed due to the order of
instruction in the pipelined loop. The pipeliner was assuming, in
this case, the the phi loop definition should be used to
rewrite the uses. However, the pipeliner needs to check to make
sure that the loop definition has already been scheduled. If not,
then the phi initial value needs to be used instead.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328545
The pipeliner was generating too many phis in the epilog blocks, which
caused incorrect code generation when rewriting an instruction that uses
the phi.
In this case, there 3 prolog and epilog stages. An existing phi was
scheduled at stage 1. When generating the code for the 2nd epilog an
extra new phi was generated.
To fix this, we need to update the code that calculates the maximum
number of phis that can be generated, which is based upon the current
prolog stage and the stage of the original phi. In this case, when the
prolog stage is 1 and the original phi stage is 1, the maximum number
of phis to generate is 2.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328543
The patch contains severals changes needed to pipeline an example
that was transformed so that a Phi with a subreg is converted to
copies.
The pipeliner wasn't working for a couple of reasons.
- The RecMII was 3 instead of 2 due to the extra copies.
- Copy instructions contained a latency of 1.
- The node order algorithm was not choosing the best "bottom"
node, which caused an instruction to be scheduled that had a
predecessor and successor already scheduled.
- Updated the Hexagon Machine Scheduler to check if the node is
latency bound when adding the cost for a 0-latency dependence.
The RecMII was 3 because the computation looks at the number of
nodes in the recurrence. The extra copy is an extra node but
it shouldn't increase the latency. The new RecMII computation
looks at the latency of the instructions in the recurrence. We
changed the latency of the dependence of a copy to 0. The latency
computation for the copy also checks the use of the copy (similar
to a reg_sequence).
The node order algorithm was not choosing the last instruction
in the recurrence for a bottom up traversal. This was when the
last instruction is a copy. A check was added when choosing the
instruction to check for NodeNum if the maxASAP is the same. This
means that the scheduler will not end up with another node in
the recurrence that has both a predecessor and successor already
scheduled.
The cost computation in Hexagon Machine Scheduler adds cost when
an instruction can be packetized with a zero-latency instruction.
We should only do this if the schedule is latency bound.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328542
The pipeliner is asserting because the serialization step that
occurs at the end is deleting an instruction. The assert
occurs later on because there is a use without a definition.
The problem occurs when an instruction defines a value used
by a REQ_SEQUENCE and that value is used by a COPY instruction.
The latencies between these instructions are zero, so they are
put in to the same packet. The serialization code is unable to
handle this correctly, and ends up putting the REG_SEQUENCE
before its definition.
There is special code in the serialization step that attempts
to handle zero-cost instructions (phis, copy, reg_sequence)
differently than regular instructions. Unfortunately, this means
the order does not come out correct.
This patch simplifies the code by changing the seperate steps for
handling zero-cost and regular instructions. Only phis are
handled separate now, since they should occurs first. Then, this
patch adds checks to make use the MoveUse is set to the smallest
value if there are multiple uses in a cycle.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328540
The pipeliner changes dependences between base+offset instructions
(loads and stores) so that the instructions have more flexibility
to be scheduled with respect to each other. This occurs when the
pipeliner is able to compute that the instructions will not alias
if their order is changed. The prevous code enforced the alias
property by checking if the base register is the same, and that the
offset values are either both positive or negative.
This patch improves the alias check by using the API
areMemAccessesTriviallyDisjoint instead. This enables more cases,
especially if the offset is a negative value. The pipeliner uses
the function by creating a new instruction with the offset used
in the next iteration.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328538
A schedule may require that a phi from the original loop is used in
multiple iterations in the scheduled loop. When this occurs, we generate
multiple phis in the pipelined loop to save the value across iterations.
When we generate the new phis and update the register names in the
pipelined loop, the pipeliner attempts to reuse a previously generated
phi, when possible. The calculation for the name of the new phi needs
to account for the version/iteration of the original phi. Also, in the
epilog, the code only needs to check backwards for a previous iteration
until reaching the first prolog block.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328537
The code in orderDepdences that looks at the order dependences between
instructions was processing all the successor and predecessor order
dependences. However, we really only want to check for an order dependence
for instructions scheduled in the same cycle.
Also, fixed how the pipeliner handles output dependences. An output
dependence is also a potential loop carried dependence. The pipeliner
didn't handle this case properly so an invalid schedule could be created
that allowed an output dependence to be scheduled in the next iteration
at the same cycle.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328516
When the definition of a phi is used by a phi in the next iteration,
the pipeliner was assuming that the definition is processed first.
Because of the assumption, an incorrect phi name was used. This patch
has a check to see if the phi definition has been processed already.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328510
The software pipeliner attempts to delete dead instructions after
generating the pipelined loop. The code looks for uses of each
instruction. Physical registers should be treated differently because
the use chains do not exist. The code that checks for dead
instructions should assume that definitions of physical registers
are used if the operand doesn't contain the dead flag.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328509
The pipeliner needs to be conservative when updating the memoperands
of instructions in the epilog. Previously, the pipeliner was changing
the offset of the memoperand based upon the scheduling stage. However,
that is incorrect when control flow branches around the kernel code.
The bug enabled a load and store to the same stack offset to be swapped.
This patch fixes the bug by updating the size of the memoperands to be
UINT_MAX. This conservative value means that dependences will be created
between other loads and stores.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328508
This is used by llvm tblgen as well as by LLVM Targets, so the only
common place is Support for now. (maybe we need another target for these
sorts of things - but for now I'm at least making them correct & we can
make them better if/when people have strong feelings)
llvm-svn: 328395
This patch adds functions to allow MachineLICM to hoist invariant stores.
Currently, MachineLICM does not hoist any store instructions, however
when storing the same value to a constant spot on the stack, the store
instruction should be considered invariant and be hoisted. The function
isInvariantStore iterates each operand of the store instruction and checks
that each register operand satisfies isCallerPreservedPhysReg. The store
may be fed by a copy, which is hoisted by isCopyFeedingInvariantStore.
This patch also adds the PowerPC changes needed to consider the stack
register as caller preserved.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40196
llvm-svn: 328326
Summary:
Some targets does not support labels inside debug sections, but support
references in form `section+offset`. Patch adds initial support
for this.
Reviewers: echristo, probinson, jlebar
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43943
llvm-svn: 328314
In our real world application, we found the following optimization is missed in DAGCombiner
(zext (and/or/xor (shl/shr (load x), cst), cst)) -> (and/or/xor (shl/shr (zextload x), (zext cst)), (zext cst))
If the user of original zext is an add, it may enable further lea optimization on x86.
This patch add a new function CombineZExtLogicopShiftLoad to do this optimization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44402
llvm-svn: 328252
Split up some of the if/else branches in runOnModule. Elaborate on some
comments. Replace a call to getOrCreateMachineFunction with getMachineFunction.
This makes it clearer what's happening in runOnModule, and ensures that the
outliner doesn't create any MachineFunctions which will never be used by the
outliner (or anything else, really).
llvm-svn: 328240
Summary:
This pass sinks COPY instructions into a successor block, if the COPY is not
used in the current block and the COPY is live-in to a single successor
(i.e., doesn't require the COPY to be duplicated). This avoids executing the
the copy on paths where their results aren't needed. This also exposes
additional opportunites for dead copy elimination and shrink wrapping.
These copies were either not handled by or are inserted after the MachineSink
pass. As an example of the former case, the MachineSink pass cannot sink
COPY instructions with allocatable source registers; for AArch64 these type
of copy instructions are frequently used to move function parameters (PhyReg)
into virtual registers in the entry block..
For the machine IR below, this pass will sink %w19 in the entry into its
successor (%bb.1) because %w19 is only live-in in %bb.1.
```
%bb.0:
%wzr = SUBSWri %w1, 1
%w19 = COPY %w0
Bcc 11, %bb.2
%bb.1:
Live Ins: %w19
BL @fun
%w0 = ADDWrr %w0, %w19
RET %w0
%bb.2:
%w0 = COPY %wzr
RET %w0
```
As we sink %w19 (CSR in AArch64) into %bb.1, the shrink-wrapping pass will be
able to see %bb.0 as a candidate.
With this change I observed 12% more shrink-wrapping candidate and 13% more dead copies deleted in spec2000/2006/2017 on AArch64.
Reviewers: qcolombet, MatzeB, thegameg, mcrosier, gberry, hfinkel, john.brawn, twoh, RKSimon, sebpop, kparzysz
Reviewed By: sebpop
Subscribers: evandro, sebpop, sfertile, aemerson, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41463
llvm-svn: 328237
As in SystemZ backend, correctly propagate node ids when inserting new
unselected nodes into the DAG during instruction Seleciton for X86
target.
Fixes PR36865.
Reviewers: jyknight, craig.topper
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44797
llvm-svn: 328233
Remove #include of Transforms/Scalar.h from Transform/Utils to fix layering.
Transforms depends on Transforms/Utils, not the other way around. So
remove the header and the "createStripGCRelocatesPass" function
declaration (& definition) that is unused and motivated this dependency.
Move Transforms/Utils/Local.h into Analysis because it's used by
Analysis/MemoryBuiltins.cpp.
llvm-svn: 328165
The pipeliner needs to remove instructions from the SlotIndexes
structure when they are deleted. Otherwise, the SlotIndexes map
has stale data, and an assert will occur when adding new
instructions.
This patch also changes the pipeliner to make the back-edge of
a loop carried dependence 1 cycle. The 1 cycle latency is added
to the anti-dependence that represents the back-edge. This
changes eliminates a couple of hacks added to the pipeliner to
handle the latency of the back-edge. It is needed to correctly
pipeline the test case for the sub-register elimination pass.
llvm-svn: 328113
Summary:
When building the selection DAG we sometimes need to postpone
the handling of a dbg.value until the value it should refer to
is created. This is done by using the DanglingDebugInfoMap.
In the past this map has been limited to hold one dangling
dbg.value per value. This patch removes that restriction.
Reviewers: aprantl, rnk, probinson, vsk
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: Ka-Ka, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44610
llvm-svn: 328084
I'm not entirely sure these hacks are still needed. If you remove the hacks completely, the name of the library call that gets generated doesn't match the grep the test previously had. So the test wasn't really checking anything.
If the hack is still needed it belongs in PPC specific code. I believe the FP_TO_SINT code here is the only place in the tree where a FP_ROUND_INREG node is created today. And I don't think its even being used correctly because the legalization returned a BUILD_PAIR with the same value twice. That doesn't seem right to me. By moving the code entirely to PPC we can avoid creating the FP_ROUND_INREG at all.
I replaced the grep in the existing test with full checks generated by hacking update_llc_test_check.py to support ppc32 just long enough to generate it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44061
llvm-svn: 328017
Summary:
Currently X-Ray Instrumentation pass has a dependency on MachineLoopInfo
(and thus on MachineDominatorTree as well) and we have to compute them
even if X-Ray is not used. This patch changes it to a lazy computation
to save compile time by avoiding these redundant computations.
Reviewers: dberris, kubamracek
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44666
llvm-svn: 327999
Summary:
Added a flag -no-dwarf-pub-sections, which allows to disable
emission of DWARF public sections.
Reviewers: probinson, echristo
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44385
llvm-svn: 327994
Summary:
Made PHI node simplifiations more robust in several ways:
- Minor refactoring to let the SimplificationTracker own the
sets with new PHI/Select nodes that are introduced. This is
maybe not mapping to the original intention with the
SimplificationTracker, but IMHO it encapsulates the logic behind
those sets a little bit better.
- MatchPhiNode can sometimes populate the Matched set with
several entries, where it maps one PHI node to different candidates
for replacement. The Matched set is changed into a SmallSetVector
to make sure we get a deterministic iteration when doing
the replacements.
- As described above we may get several different replacements
for a single PHI node. The loop in MatchPhiSet that is doing
the replacements could end up calling eraseFromParent several
times for the same PHI node, resulting in segmentation faults.
This problem was supposed to be fixed in rL327250, but due to
the non-determinism(?) it only appeared to be fixed (I still
got crashes sometime when turning on/off -print-after-all etc
to get different iteration order in the DenseSets).
With this patch we follow the deterministic ordering in the
Matched set when replacing the PHI nodes. If we find a new
replacement for an already replaced PHI node we replace the
new replacement by the old replacement instead. This is quite
similar to what happened in the rl327250 patch, but here we
also recursively verify that the old replacement hasn't been
replaced already.
- It was really hard to track down the fault described above
(segementation fault due to doing eraseFromParent multiple
times for the same instruction). The fault was intermittent and
small changes in the code, or simply turning on -print-after-all
etc could make the problem go away. This was basically due to
the iteration over PhiNodesToMatch in MatchPhiSet no being
deterministic. Therefore I've changed the data structure for
the SimplificationTracker::AllPhiNodes into an SmallSetVector.
This gives a deterministic behavior.
Reviewers: skatkov, john.brawn
Reviewed By: skatkov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44571
llvm-svn: 327961
When scanning the function for CSRs uses and defs, also check if
the basic block are landing pads.
Consider that landing pads needs the CSRs to be properly set.
That way we force the prologue/epilogue to always be pushed out
of the problematic "throw" region. The "throw" region is
problematic because the jumps are not properly modeled.
Fixes PR36513
llvm-svn: 327942
Summary:
DbgValue nodes were not transferred when integer DAG nodes were promoted. For example, if an i32 add node was promoted to an i64 add node by DAGTypeLegalizer::PromoteIntegerResult(), its DbgValue node was not transferred to the new node. The simple fix is to update SetPromotedInteger() to transfer DbgValues.
Add AArch64/dbg-value-i8.ll to test this change and fix ARM/debug-info-d16-reg.ll which had the wrong DILocalVariable nodes with arg numbers even though they are not for function parameters.
Patch by Se Jong Oh!
Reviewers: vsk, JDevlieghere, aprantl
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44546
llvm-svn: 327919
Summary:
This patch prevents DBG_VALUE instructions from influencing
LivePhysRegs::stepBackwards and stepForwards. In at least one case,
specifically branch folding, the stepBackwards logic was having an
influence on code generation. The result was that certain code
compiled with '-g -O2' would differ from that compiled with '-O2'
alone. It seems that the original logic, accounting for DBG_VALUE,
was influencing the placement of an IMPLICIT_DEF which had a later
impact on how blocks were processed in branch folding.
Reviewers: kparzysz, MatzeB
Reviewed By: kparzysz
Subscribers: bjope, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43850
llvm-svn: 327862
This patch adds functions to allow MachineLICM to hoist invariant stores.
Currently, MachineLICM does not hoist any store instructions, however
when storing the same value to a constant spot on the stack, the store
instruction should be considered invariant and be hoisted. The function
isInvariantStore iterates each operand of the store instruction and checks
that each register operand satisfies isCallerPreservedPhysReg. The store
may be fed by a copy, which is hoisted by isCopyFeedingInvariantStore.
This patch also adds the PowerPC changes needed to consider the stack
register as caller preserved.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40196
llvm-svn: 327856
Now that almost all functionality of Apple's dsymutil has been
upstreamed, the open source variant can be used as a drop in
replacement. Hence we feel it's no longer necessary to have the llvm
prefix.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44527
llvm-svn: 327790
X86 Supports Indirect Branch Tracking (IBT) as part of Control-Flow Enforcement Technology (CET).
IBT instruments ENDBR instructions used to specify valid targets of indirect call / jmp.
The `nocf_check` attribute has two roles in the context of X86 IBT technology:
1. Appertains to a function - do not add ENDBR instruction at the beginning of the function.
2. Appertains to a function pointer - do not track the target function of this pointer by adding nocf_check prefix to the indirect-call instruction.
This patch implements `nocf_check` context for Indirect Branch Tracking.
It also auto generates `nocf_check` prefixes before indirect branchs to jump tables that are guarded by range checks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41879
llvm-svn: 327767
The BITCAST handling in computeKnownBits() previously only worked for little
endian.
This patch reverses the iteration over elements for a big endian target which
allows this to work in this case also.
SystemZ test case.
Review: Eli Friedman
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44249
llvm-svn: 327764
Previously if getSetccResultType returned an illegal type we just fell back to using the default promoted type. This appears to have been to handle the case where for vectors getSetccResultType returns the input type, but the input type itself isn't legal and will need to be promoted. Without the legality check we would never reach a legal type.
But just picking the promoted type to be the setcc type can create strange setccs where the result type is 128 bits and the operand type is 256 bits. If for example the result type was promoted to v8i16 from v8i1, but the input type was promoted from v8i23 to v8i32. We currently handle this with custom lowering code in X86.
This legality check also caused us reject the getSetccResultType when the input type needed to be widened or split. Even though that result wouldn't have caused legalization to get stuck.
This patch tries to fix this by detecting the getSetccResultType needs to be promoted. If its input type also needs to be promoted we'll try a ask for a new setcc result type based on its eventual promoted value. Otherwise we fall back to default type to promote to.
For any other illegal values we might get back from the initial call to getSetccResultType we just keep and allow it to be re-legalized later via splitting or widening or scalarizing.
llvm-svn: 327683
We were unnecessarily copying a bunch of these FunctionInfo objects
around when rehashing the DenseMap.
Furthermore, r327620 introduced pointers referring to objects owned by
FunctionInfo, and the default copy ctor did the wrong thing in this
case, leading to use-after-free when the DenseMap gets rehashed.
I will rebase r327620 on this next and recommit it.
llvm-svn: 327665
This patch sorts local variables by lexical scope and emits them inside
an appropriate S_BLOCK32 CodeView symbol.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42926
llvm-svn: 327620
Summary:
Local values are constants, global addresses, and stack addresses that
can't be folded into the instruction that uses them. For example, when
storing the address of a global variable into memory, we need to
materialize that address into a register.
FastISel doesn't want to materialize any given local value more than
once, so it generates all local value materialization code at
EmitStartPt, which always dominates the current insertion point. This
allows it to maintain a map of local value registers, and it knows that
the local value area will always dominate the current insertion point.
The downside is that local value instructions are always emitted without
a source location. This is done to prevent jumpy line tables, but it
means that the local value area will be considered part of the previous
statement. Consider this C code:
call1(); // line 1
++global; // line 2
++global; // line 3
call2(&global, &local); // line 4
Today we end up with assembly and line tables like this:
.loc 1 1
callq call1
leaq global(%rip), %rdi
leaq local(%rsp), %rsi
.loc 1 2
addq $1, global(%rip)
.loc 1 3
addq $1, global(%rip)
.loc 1 4
callq call2
The LEA instructions in the local value area have no source location and
are treated as being on line 1. Stepping through the code in a debugger
and correlating it with the assembly won't make much sense, because
these materializations are only required for line 4.
This is actually problematic for the VS debugger "set next statement"
feature, which effectively assumes that there are no registers live
across statement boundaries. By sinking the local value code into the
statement and fixing up the source location, we can make that feature
work. This was filed as https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35975 and
https://crbug.com/793819.
This change is obviously not enough to make this feature work reliably
in all cases, but I felt that it was worth doing anyway because it
usually generates smaller, more comprehensible -O0 code. I measured a
0.12% regression in code generation time with LLC on the sqlite3
amalgamation, so I think this is worth doing.
There are some special cases worth calling out in the commit message:
1. local values materialized for phis
2. local values used by no-op casts
3. dead local value code
Local values can be materialized for phis, and this does not show up as
a vreg use in MachineRegisterInfo. In this case, if there are no other
uses, this patch sinks the value to the first terminator, EH label, or
the end of the BB if nothing else exists.
Local values may also be used by no-op casts, which adds the register to
the RegFixups table. Without reversing the RegFixups map direction, we
don't have enough information to sink these instructions.
Lastly, if the local value register has no other uses, we can delete it.
This comes up when fastisel tries two instruction selection approaches
and the first materializes the value but fails and the second succeeds
without using the local value.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, qcolombet, MatzeB, vsk, echristo
Subscribers: dotdash, chandlerc, hans, sdardis, amccarth, javed.absar, zturner, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43093
llvm-svn: 327581
Get rid of the "; mem:" suffix and use the one we use in MIR: ":: (load 2)".
rdar://38163529
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42377
llvm-svn: 327580
I had to modify the bswap recognition to allow unshrunk masks to make this work.
Fixes PR36689.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44442
llvm-svn: 327530
swifterror llvm values model the swifterror register as memory at the
LLVM IR level. ISel will perform adhoc mem-to-reg on them. swifterror
values are constraint in how they can be used. Spilling them to memory
is not allowed.
SjLjEHPrepare tried to lower swifterror values to memory which is
unecessary since the back-end will spill and reload the register as
neccessary (as long as clobbering calls are marked as such which is the
case here) and further leads to invalid IR because swifterror values
can't be stored to memory.
rdar://38164004
llvm-svn: 327521
I don't know how to expose this in a test. There are ARM / AArch64
sched classes that include zero latency instructions, but I'm not
seeing sched info printed for those targets. X86 will almost
certainly have these soon (see PR36671), but no model has
'let Latency = 0' currently.
llvm-svn: 327518
This could end up inititialized if someone called the function with a
null AsmPrinter. Right now this only happens in DIEHash unit tests,
presumably because it was hard to create an AsmPrinter in the context of
unit tests. This only worked before r327486 because those tests did not
use any dwarf forms whose size actually depended on the dwarf version
(otherwise, they would have crashed due to null dereference).
I fix the uninitialized error, by explicitly initializing FormParams to
an invalid value, which will cause getFixedFormByteSize to return None
if called with a form with version-dependent size. A more principled
solution might be to fix the DIEHash tests to always pass in a valid
AsmPrinter.
llvm-svn: 327498
Summary:
This patch replaces the two switches which are deducing the size of
various forms with a single implementation. I have put the new
implementation into BinaryFormat, to avoid introducing dependencies
between the two independent libraries (DebugInfo and CodeGen) that need
this functionality.
Reviewers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44418
llvm-svn: 327486
BUILD_VECTORs aren't themselves legalized until LegalizeDAG so we should still be able to create an "illegal" one before that. This helps combine with BUILD_VECTORS that are introduced during LegalizeVectorOps due to unrolling.
llvm-svn: 327446
Nothing prevents us from having both frame-setup and frame-destroy on
the same instruction.
When merging:
* frame-setup OPCODE1
* frame-destroy OPCODE2
into
* frame-setup frame-destroy OPCODE3
we want to be able to print and parse both flags.
llvm-svn: 327442
Under some circumstances the divrems won't have been combined together before getting to this code.
So replace the assertion with a if() guard to not expand to X-((X/C)*C) to give the other combine chance to happen.
Reduced from OSS-Fuzz #6883https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=6883
llvm-svn: 327424
Summary:
This change is part of step five in the series of changes to remove alignment argument from
memcpy/memmove/memset in favour of alignment attributes. In particular, this changes the
SelectionDAGBuilder to cease using the old getAlignment() API of MemoryIntrinsic in favour of getting
source & dest specific alignments through the new API.
Steps:
Step 1) Remove alignment parameter and create alignment parameter attributes for
memcpy/memmove/memset. ( rL322965, rC322964, rL322963 )
Step 2) Expand the IRBuilder API to allow creation of memcpy/memmove with differing
source and dest alignments. ( rL323597 )
Step 3) Update Clang to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rC323617 )
Step 4) Update Polly to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rL323618 )
Step 5) Update LLVM passes that create memcpy/memmove calls to use the new IRBuilder API,
and those that use use MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() to use [get|set]DestAlignment()
and [get|set]SourceAlignment() instead. ( rL323886, rL323891, rL324148, rL324273, rL324278,
rL324384, rL324395, rL324402, rL324626, rL324642, rL324653, rL324654, rL324773, rL324774,
rL324781, rL324784, rL324955, rL324960, rL325816, rL327398 )
Step 6) Remove the single-alignment IRBuilder API for memcpy/memmove, and the
MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() methods.
Reference
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-August/089384.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html
llvm-svn: 327421
The goal is to make the reciprocal throughput computation accessible through the
MCSchedModel interface. This is particularly important for llvm-mca because it
can only query the MCSchedModel interface.
No functional change intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44392
llvm-svn: 327420
The goal is to make the latency information accessible through the MCSchedModel
interface. This is particularly important for tools like llvm-mca that only have
access to the MCSchedModel API.
This partially fixes PR36676.
No functional change intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44383
llvm-svn: 327406
Codeview references to unnamed structs and unions are expected to refer to the
complete type definition instead of a forward reference so Visual Studio can
resolve the type properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32498
llvm-svn: 327397
splitMergedValStore will split a store into two if target prefers this, or if
-force-split-store is passed.
This patch adds the missing handling for endianness in this function along
with a test case.
Review: Eli Friedman
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44396
llvm-svn: 327375
Summary:
1) Make sure to discard dangling debug info if the variable (or
variable fragment) is mapped to something new before we had a
chance to resolve the dangling debug info.
2) When resolving debug info, make sure to bump the associated
SDNodeOrder to ensure that the DBG_VALUE is emitted after the
instruction that defines the value used in the DBG_VALUE.
This will avoid a debug-use before def scenario as seen in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36417.
The new test case, test/DebugInfo/X86/sdag-dangling-dbgvalue.ll,
show some other limitations in how dangling debug info is
handled in the SelectionDAG. Since we currently only support
having one dangling dbg.value per Value, we will end up dropping
debug info when there are more than one variable that is described
by the same "dangling value".
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: aprantl, eraman, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44369
llvm-svn: 327303
When we replace the Phi we created with matched ones it is possible that
there are two identical phi nodes in IR. And matcher is smart enough to find that
new created phi matches both of them. So we try to replace our phi node with
matched ones twice and what is bad we delete our phi node twice causing a crash.
As soon as we found that we have two identical Phi nodes it makes sense to do
a clean-up and replace one phi node by other one.
The patch implements it.
Reviewers: john.brawn, reames
Reviewed By: john.brawn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43758
llvm-svn: 327250
The intent of revision r300311 was to add a check for invalid scheduling class
descriptors. However, it ended up adding a redundant call in a basic block that
should not be reachable.
llvm-svn: 327231
r327171 "Improve Dependency analysis when doing multi-node Instruction Selection"
r328170 "[DAG] Enforce stricter NodeId invariant during Instruction selection"
Reverting patch as NodeId invariant change is causing pathological
increases in compile time on PPC
llvm-svn: 327197
These instructions have 3 operands that can be commuted. The first commute we find may not be the best. So we should keep searching if we performed an aggressive commute. There may still be an operand that is killed or a physical register constraint that might be better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44324
llvm-svn: 327188
Relanding after fixing NodeId Invariant.
Cleanup cycle/validity checks in ISel (IsLegalToFold,
HandleMergeInputChains) and X86 (isFusableLoadOpStore). Now do a full
search for cycles / dependencies pruning the search when topological
property of NodeId allows.
As part of this propogate the NodeId-based cutoffs to narrow
hasPreprocessorHelper searches.
Reviewers: craig.topper, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41293
llvm-svn: 327171
Instruction Selection makes use of the topological ordering of nodes
by node id (a node's operands have smaller node id than it) when doing
cycle detection. During selection we may violate this property as a
selection of multiple nodes may induce a use dependence (and thus a
node id restriction) between two unrelated nodes. If a selected node
has an unselected successor this may allow us to miss a cycle in
detection an invalid selection.
This patch fixes this by marking all unselected successors of a
selected node have negated node id. We avoid pruning on such negative
ids but still can reconstruct the original id for pruning.
In-tree targets have been updated to replace DAG-level replacements
with ISel-level ones which enforce this property.
This preemptively fixes PR36312 before triggering commit r324359 relands
Reviewers: craig.topper, bogner, jyknight
Subscribers: arsenm, nhaehnle, javed.absar, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43198
llvm-svn: 327170
The retpoline mitigation for variant 2 of CVE-2017-5715 inhibits the
branch predictor, and as a result it can lead to a measurable loss of
performance. We can reduce the performance impact of retpolined virtual
calls by replacing them with a special construct known as a branch
funnel, which is an instruction sequence that implements virtual calls
to a set of known targets using a binary tree of direct branches. This
allows the processor to speculately execute valid implementations of the
virtual function without allowing for speculative execution of of calls
to arbitrary addresses.
This patch extends the whole-program devirtualization pass to replace
certain virtual calls with calls to branch funnels, which are
represented using a new llvm.icall.jumptable intrinsic. It also extends
the LowerTypeTests pass to recognize the new intrinsic, generate code
for the branch funnels (x86_64 only for now) and lay out virtual tables
as required for each branch funnel.
The implementation supports full LTO as well as ThinLTO, and extends the
ThinLTO summary format used for whole-program devirtualization to
support branch funnels.
For more details see RFC:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120672.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42453
llvm-svn: 327163
Summary: We create a ConstantDataSequential (ConstantDataArray or ConstantDataVector) to avoid creating a Constant for each element in an array of constants. But them in AsmPrinter, we do create a ConstantFP for each element in the ConstantDataSequential. This triggers excessive memory use when generating large global FP constants.
Reviewers: bogner, lhames, t.p.northover
Subscribers: jlebar, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44277
llvm-svn: 327161
Added helpers to build G_FCONSTANT, along with matching ConstantFP and
unit tests for the same.
Sample usage.
auto MIB = Builder.buildFConstant(s32, 0.5); // Build IEEESingle
For Matching the above
const ConstantFP* Tmp;
mi_match(DstReg, MRI, m_GFCst(Tmp));
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44128
reviewed by: volkan
llvm-svn: 327152
The code to match and produce more x86 vector blends was enabled for all
architectures even though the transform may pessimize the code for other
architectures that do not provide a vector blend instruction.
Added an aarch64 testcase to check that a VZIP instruction is generated instead
of byte movs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44118
llvm-svn: 327132
This patch is a fix for PR36642.
While legalizing long vector types, make sure the smaller types get the
flags of the wider type.
bugzilla link: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36642
Change-Id: I0c2829639f094c862c10a6b51b342d4c2563e1fa
llvm-svn: 327079
Summary:
This patch adds the DW_AT_byte_size dwarf attribute to vectors.
This fixes PR21924
LLVM will round a vector up to the next alignable address, which can result in
the vector's representation in the object file being larger than what the
debugger will calculate via NumberOfElements * ElementSize. In such a case calling sizeof(MyVec) in the source will result in a different value than what a debugger might present. This situation can occur because LLVM permits non-power of two 'vector_size' attributes.
Reviewers: echristo, dexonsmith, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: probinson, aprantl, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44048
llvm-svn: 327072
Summary:
A desired property of the node order in Swing Modulo Scheduling is
that for nodes outside circuits the following holds: none of them is
scheduled after both a successor and a predecessor. We call
node orders that meet this property valid.
Although invalid node orders do not lead to the generation of incorrect
code, they can cause the pipeliner not being able to find a pipelined schedule
for arbitrary II. The reason is that after scheduling the successor and the
predecessor of a node, no room may be left to schedule the node itself.
For data flow graphs with 0-latency edges, the node ordering algorithm
of Swing Modulo Scheduling can generate such undesired invalid node orders.
This patch fixes that.
In the remainder of this commit message, I will give an example
demonstrating the issue, explain the fix, and explain how the the fix is tested.
Consider, as an example, the following data flow graph with all
edge latencies 0 and all edges pointing downward.
```
n0
/ \
n1 n3
\ /
n2
|
n4
```
Consider the implemented node order algorithm in top-down mode. In that mode,
the algorithm orders the nodes based on greatest Height and in case of equal
Height on lowest Movability. Finally, in case of equal Height and
Movability, given two nodes with an edge between them, the algorithm prefers
the source-node.
In the graph, for every node, the Height and Movability are equal to 0.
As will be explained below, the algorithm can generate the order n0, n1, n2, n3, n4.
So, node n3 is scheduled after its predecessor n0 and after its successor n2.
The reason that the algorithm can put node n2 in the order before node n3,
even though they have an edge between them in which node n3 is the source,
is the following: Suppose the algorithm has constructed the partial node
order n0, n1. Then, the nodes left to be ordered are nodes n2, n3, and n4. Suppose
that the while-loop in the implemented algorithm considers the nodes in
the order n4, n3, n2. The algorithm will start with node n4, and look for
more preferable nodes. First, node n4 will be compared with node n3. As the nodes
have equal Height and Movability and have no edge between them, the algorithm
will stick with node n4. Then node n4 is compared with node n2. Again the
Height and Movability are equal. But, this time, there is an edge between
the two nodes, and the algorithm will prefer the source node n2.
As there are no nodes left to compare, the algorithm will add node n2 to
the node order, yielding the partial node order n0, n1, n2. In this way node n2
arrives in the node-order before node n3.
To solve this, this patch introduces the ZeroLatencyHeight (ZLH) property
for nodes. It is defined as the maximum unweighted length of a path from the
given node to an arbitrary node in which each edge has latency 0.
So, ZLH(n0)=3, ZLH(n1)=ZLH(n3)=2, ZLH(n2)=1, and ZLH(n4)=0
In this patch, the preference for a greater ZeroLatencyHeight
is added in the top-down mode of the node ordering algorithm, after the
preference for a greater Height, and before the preference for a
lower Movability.
Therefore, the two allowed node-orders are n0, n1, n3, n2, n4 and n0, n3, n1, n2, n4.
Both of them are valid node orders.
In the same way, the bottom-up mode of the node ordering algorithm is adapted
by introducing the ZeroLatencyDepth property for nodes.
The patch is tested by adding extra checks to the following existing
lit-tests:
test/CodeGen/Hexagon/SUnit-boundary-prob.ll
test/CodeGen/Hexagon/frame-offset-overflow.ll
test/CodeGen/Hexagon/vect/vect-shuffle.ll
Before this patch, the pipeliner failed to pipeline the loops in these tests
due to invalid node-orders. After the patch, the pipeliner successfully
pipelines all these loops.
Reviewers: bcahoon
Reviewed By: bcahoon
Subscribers: Ayal, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43620
llvm-svn: 326925
Fixes the bug found by asan. Also XFAIL the new test for Darwin,
which is stuck on DWARF v2, and fix up other tests so they stop
failing on Windows.
llvm-svn: 326839
Summary:
- Emit UdtSourceLine information for enums to match MSVC
- Add a method to add UDTSrcLine and call it for all Class/Struct/Union/Enum
- Update test cases to verify the changes
Reviewers: zturner, llvm-commits, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44116
llvm-svn: 326824
I obviously messed up arguments to MachineOperand::CreateReg
in rL326769. This should make it work as intended.
Thanks to RKSimon for spotting this.
llvm-svn: 326780
Summary:
This is a workaround for pr36417
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36417
LiveDebugVariables will now verify that the DBG_VALUE instructions
are sane (prior to register allocation) by asking LIS if a virtual
register used in the DBG_VALUE is live (or dead def) in the slot
index before the DBG_VALUE. If it isn't sane the DBG_VALUE is
discarded.
One pass that was identified as introducing non-sane DBG_VALUE
instructtons, when analysing pr36417, was the DAG->DAG Instruction
Selection. It sometimes inserts DBG_VALUE instructions referring to
a virtual register that is defined later in the same basic block.
So it is a use before def kind of problem. The DBG_VALUE is
typically inserted in the beginning of a basic block when this
happens. The problem can be seen in the test case
test/DebugInfo/X86/dbg-value-inlined-parameter.ll
Reviewers: aprantl, rnk, probinson
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: vsk, davide, alexcrichton, Ka-Ka, eraman, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43956
llvm-svn: 326769
DWARF v5 specifies that the root file (also given in the DW_AT_name
attribute of the compilation unit DIE) should be emitted explicitly to
the line table's list of files. This makes the line table more
independent of the .debug_info section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44054
llvm-svn: 326758
Summary:
Fabs is a common floating-point operation, especially for some expansions. This patch adds
a new generic opcode for llvm.fabs.* intrinsic in order to avoid building/matching this intrinsic.
Reviewers: qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar, dsanders, rovka
Reviewed By: aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43864
llvm-svn: 326749
This is a NFC simple patch that changes the DEBUG dumping in the
MachineScheduler so that the dumping of the built SUnits is done before the
SchedImpl->initialize() is called.
This is better on SystemZ, since it has a strategy that does some dumping at
the start of the region, and it is not possible to easily read it if it is
output above a long list of SU.
Review: Javed Absar
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44089
llvm-svn: 326716