Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Javed Absar e7c338081a [ARM] Assign cost of scaling for Cortex-R52
This patch assigns cost of the scaling used in addressing for Cortex-R52.

On Cortex-R52 a negated register offset takes longer than a non-negated
register offset, in a register-offset addressing mode.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D25670

Reviewer: jmolloy
llvm-svn: 284460
2016-10-18 09:08:54 +00:00
Javed Absar 85874a9360 [ARM]: Assign cost of scaling used in addressing mode for ARM cores
This patch assigns cost of the scaling used in addressing.
On many ARM cores, a negated register offset takes longer than a
non-negated register offset, in a register-offset addressing mode.

For instance:

LDR R0, [R1, R2 LSL #2]
LDR R0, [R1, -R2 LSL #2]

Above, (1) takes less cycles than (2).

By assigning appropriate scaling factor cost, we enable the LLVM
to make the right trade-offs in the optimization and code-selection phase.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24857

Reviewers: jmolloy, rengolin
llvm-svn: 284127
2016-10-13 14:57:43 +00:00
David Blaikie 79e6c74981 [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to getelementptr instruction
One of several parallel first steps to remove the target type of pointers,
replacing them with a single opaque pointer type.

This adds an explicit type parameter to the gep instruction so that when the
first parameter becomes an opaque pointer type, the type to gep through is
still available to the instructions.

* This doesn't modify gep operators, only instructions (operators will be
  handled separately)

* Textual IR changes only. Bitcode (including upgrade) and changing the
  in-memory representation will be in separate changes.

* geps of vectors are transformed as:
    getelementptr <4 x float*> %x, ...
  ->getelementptr float, <4 x float*> %x, ...
  Then, once the opaque pointer type is introduced, this will ultimately look
  like:
    getelementptr float, <4 x ptr> %x
  with the unambiguous interpretation that it is a vector of pointers to float.

* address spaces remain on the pointer, not the type:
    getelementptr float addrspace(1)* %x
  ->getelementptr float, float addrspace(1)* %x
  Then, eventually:
    getelementptr float, ptr addrspace(1) %x

Importantly, the massive amount of test case churn has been automated by
same crappy python code. I had to manually update a few test cases that
wouldn't fit the script's model (r228970,r229196,r229197,r229198). The
python script just massages stdin and writes the result to stdout, I
then wrapped that in a shell script to handle replacing files, then
using the usual find+xargs to migrate all the files.

update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re

ibrep = re.compile(r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr inbounds )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
normrep = re.compile(       r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")

def conv(match, line):
  if not match:
    return line
  line = match.groups()[0]
  if len(match.groups()[5]) == 0:
    line += match.groups()[2]
  line += match.groups()[3]
  line += ", "
  line += match.groups()[1]
  line += "\n"
  return line

for line in sys.stdin:
  if line.find("getelementptr ") == line.find("getelementptr inbounds"):
    if line.find("getelementptr inbounds") != line.find("getelementptr inbounds ("):
      line = conv(re.match(ibrep, line), line)
  elif line.find("getelementptr ") != line.find("getelementptr ("):
    line = conv(re.match(normrep, line), line)
  sys.stdout.write(line)

apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
  python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
  rm -f "$name.tmp"
done

The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh

After that, check-all (with llvm, clang, clang-tools-extra, lld,
compiler-rt, and polly all checked out).

The extra 'rm' in the apply.sh script is due to a few files in clang's test
suite using interesting unicode stuff that my python script was throwing
exceptions on. None of those files needed to be migrated, so it seemed
sufficient to ignore those cases.

Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7636

llvm-svn: 230786
2015-02-27 19:29:02 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 7258735fa0 ARM: fixup more tests to specify the target more explicitly
This changes the tests that were targeting ARM EABI to explicitly specify the
environment rather than relying on the default.  This breaks with the new
Windows on ARM support when running the tests on Windows where the default
environment is no longer EABI.

Take the opportunity to avoid a pointless redirect (helps when trying to debug
with providing a command line invocation which can be copy and pasted) and
removing a few greps in favour of FileCheck.

llvm-svn: 205541
2014-04-03 16:01:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a5a29f970e Convert all tests using TCL-style quoting to use shell-style quoting.
This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.

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

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

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

llvm-svn: 159525
2012-07-02 12:47:22 +00:00
Dan Gohman c8054d90fb Eliminate more uses of llvm-as and llvm-dis.
llvm-svn: 81293
2009-09-09 00:09:15 +00:00
Evan Cheng 3158790e32 Changing allocation ordering from r3 ... r0 back to r0 ... r3. The order change no longer make sense after the coalescing changes we have made since then.
llvm-svn: 72955
2009-06-05 19:08:58 +00:00
Dan Gohman b81dd48fd2 Add nounwind to a few tests.
llvm-svn: 72002
2009-05-18 15:16:49 +00:00
Reid Spencer b5dc70c270 For PR1319: Upgrade to use new test harness
llvm-svn: 36076
2007-04-15 19:11:47 +00:00
Chris Lattner be96c646dc new testcase.
llvm-svn: 35591
2007-04-02 06:33:10 +00:00