This is generally more readable due to the way the assembler aliases
work.
(This causes a lot of test changes, but it's not really as scary as it
looks at first glance; it's just mechanically changing a bunch of checks
for orr to check for mov instead.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59720
llvm-svn: 356954
As suggested in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32384#c1, this change
makes the inlining of `memset()` and `memcpy()` more aggressive when
compiling for speed. The tuning remains the same when optimizing for size.
Patch by: Sebastian Pop <s.pop@samsung.com>
Evandro Menezes <e.menezes@samsung.com>
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45098
llvm-svn: 333429
Note, this was reviewed (and more details are in) http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html
These intrinsics currently have an explicit alignment argument which is
required to be a constant integer. It represents the alignment of the
source and dest, and so must be the minimum of those.
This change allows source and dest to each have their own alignments
by using the alignment attribute on their arguments. The alignment
argument itself is removed.
There are a few places in the code for which the code needs to be
checked by an expert as to whether using only src/dest alignment is
safe. For those places, they currently take the minimum of src/dest
alignments which matches the current behaviour.
For example, code which used to read:
call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* %dest, i8* %src, i32 500, i32 8, i1 false)
will now read:
call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* align 8 %dest, i8* align 8 %src, i32 500, i1 false)
For out of tree owners, I was able to strip alignment from calls using sed by replacing:
(call.*llvm\.memset.*)i32\ [0-9]*\,\ i1 false\)
with:
$1i1 false)
and similarly for memmove and memcpy.
I then added back in alignment to test cases which needed it.
A similar commit will be made to clang which actually has many differences in alignment as now
IRBuilder can generate different source/dest alignments on calls.
In IRBuilder itself, a new argument was added. Instead of calling:
CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)
you now call
CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, SrcAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)
There is a temporary class (IntegerAlignment) which takes the source alignment and rejects
implicit conversion from bool. This is to prevent isVolatile here from passing its default
parameter to the source alignment.
Note, changes in future can now be made to codegen. I didn't change anything here, but this
change should enable better memcpy code sequences.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel.
llvm-svn: 253511
This commit defines subtarget feature strict-align and uses it instead of
cl::opt -aarch64-strict-align to decide whether strict alignment should be
forced.
rdar://problem/21529937
llvm-svn: 243516
restrictions when choosing a type for small-memcpy inlining in
SelectionDAGBuilder.
This ensures that the loads and stores output for the memcpy won't be further
expanded during legalization, which would cause the total number of instructions
for the memcpy to exceed (often significantly) the inlining thresholds.
<rdar://problem/17829180>
llvm-svn: 234462