next to its only user. This helper relies on TargetLowering information
that shouldn't be generally used throughout the Transfoms library, and
so it made little sense as a generic utility.
This also consolidates the file where we need to remove the remaining
uses of TargetLowering in favor of the IR-layer abstract interface in
TargetTransformInfo.
llvm-svn: 171590
1. Add code to estimate register pressure.
2. Add code to select the unroll factor based on register pressure.
3. Add bits to TargetTransformInfo to provide the number of registers.
llvm-svn: 171469
code that includes Intrinsics.gen directly.
This never showed up in my testing because the old Intrinsics.gen was
still kicking around in the make build system and was correct there. =[
Thankfully, some of the bots to clean rebuilds and that caught this.
llvm-svn: 171373
into their new header subdirectory: include/llvm/IR. This matches the
directory structure of lib, and begins to correct a long standing point
of file layout clutter in LLVM.
There are still more header files to move here, but I wanted to handle
them in separate commits to make tracking what files make sense at each
layer easier.
The only really questionable files here are the target intrinsic
tablegen files. But that's a battle I'd rather not fight today.
I've updated both CMake and Makefile build systems (I think, and my
tests think, but I may have missed something).
I've also re-sorted the includes throughout the project. I'll be
committing updates to Clang, DragonEgg, and Polly momentarily.
llvm-svn: 171366
utils/sort_includes.py script.
Most of these are updating the new R600 target and fixing up a few
regressions that have creeped in since the last time I sorted the
includes.
llvm-svn: 171362
Specifically these calls return their argument verbatim, as a low-level
optimization. However, this makes high-level optimizations
harder. We undo any uses of this optimization that the front-end
emitted. We redo them later in the contract pass.
llvm-svn: 171346
The later API is nicer than the former, and is correct regarding wrap-around offsets (if anyone cares).
There are a few more places left with duplicated code, which I'll remove soon.
llvm-svn: 171259
directly.
This is in preparation for removing the use of the 'Attribute' class as a
collection of attributes. That will shift to the AttributeSet class instead.
llvm-svn: 171253
LCSSA PHIs may have undef values. The vectorizer updates values that are used by outside users such as PHIs.
The bug happened because undefs are not loop values. This patch handles these PHIs.
PR14725
llvm-svn: 171251
such as by a compiler warning, a check in clang -fsanitizer=undefined, being
optimized to unreachable, or a combination of the above. PR14722.
llvm-svn: 171119
For the time being this includes only some dummy test cases. Once the
generic implementation of the intrinsics cost function does something other
than assuming scalarization in all cases, or some target specializes the
interface, some real test cases can be added.
Also, for consistency, I changed the type of IID from unsigned to Intrinsic::ID
in a few other places.
llvm-svn: 171079
When the backend is used from clang, it should produce proper diagnostics
instead of just printing messages to errs(). Other clients may also want to
register their own error handlers with the LLVMContext, and the same handler
should work for warnings in the same way as the existing emitError methods.
llvm-svn: 171041
memory bound checks. Before the fix we were able to vectorize this loop from
the Livermore Loops benchmark:
for ( k=1 ; k<n ; k++ )
x[k] = x[k-1] + y[k];
llvm-svn: 170811
Before if-conversion we could check if a value is loop invariant
if it was declared inside the basic block. Now that loops have
multiple blocks this check is incorrect.
This fixes External/SPEC/CINT95/099_go/099_go
llvm-svn: 170756
Similarly inlining of the function is inhibited, if that would duplicate the call (in particular inlining is still allowed when there is only one callsite and the function has internal linkage).
llvm-svn: 170704
When the least bit of C is greater than V, (x&C) must be greater than V
if it is not zero, so the comparison can be simplified.
Although this was suggested in Target/X86/README.txt, it benefits any
architecture with a directly testable form of AND.
Patch by Kevin Schoedel
llvm-svn: 170576
This changes adds shadow and origin propagation for unknown intrinsics
by examining the arguments and ModRef behaviour. For now, only 3 classes
of intrinsics are handled:
- those that look like simple SIMD store
- those that look like simple SIMD load
- those that don't have memory effects and look like arithmetic/logic/whatever
operation on simple types.
llvm-svn: 170530
MapVector is a bit heavyweight, but I don't see a simpler way. Also the
InductionList is unlikely to be large. This should help 3-stage selfhost
compares (PR14647).
llvm-svn: 170528
This was a silly oversight, we weren't pruning allocas which were used
by variable-length memory intrinsics from the set that could be widened
and promoted as integers. Fix that.
llvm-svn: 170353
This also cleans up a bit of the memcpy call rewriting by sinking some
irrelevant code further down and making the call-emitting code a bit
more concrete.
Previously, memcpy of a subvector would actually miscompile (!!!) the
copy into a single vector element copy. I have no idea how this ever
worked. =/ This is the memcpy half of PR14478 which we probably weren't
noticing previously because it didn't actually assert.
The rewrite relies on the newly refactored insert- and extractVector
functions to do the heavy lifting, and those are the same as used for
loads and stores which makes the test coverage a bit more meaningful
here.
llvm-svn: 170338
Check whether a BB is known as reachable before adding it to the worklist.
This way BB's with multiple predecessors are added to the list no more than
once.
llvm-svn: 170335
The first half of fixing this bug was actually in r170328, but was
entirely coincidental. It did however get me to realize the nature of
the bug, and adapt the test case to test more interesting behavior. In
turn, that uncovered the rest of the bug which I've fixed here.
This should fix two new asserts that showed up in the vectorize nightly
tester.
llvm-svn: 170333
I noticed this while looking at r170328. We only ever do a vector
rewrite when the alloca *is* the vector type, so it's good to not paper
over bugs here by doing a convertValue that isn't needed.
llvm-svn: 170331
This will allow its use inside of memcpy rewriting as well. This routine
is more complex than extractVector, and some of its uses are not 100%
where I want them to be so there is still some work to do here.
While this can technically change the output in some cases, it shouldn't
be a change that matters -- IE, it can leave some dead code lying around
that prior versions did not, etc.
Yet another step in the refactorings leading up to the solution to the
last component of PR14478.
llvm-svn: 170328
The method helpers all implicitly act upon the alloca, and what we
really want is a fully generic helper. Doing memcpy rewrites is more
special than all other rewrites because we are at times rewriting
instructions which touch pointers *other* than the alloca. As
a consequence all of the helpers needed by memcpy rewriting of
sub-vector copies will need to be generalized fully.
Note that all of these helpers ({insert,extract}{Integer,Vector}) are
woefully uncommented. I'm going to go back through and document them
once I get the factoring correct.
No functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 170325
PR14478 highlights a serious problem in SROA that simply wasn't being
exercised due to a lack of vector input code mixed with C-library
function calls. Part of SROA was written carefully to handle subvector
accesses via memset and memcpy, but the rewriter never grew support for
this. Fixing it required refactoring the subvector access code in other
parts of SROA so it could be shared, and then fixing the splat formation
logic and using subvector insertion (this patch).
The PR isn't quite fixed yet, as memcpy is still broken in the same way.
I'm starting on that series of patches now.
Hopefully this will be enough to bring the bullet benchmark back to life
with the bb-vectorizer enabled, but that may require fixing memcpy as
well.
llvm-svn: 170301
No functionality changed. Refactoring leading up to the fix for PR14478
which requires some significant changes to the memset and memcpy
rewriting.
llvm-svn: 170299
This change moves the code for default shadow propagaition (handleShadowOr)
and origin tracking (setOriginForNaryOp) into a new builder-like class. Also
gets rid of handleShadowOrBinary.
llvm-svn: 170192
This assumes (1 << n) is always not zero. Consider n is greater than word size.
Although I know it is undefined, this transforms undefined behavior hidden.
This led clang unexpected behavior with some failures. I will investigate to fix undefined shl in clang.
llvm-svn: 170128
In a previous thread it was pointed out that isPowerOfTwo is not a very precise
name since it can return false for powers of two if it is unable to show that
they are powers of two.
llvm-svn: 170093
Provides m_Argument that allows matching against a CallSite's specified argument. Provides m_Intrinsic pattern that can be templatized over the intrinsic id and bind/match arguments similarly to other pattern matchers. Implementations provided for 0 to 4 arguments, though it's very simple to extend for more. Also provides example template specialization for bswap (m_BSwap) and example of code cleanup for its use.
llvm-svn: 170091
Better controls the inlining of functions when the caller function has MinSize attribute.
Basically, when the caller function has this attribute, we do not "force" the inlining
of callee functions carrying the InlineHint attribute (i.e., functions defined with
inline keyword)
llvm-svn: 170065
been used in the first place. It simply was passed to the function and to the
recursive invocations. Simply drop the parameter and update the callers for the
new signature.
Patch by Saleem Abdulrasool!
llvm-svn: 169988
When ASan replaces <alloca instruction> with
<offset into a common large alloca>, it should also patch
llvm.dbg.declare calls and replace debug info descriptors to mark
that we've replaced alloca with a value that stores an address
of the user variable, not the user variable itself.
See PR11818 for more context.
llvm-svn: 169984
Use explicitely aligned store and load instructions to deal with argument and
retval shadow. This matters when an argument's alignment is higher than
__msan_param_tls alignment (which is the case with __m128i).
llvm-svn: 169859
The `-mno-red-zone' flag wasn't being propagated to the functions that code
coverage generates. This allowed some of them to use the red zone when that
wasn't allowed.
<rdar://problem/12843084>
llvm-svn: 169754
This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the
use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc.
It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep
recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply
translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the
offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains
constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it
performs conservative escape analysis.
However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed
going forward:
1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers.
2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset
tracking isn't needed.
3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values.
The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the
SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of
their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified.
SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which
this utility now provides.
Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few
more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring
chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in
fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory.
While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as
any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we
get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these
features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such
heroics.
The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward,
and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing
a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer.
Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help
reviewing and debugging this patch.
llvm-svn: 169728
When SROA was evaluating a mixture of i1 and i8 loads and stores, in
just a particular case, it would tickle a latent bug where we compared
bits to bytes rather than bits to bits. As a consequence of the latent
bug, we would allow integers through which were not byte-size multiples,
a situation the later rewriting code was never intended to handle.
In release builds this could trigger all manner of oddities, but the
reported issue in PR14548 was forming invalid bitcast instructions.
The only downside of this fix is that it makes it more clear that SROA
in its current form is not capable of handling mixed i1 and i8 loads and
stores. Sometimes with the previous code this would work by luck, but
usually it would crash, so I'm not terribly worried. I'll watch the LNT
numbers just to be sure.
llvm-svn: 169719
- added function to VectorTargetTransformInfo to query cost of intrinsics
- vectorize trivially vectorizable intrinsic calls such as sin, cos, log, etc.
Reviewed by: Nadav
llvm-svn: 169711
This will more closely match the behavior of the new PtrUseVisitor that
I am adding. Hopefully this will not change the actual behavior in any
way, but by making the processing order more similar help in debugging.
llvm-svn: 169697
There are still bugs in this pass, as well as other issues that are
being worked on, but the bugs are crashers that occur pretty easily in
the wild. Test cases have been sent to the original commit's review
thread.
This reverts the commits:
r169671: Fix a logic error.
r169604: Move the popcnt tests to an X86 subdirectory.
r168931: Initial commit adding the pass.
llvm-svn: 169683
MSan uses a TLS slot to pass shadow for function arguments and return values.
This makes all instrumented functions not readonly, and at the same time
requires that all callees of an instrumented function that may be
MSan-instrumented do not have readonly attribute (otherwise some of the
instrumentation may be optimized out).
llvm-svn: 169591
Instead of unconditionally storing origin with every application store,
only do this when the shadow of the stored value is != 0.
This change also delays instrumentation of stores until after the walk over
function's instructions, because adding new basic blocks confuses InstVisitor.
We only keep 1 origin value per 4 bytes of application memory. This change
fixes the bug when a store of a single clean byte wiped the origin for the
whole 4-byte area.
Since stores of uninitialized values are relatively uncommon, this change
improves performance of track-origins mode by 5% median and by up to 47% on
specs.
llvm-svn: 169490
This change attempts to simplify (X^Y) -> X or Y in the user's context if we know that
only bits from X or Y are demanded.
A minimized case is provided bellow. This change will simplify "t>>16" into "var1 >>16".
=============================================================
unsigned foo (unsigned val1, unsigned val2) {
unsigned t = val1 ^ 1234;
return (t >> 16) | t; // NOTE: t is used more than once.
}
=============================================================
Note that if the "t" were used only once, the expression would be finally optimized as well.
However, with with this change, the optimization will take place earlier.
Reviewed by Nadav, Thanks a lot!
llvm-svn: 169317
missed in the first pass because the script didn't yet handle include
guards.
Note that the script is now able to handle all of these headers without
manual edits. =]
llvm-svn: 169224
Added the code that actually performs the if-conversion during vectorization.
We can now vectorize this code:
for (int i=0; i<n; ++i) {
unsigned k = 0;
if (a[i] > b[i]) <------ IF inside the loop.
k = k * 5 + 3;
a[i] = k; <---- K is a phi node that becomes vector-select.
}
llvm-svn: 169217
This change tries to simmplify E1 = " X >> C1 << C2" into :
- E2 = "X << (C2 - C1)" if C2 > C1, or
- E2 = "X >> (C1 - C2)" if C1 > C2, or
- E2 = X if C1 == C2.
Reviewed by Nadav. Thanks!
llvm-svn: 169182
which is the legality of the if-conversion transformation. The next step is to
implement the cost-model for the if-converted code as well as the
vectorization itself.
llvm-svn: 169152
Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes.
I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module
include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or
care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time
and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything
(I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they
may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the
API being implemented.
Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header
files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main
module rule does in fact have its merits. =]
llvm-svn: 169131
The partitioning logic attempted to handle uses of an alloca with an
offset starting before the alloca so long as the use had some overlap
with the alloca itself. However, there was a bug where we tested
'(uint64_t)Offset >= AllocSize' without first checking whether 'Offset'
was positive. As a consequence, essentially every negative offset (that
is, starting *before* the alloca does) would be thrown out, even if it
was overlapping. The subsequent code to throw out negative offsets which
were actually non-overlapping was essentially dead. The code to *handle*
overlapping negative offsets was actually dead!
I've just removed all of this, and taught SROA to discard any uses which
start prior to the alloca from the beginning. It has the lovely property
of simplifying the code. =] All the tests still pass, and in fact no new
tests are needed as this is already covered by our testsuite. Fixing the
code so that negative offsets work the way the comments indicate they
were supposed to work causes regressions. That's how I found this.
Anyways, this is all progress in the correct direction -- tightening up
SROA to be maximally aggressive. Some day, I really hope to turn
out-of-bounds accesses to an alloca into 'unreachable'.
llvm-svn: 169120
Also check in a case to repeat the issue, on which 'opt -globalopt' consumes 1.6GB memory.
The big memory footprint cause is that current GlobalOpt one by one hoists and stores the leaf element constant into the global array, in each iteration, it recreates the global array initializer constant and leave the old initializer alone. This may result in many obsolete constants left.
For example: we have global array @rom = global [16 x i32] zeroinitializer
After the first element value is hoisted and installed: @rom = global [16 x i32] [ 1, 0, 0, ... ]
After the second element value is installed: @rom = global [16 x 32] [ 1, 2, 0, 0, ... ] // here the previous initializer is obsolete
...
When the transform is done, we have 15 obsolete initializers left useless.
llvm-svn: 169079
The original patch removed a bunch of code that the SjLjEHPrepare pass placed
into the entry block if all of the landing pads were removed during the
CodeGenPrepare class. The more natural way of doing things is to run the CGP
*before* we run the SjLjEHPrepare pass.
Make it so!
llvm-svn: 169044
We're iterating over a non-deterministically ordered container looking
for two saturating flags. To do this correctly, we have to saturate
both, and only stop looping if both saturate to their final value.
Otherwise, which flag we see first changes the result.
This is also a micro-optimization of the previous version as now we
don't go into the (possibly expensive) test logic once the first
violation of either constraint is detected.
llvm-svn: 168989
functionality changed.
Evan's commit r168970 moved the code that the primary comment in this
function referred to to the other end of the function without moving the
comment, and there has been a steady creep of "boolean" logic in it that
is simpler if handled via early exit. That way each special case can
have its own comments. I've also made the variable name a bit more
explanatory than "AllFit". This is in preparation to fix the
non-deterministic output of this function.
llvm-svn: 168988
The simplify-libcalls pass maintained a statistic to count the number
of library calls that have been simplified. Now that library call
simplification is being carried out in instcombine the statistic should
be moved to there.
llvm-svn: 168975
depends on the IR infrastructure, there is no sense in it being off in
Support land.
This is in preparation to start working to expand InstVisitor into more
special-purpose visitors that are still generic and can be re-used
across different passes. The expansion will go into the Analylis tree
though as nothing in VMCore needs it.
llvm-svn: 168972
This revision attempts to recognize following population-count pattern:
while(a) { c++; ... ; a &= a - 1; ... },
where <c> and <a>could be used multiple times in the loop body.
TODO: On X8664 and ARM, __buildin_ctpop() are not expanded to a efficent
instruction sequence, which need to be improved in the following commits.
Reviewed by Nadav, really appreciate!
llvm-svn: 168931
the last invoke instruction in the function. This also removes the last landing
pad in an function. This is fine, but with SjLj EH code, we've already placed a
bunch of code in the 'entry' block, which expects the landing pad to stick
around.
When we get to the situation where CGP has removed the last landing pad, go
ahead and nuke the SjLj instructions from the 'entry' block.
<rdar://problem/12721258>
llvm-svn: 168930
This patch migrates the puts optimizations from the simplify-libcalls
pass into the instcombine library call simplifier.
All the simplifiers from simplify-libcalls have now been migrated to
instcombine. Yay! Just a few other bits to migrate (prototype attribute
inference and a few statistics) and simplify-libcalls can finally be put
to rest.
llvm-svn: 168925
The old version failed on a 3-arg instruction with (-1, 0, 0) shadows (it would
pick the 3rd operand origin irrespective of its shadow).
The new version always picks the origin of the rightmost poisoned operand.
llvm-svn: 168887
Rewrite getOriginPtr in a way that lets subsequent optimizations factor out
the common part of Shadow and Origin address calculation. Improves perf by
up to 5%.
llvm-svn: 168879
This was already done for memmove, where it is required for correctness.
This change improves performance by avoiding copyingthe same memory twice.
Also, the library functions are given __msan_ prefix to prevent instcombine
pass from converting them back to intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 168876
Also a couple not-user-visible changes; using empty() instead of size(), and
make inSection() not insert NULL Regex*'s into StringMap when doing a lookup.
llvm-svn: 168833
My commit to migrate the printf simplifiers from the simplify-libcalls
in r168604 introduced a regression reported by Duncan [1]. The problem
is that in some cases the library call simplifier can return a new value
that has no uses and the new value's type is different than the old value's
type (which is fine because there are no uses). The specific case that
triggered the bug looked something like:
declare void @printf(i8*, ...)
...
call void (i8*, ...)* @printf(i8* %fmt)
Which we want to optimized into:
call i32 @putchar(i32 104)
However, the code was attempting to replace all uses of the printf with
the putchar and the types differ, hence a crash. This is fixed by *just*
deleting the original instruction when there are no uses. The old
simplify-libcalls pass is already doing something similar.
[1] http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-November/056338.html
llvm-svn: 168716
InstCombineLoadStoreAlloca.cpp, which had many issues.
(At least two bugs were noted on llvm-commits, and it was overly conservative.)
Instead, use getOrEnforceKnownAlignment.
llvm-svn: 168629
Enhancement to InstCombine. Try to catch this opportunity:
---------------------------------------------------------------
((X^C1) >> C2) ^ C3 => (X>>C2) ^ ((C1>>C2)^C3)
where the subexpression "X ^ C1" has more than one uses, and
"(X^C1) >> C2" has single use.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Reviewed by Nadav (with minor change per his request).
llvm-svn: 168615
Now if we can transform an alloca into a single vector value, but it has
subvector, non-element accesses, we form the appropriate shufflevectors
to allow SROA to proceed. This fixes PR14055 which pointed out a very
common pattern that SROA couldn't handle -- mixed vec3 and vec4
operations on a single alloca.
llvm-svn: 168418
The issue is that we may end up with newly OOB loads when speculating
a load into the predecessors of a PHI node, and this confuses the new
integer splitting logic in some cases, triggering an assertion failure.
In fact, the branch in question must be dead code as it loads from
a too-narrow alloca. Add code to handle this gracefully and leave the
requisite FIXMEs for both optimizing more aggressively and doing more to
aid sanitizing invalid code which triggers these patterns.
llvm-svn: 168361
When code deletes the context, the AttributeImpls that the AttrListPtr points to
are now invalid. Therefore, instead of keeping a separate managed static for the
AttrListPtrs that's reference counted, move it into the LLVMContext and delete
it when deleting the AttributeImpls.
llvm-svn: 168354
to properly handle the combinations of these with split integer loads
and stores. This essentially replaces Evan's r168227 by refactoring the
code in a different way, and trynig to mirror that refactoring in both
the load and store sides of the rewriting.
Generally speaking there was some really problematic duplicated code
here that led to poorly founded assumptions and then subtle bugs. Now
much of the code actually flows through and follows a more consistent
style and logical path. There is still a tiny bit of duplication on the
store side of things, but it is much less bad.
This also changes the logic to never re-use a load or store instruction
as that was simply too error prone in practice.
I've added a few tests (one a reduction of the one in Evan's original
patch, which happened to be the same as the report in PR14349). I'm
going to look at adding a few more tests for things I found and fixed in
passing (such as the volatile tests in the vectorizable predicate).
This patch has survived bootstrap, and modulo one bugfix survived
Duncan's test suite, but let me know if anything else explodes.
llvm-svn: 168346
This patch moves the isInlineViable function from the InlineAlways pass into
the InlineCostAnalyzer and then changes the InlineCost computation to use that
simple check for always-inline functions. All the special-case checks for
AlwaysInline in the CallAnalyzer can then go away.
llvm-svn: 168300
operands of the expression being written was wrongly thought to be reusable as
an inner node of the expression resulting in it turning up as both an inner node
*and* a leaf, creating a cycle in the def-use graph. This would have caused the
verifier to blow up if things had gotten that far, however it managed to provoke
an infinite loop first.
llvm-svn: 168291
replaced by this patch is equivalent to the new logic, but you'd be wrong, and
that's exactly where the bug was. There's a similar bug in instsimplify which
manifests itself as instsimplify failing to simplify this, rather than doing it
wrong, see next commit.
llvm-svn: 168181
For global variables that get the same value stored into them
everywhere, GlobalOpt will replace them with a constant. The problem is
that a thread-local GlobalVariable looks like one value (the address of
the TLS var), but is different between threads.
This patch introduces Constant::isThreadDependent() which returns true
for thread-local variables and constants which depend on them (e.g. a GEP
into a thread-local array), and teaches GlobalOpt not to track such
values.
llvm-svn: 168037
the utility for extracting a chain of operations from the IR, thought that it
might as well combine any constants it came across (rather than just returning
them along with everything else). On the other hand, the factorization code
would like to see the individual constants (this is quite reasonable: it is
much easier to pull a factor of 3 out of 2*3 than it is to pull it out of 6;
you may think 6/3 isn't so hard, but due to overflow it's not as easy to undo
multiplications of constants as it may at first appear). This patch therefore
makes LinearizeExprTree stupider: it now leaves optimizing to the optimization
part of reassociate, and sticks to just analysing the IR.
llvm-svn: 168035
For now, this uses 8 on-stack elements. I'll need to do some profiling
to see if this is the best number.
Pointed out by Jakob in post-commit review.
llvm-svn: 167966
Iterating over the children of each node in the potential vectorization
plan must happen in a deterministic order (because it affects which children
are erased when two children conflict). There was no need for this data
structure to be a map in the first place, so replacing it with a vector
is a small change.
I believe that this was the last remaining instance if iterating over the
elements of a Dense* container where the iteration order could matter.
There are some remaining iterations over std::*map containers where the order
might matter, but so long as the Value* for instructions in a block increase
with the order of the instructions in the block (or decrease) monotonically,
then this will appear to be deterministic.
llvm-svn: 167942
This patch migrates the math library call simplifications from the
simplify-libcalls pass into the instcombine library call simplifier.
I have typically migrated just one simplifier at a time, but the math
simplifiers are interdependent because:
1. CosOpt, PowOpt, and Exp2Opt all depend on UnaryDoubleFPOpt.
2. CosOpt, PowOpt, Exp2Opt, and UnaryDoubleFPOpt all depend on
the option -enable-double-float-shrink.
These two factors made migrating each of these simplifiers individually
more of a pain than it would be worth. So, I migrated them all together.
llvm-svn: 167815
Don't choose a vectorization plan containing only shuffles and
vector inserts/extracts. Due to inperfections in the cost model,
these can lead to infinite recusion.
llvm-svn: 167811
This fixes another infinite recursion case when using target costs.
We can only replace insert element input chains that are pure (end
with inserting into an undef).
llvm-svn: 167784
The old checking code, which assumed that input shuffles and insert-elements
could always be folded (and thus were free) is too simple.
This can only happen in special circumstances.
Using the simple check caused infinite recursion.
llvm-svn: 167750
The pass would previously assert when trying to compute the cost of
compare instructions with illegal vector types (like struct pointers).
llvm-svn: 167743
The assertion is trigged when the Reassociater tries to transform expression
... + 2 * n * 3 + 2 * m + ...
into:
... + 2 * (n*3 + m).
In the process of the transformation, a helper routine folds the constant 2*3 into 6,
confusing optimizer which is trying the to eliminate the common factor 2, and cannot
find 2 any more.
Review is pending. But I'd like commit first in order to help those who are waiting
for this fix.
llvm-svn: 167740
This fixes a bug where shuffles were being fused such that the
resulting input types were not legal on the target. This would
occur only when both inputs and dependencies were also foldable
operations (such as other shuffles) and there were other connected
pairs in the same block.
llvm-svn: 167731
The library call simplifier folds memcmp calls with all constant arguments
to a constant. For example:
memcmp("foo", "foo", 3) -> 0
memcmp("hel", "foo", 3) -> 1
memcmp("foo", "hel", 3) -> -1
The folding is implemented in terms of the system memcmp that LLVM gets
linked with. It currently just blindly uses the value returned from
the system memcmp as the folded constant.
This patch normalizes the values returned from the system memcmp to
(-1, 0, 1) so that we get consistent results across multiple platforms.
The test cases were adjusted accordingly.
llvm-svn: 167726
In some cases the library call simplifier may need to replace instructions
other than the library call being simplified. In those cases it may be
necessary for clients of the simplifier to override how the replacements
are actually done. As such, a new overrideable method for replacing
instructions was added to LibCallSimplifier.
A new subclass of LibCallSimplifier is also defined which overrides
the instruction replacement method. This is because the instruction
combiner defines its own replacement method which updates the worklist
when instructions are replaced.
llvm-svn: 167681
Several of the simplifiers migrated from the simplify-libcalls pass to
the instcombine pass were not correctly checking the target library
information to gate the simplifications. This patch ensures that the
check is made.
llvm-svn: 167660
The new analysis is not yet ready for prime time. It has a *critical*
flawed assumption, and some troubling shortages of testing. Until it's
been hammered into better shape, let's stick with the working code. This
should be easy to revert itself when the analysis is ready.
Fixes PR14241, a miscompile of any memcpy-able loop which uses a pointer
as the induction mechanism. If you have been seeing miscompiles in this
revision range, you really want to test with this backed out. The
results of this miscompile are a bit subtle as they can lead to
downstream passes concluding things are impossible which are in fact
possible.
Thanks to David Blaikie for the majority of the reduction of this
miscompile. I'll be checking in the test case in a non-revert commit.
Revesions reverted here:
r167045: LoopIdiom: Fix a serious missed optimization: we only turned
top-level loops into memmove.
r166877: LoopIdiom: Add checks to avoid turning memmove into an infinite
loop.
r166875: LoopIdiom: Recognize memmove loops.
r166874: LoopIdiom: Replace custom dependence analysis with
DependenceAnalysis.
llvm-svn: 167286
When target cost information is available, compute explicit costs of inserting and
extracting values from vectors. At this point, all costs are estimated using the
target information, and the chain-depth heuristic is not needed. As a result, it is now, by
default, disabled when using target costs.
llvm-svn: 167256
r165941: Resubmit the changes to llvm core to update the functions to
support different pointer sizes on a per address space basis.
Despite this commit log, this change primarily changed stuff outside of
VMCore, and those changes do not carry any tests for correctness (or
even plausibility), and we have consistently found questionable or flat
out incorrect cases in these changes. Most of them are probably correct,
but we need to devise a system that makes it more clear when we have
handled the address space concerns correctly, and ideally each pass that
gets updated would receive an accompanying test case that exercises that
pass specificaly w.r.t. alternate address spaces.
However, from this commit, I have retained the new C API entry points.
Those were an orthogonal change that probably should have been split
apart, but they seem entirely good.
In several places the changes were very obvious cleanups with no actual
multiple address space code added; these I have not reverted when
I spotted them.
In a few other places there were merge conflicts due to a cleaner
solution being implemented later, often not using address spaces at all.
In those cases, I've preserved the new code which isn't address space
dependent.
This is part of my ongoing effort to clean out the partial address space
code which carries high risk and low test coverage, and not likely to be
finished before the 3.2 release looms closer. Duncan and I would both
like to see the above issues addressed before we return to these
changes.
llvm-svn: 167222
getIntPtrType support for multiple address spaces via a pointer type,
and also introduced a crasher bug in the constant folder reported in
PR14233.
These commits also contained several problems that should really be
addressed before they are re-committed. I have avoided reverting various
cleanups to the DataLayout APIs that are reasonable to have moving
forward in order to reduce the amount of churn, and minimize the number
of commits that were reverted. I've also manually updated merge
conflicts and manually arranged for the getIntPtrType function to stay
in DataLayout and to be defined in a plausible way after this revert.
Thanks to Duncan for working through this exact strategy with me, and
Nick Lewycky for tracking down the really annoying crasher this
triggered. (Test case to follow in its own commit.)
After discussing with Duncan extensively, and based on a note from
Micah, I'm going to continue to back out some more of the more
problematic patches in this series in order to ensure we go into the
LLVM 3.2 branch with a reasonable story here. I'll send a note to
llvmdev explaining what's going on and why.
Summary of reverted revisions:
r166634: Fix a compiler warning with an unused variable.
r166607: Add some cleanup to the DataLayout changes requested by
Chandler.
r166596: Revert "Back out r166591, not sure why this made it through
since I cancelled the command. Bleh, sorry about this!
r166591: Delete a directory that wasn't supposed to be checked in yet.
r166578: Add in support for getIntPtrType to get the pointer type based
on the address space.
llvm-svn: 167221
When target costs are available, use them to account for the costs of
shuffles on internal edges of the DAG of candidate pairs.
Because the shuffle costs here are currently for only the internal edges,
the current target cost model is trivial, and the chain depth requirement
is still in place, I don't yet have an easy test
case. Nevertheless, by looking at the debug output, it does seem to do the right
think to the effective "size" of each DAG of candidate pairs.
llvm-svn: 167217
- Use value handle tricks to communicate use replacements instead of forgetLoop, this is a lot faster.
- Move the "big hammer" out of the main loop so it's not called for every instruction.
This should recover most (if not all) compile time regressions introduced by this code.
llvm-svn: 167136
BBVectorize would, except for loads and stores, always fuse instructions
so that the first instruction (in the current source order) would always
represent the low part of the input vectors and the second instruction
would always represent the high part. This lead to too many shuffles
being produced because sometimes the opposite order produces fewer of them.
With this change, BBVectorize tracks the kind of pair connections that form
the DAG of candidate pairs, and uses that information to reorder the pairs to
avoid excess shuffles. Using this information, a future commit will be able
to add VTTI-based shuffle costs to the pair selection procedure. Importantly,
the number of remaining shuffles can now be estimated during pair selection.
There are some trivial instruction reorderings in the test cases, and one
simple additional test where we certainly want to do a reordering to
avoid an unnecessary shuffle.
llvm-svn: 167122
By propagating the value for the switch condition, LLVM can now build
lookup tables for code such as:
switch (x) {
case 1: return 5;
case 2: return 42;
case 3: case 4: case 5:
return x - 123;
default:
return 123;
}
Given that x is known for each case, "x - 123" becomes a constant for
cases 3, 4, and 5.
llvm-svn: 167115