to adding them in a determinstic order (bottom up from
the root) based on the structure of the graph itself.
This updates tests for some random changes, interesting
bits: CodeGen/Blackfin/promote-logic.ll no longer crashes.
I have no idea why, but that's good right?
CodeGen/X86/2009-07-16-LoadFoldingBug.ll also fails, but
now compiles to have one fewer constant pool entry, making
the expected load that was being folded disappear. Since it
is an unreduced mass of gnast, I just removed it.
This fixes PR6370
llvm-svn: 97023
(OP (trunc x), (trunc y)) -> (trunc (OP x, y))
Unfortunately this simple change causes dag combine to infinite looping. The problem is the shrink demanded ops optimization tend to canonicalize expressions in the opposite manner. That is badness. This patch disable those optimizations in dag combine but instead it is done as a late pass in sdisel.
This also exposes some deficiencies in dag combine and x86 setcc / brcond lowering. Teach them to look pass ISD::TRUNCATE in various places.
llvm-svn: 92849
physical registers. This is especially critical for the later two since they
start the live interval of a super-register. e.g.
%DO<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %D0<undef>, %S0<kill>, 1
If this instruction is eliminated, the register scavenger will not be happy as
D0 is not defined previously.
This fixes PR5055.
llvm-svn: 82968
In the included test case, a stack load was not included in DistanceMap. That
caused TransferDeadness to ignore the instruction, leading to a scavenger
assert.
llvm-svn: 79090
The register scavenger maintains a DistanceMap that maps MI pointers to their
distance from the top of the current MBB. The DistanceMap is built
incrementally in forward() and in bulk in findFirstUse(). It is used by
scavengeRegister() to determine which candidate register has the longest
unused interval.
Unfortunately the DistanceMap contents can become outdated. The first time
scavengeRegister() is called, the DistanceMap is filled to cover the MBB. If
then instructions are inserted in the MBB (as they always are following
scavengeRegister()), the recorded distances are too short. This causes bad
behaviour in the included test case where a register use /after/ the current
position is ignored because findFirstUse() thinks is is /before/ the current
position. A "using an undefined register" assertion follows promptly.
The fix is to build a fresh DistanceMap at the top of scavengeRegister(), and
discard it after use. This means that DistanceMap is no longer needed as a
RegScavenger member variable, and forward() doesn't need to update it.
The fix then discloses issue number two in the same test case: The candidate
search in scavengeRegister() finds a CSR that has been saved in the prologue,
but is currently unused. It would be both inefficient and wrong to spill such
a register in the emergency spill slot. In the present case, the emergency
slot restore is placed immediately before the normal epilogue restore, leading
to a "Redefining a live register" assertion.
Fix number two: When scavengerRegister() stumbles upon an unused register that
is overwritten later in the MBB, return that register early. It is important
to verify that the register is defined later in the MBB, otherwise it might be
an unspilled CSR.
llvm-svn: 78650
Blackfin supports and/or/xor on i32 but not on i16. Teach
DAGCombiner::SimplifyBinOpWithSameOpcodeHands to not produce illegal nodes
after legalize ops.
llvm-svn: 78497
When LowerExtract eliminates an EXTRACT_SUBREG with a kill flag, it moves the
kill flag to the place where the sub-register is killed. This can accidentally
overlap with the use of a sibling sub-register, and we have trouble.
In the test case we have this code:
Live Ins: %R0 %R1 %R2
%R2L<def> = EXTRACT_SUBREG %R2<kill>, 1
%R2H<def> = LOAD16fi <fi#-1>, 0, Mem:LD(2,4) [FixedStack-1 + 0]
%R1L<def> = EXTRACT_SUBREG %R1<kill>, 1
%R0L<def> = EXTRACT_SUBREG %R0<kill>, 1
%R0H<def> = ADD16 %R2H<kill>, %R2L<kill>, %AZ<imp-def>, %AN<imp-def>, %AC0<imp-def>, %V<imp-def>, %VS<imp-def>
subreg: CONVERTING: %R2L<def> = EXTRACT_SUBREG %R2<kill>, 1
subreg: eliminated!
subreg: killed here: %R0H<def> = ADD16 %R2H, %R2L, %R2<imp-use,kill>, %AZ<imp-def>, %AN<imp-def>, %AC0<imp-def>, %V<imp-def>, %VS<imp-def>
The kill flag on %R2 is moved to the last instruction, and the live range overlaps with the definition of %R2H:
*** Bad machine code: Redefining a live physical register ***
- function: f
- basic block: 0x18358c0 (#0)
- instruction: %R2H<def> = LOAD16fi <fi#-1>, 0, Mem:LD(2,4) [FixedStack-1 + 0]
Register R2H was defined but already live.
The fix is to replace EXTRACT_SUBREG with IMPLICIT_DEF instead of eliminating
it completely:
subreg: CONVERTING: %R2L<def> = EXTRACT_SUBREG %R2<kill>, 1
subreg: replace by: %R2L<def> = IMPLICIT_DEF %R2<kill>
Note that these IMPLICIT_DEF instructions survive to the asm output. It is
necessary to fix the stack-color-with-reg test case because of that.
llvm-svn: 78093
__builtin_bfin_ones does the same as ctpop, so it can be implemented in the front-end.
__builtin_bfin_loadbytes loads from an unaligned pointer with the disalignexcpt instruction. It does the same as loading from a pointer with the low bits masked. It is better if the front-end creates a masked load. We can always instruction select the masked to disalignexcpt+load.
We keep csync/ssync/idle. These intrinsics represent instructions that need workarounds for some silicon revisions. We may even want to convert inline assembler to intrinsics to enable the workarounds.
llvm-svn: 77917
Allow imp-def and imp-use of anything in the scavenger asserts, just like the machine code verifier.
Allow redefinition of a sub-register of a live register.
llvm-svn: 77904