AArch64 is going to need some kind of cache-invalidation in order to
successfully JIT since it has a weak memory-model. This is provided by
a __clear_cache builtin in libgcc, which acts very much like the
32-bit ARM equivalent (on platforms where it exists).
llvm-svn: 181129
This let us to remove some custom code that matched constant offsets
from globals at instruction selection time as a special addressing mode.
No intended functionality change.
llvm-svn: 181126
The code now makes use of ComputeMaskedBits,
SelectionDAG::isBaseWithConstantOffset and TargetLowering::isGAPlusOffset
where appropriate reducing the amount of logic needed in XCoreISelLowering.
No intended functionality change.
llvm-svn: 181125
Thread local storage is not supported by the XMOS linker so we handle
thread local variables by lowering the variable to an array of n elements
(where n is the number of hardware threads per core, currently 8
for all XMOS devices) indexed by the the current thread ID.
Previously this lowering was spread across the XCoreISelLowering and the
XCoreAsmPrinter classes. Moving this to a separate pass should be much
cleaner.
llvm-svn: 181124
The MOVZ/MOVK instruction sequence may not be the most efficient (a
literal-pool load could be better) but adding that would require
reinstating the ConstantIslands pass.
For now the sequence is correct, and that's enough. Beware, as of
commit GNU ld does not appear to support the relocations needed for
this. Its primary purpose (for now) will be to support JITed code,
since in that case there is no guarantee of where your code will end
up in memory relative to external symbols it references.
llvm-svn: 181117
The intended semantics mirror autoconf, where the user is able to
specify a host triple, but if it's left to the build system then
"config.guess" is invoked for the default.
This also renames the LLVM_HOSTTRIPLE define to LLVM_HOST_TRIPLE to
fit in with the style of the surrounding defines.
llvm-svn: 181112
Now that we hava a convinient place to keep it, remeber the set of
identified structs as we merge modules.
This speeds up the linking of all the bitcode files in clang with the
gold plugin and -plugin-opt=emit-llvm (i.e., link only, no codegen) from
5:25 minutes to 13.6 seconds!
Patch by Xiaofei Wan!
llvm-svn: 181104
Update comments, fix * placement, fix method names that are not
used in clang, add a linkInModule that takes a Mode and put it
in Linker.cpp.
llvm-svn: 181099
PowerPC assemblers are supposed to support a stand-alone '$' symbol
as an alternative of '.' to refer to the current PC. This does not
work in the LLVM assembler parser yet.
To avoid bootstrap failures when using the LLVM assembler as system
assembler, this patch modifies the assembler source code generated
by LLVM to avoid using '$' (and simply use '.' instead).
llvm-svn: 181054
This patch adds support for PowerPC platform-specific variant
kinds in MCSymbolRefExpr::getVariantKindForName, and also
adds a test case to verify they are translated to the appropriate
fixup type.
llvm-svn: 181053
This patch adds a couple of Book II instructions (isync, icbi) to the
PowerPC assembler parser. These are needed when bootstrapping clang
with the integrated assembler forced on, because they are used in
inline asm statements in the code base.
The test case adds the full list of Book II storage control instructions,
including associated extended mnemonics. Again, those that are not yet
supported as marked as FIXME.
llvm-svn: 181052
This patch adds infrastructure to support extended mnemonics in the
PowerPC assembler parser. It adds support specifically for those
extended mnemonics that LLVM will itself generate.
The test case lists *all* extended mnemonics according to the
PowerPC ISA v2.06 Book I, but marks those not yet supported
as FIXME.
llvm-svn: 181051
This adds assembler parser support to the PowerPC back end.
The parser will run for any powerpc-*-* and powerpc64-*-* triples,
but was tested only on 64-bit Linux. The supported syntax is
intended to be compatible with the GNU assembler.
The parser does not yet support all PowerPC instructions, but
it does support anything that is generated by LLVM itself.
There is no support for testing restricted instruction sets yet,
i.e. the parser will always accept any instructions it knows,
no matter what feature flags are given.
Instruction operands will be checked for validity and errors
generated. (Error handling in general could still be improved.)
The patch adds a number of test cases to verify instruction
and operand encodings. The tests currently cover all instructions
from the following PowerPC ISA v2.06 Book I facilities:
Branch, Fixed-point, Floating-Point, and Vector.
Note that a number of these instructions are not yet supported
by the back end; they are marked with FIXME.
A number of follow-on check-ins will add extra features. When
they are all included, LLVM passes all tests (including bootstrap)
when using clang -cc1as as the system assembler.
llvm-svn: 181050
This function consists of following steps:
1. Collect dependent memory accesses.
2. Analyze availability.
3. Perform fully redundancy elimination, or
4. Perform PRE, depending on the availability
Step 2, 3 and 4 are now moved to three helper routines.
llvm-svn: 181047
its fields.
This removes false dependencies between DSP instructions which access different
fields of the the control register. Implicit register operands are added to
instructions RDDSP and WRDSP after instruction selection, depending on the
value of the mask operand.
llvm-svn: 181041
By supporting the vectorization of PHINodes with more than two incoming values we can increase the complexity of nested if statements.
We can now vectorize this loop:
int foo(int *A, int *B, int n) {
for (int i=0; i < n; i++) {
int x = 9;
if (A[i] > B[i]) {
if (A[i] > 19) {
x = 3;
} else if (B[i] < 4 ) {
x = 4;
} else {
x = 5;
}
}
A[i] = x;
}
}
llvm-svn: 181037
Another step towards reinstating the SystemZ backend. I'll commit
the configure changes separately (TARGET_HAS_JIT etc.), then commit
a patch to enable the MCJIT tests on SystemZ.
llvm-svn: 181015
The llvm::sys::AddSignalHandler function (as well as related routines) in
lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc currently registers a signal handler routine
via "sigaction". When this handler is called due to a SIGSEGV, SIGILL or
similar signal, it will show a stack backtrace, deactivate the handler,
and then simply return to the operating system. The intent is that the
OS will now retry execution at the same location as before, which ought
to again trigger the same error condition and cause the same signal to be
delivered again. Since the hander is now deactivated, the OS will take
its default action (usually, terminate the program and possibly create
a core dump).
However, this method doesn't work reliably on System Z: With certain
signals (namely SIGILL, SIGFPE, and SIGTRAP), the program counter stored
by the kernel on the signal stack frame (which is the location where
execution will resume) is not the instruction that triggered the fault,
but then instruction *after it*. When the LLVM signal handler simply
returns to the kernel, execution will then resume at *that* address,
which will not trigger the problem again, but simply go on and execute
potentially unrelated code leading to random errors afterwards.
To fix this, the patch simply goes and re-raises the signal in question
directly from the handler instead of returning from it. This is done
only on System Z and only for those signals that have this particular
problem.
llvm-svn: 181010
Build attribute sections can now be read if they exist via ELFObjectFile, and
the llvm-readobj tool has been extended with an option to dump this information
if requested. Regression tests are also included which exercise these features.
Also update the docs with a fixed ARM ABI link and a new link to the Addenda
which provides the build attributes specification.
llvm-svn: 181009
the "identifier" parsed by the frontend callback by skipping forward
until we've consumed a token that ends at the point dictated by the
callback.
In addition, inform the callback when it's parsing an unevaluated
operand (e.g. mov eax, LENGTH A::x) as opposed to an evaluated one
(e.g. mov eax, [A::x]).
This commit depends on a clang commit.
llvm-svn: 180978
register.
- Define pseudo instructions which store or load ccond field of the DSP
control register.
- Emit the pseudos in MipsSEInstrInfo::storeRegToStack and loadRegFromStack.
- Expand the pseudos before callee-scan save.
- Emit instructions RDDSP or WRDSP to copy between ccond field and GPRs.
llvm-svn: 180969
Actually it took me couple of hours trying to make sense of them and
only to find they are dead code. I guess the original author used
"allSingleSucc" to indicate if there are any critial edge emanating
from some blocks, and tried to perform code motion (actually speculation)
in the presence of these critical edges; but later on he/she changed mind
and decided to perform edge-splitting first.
llvm-svn: 180951
* lib/Target/Hexagon/HexagonInstrInfo.td: Add patterns to combine a
sequence of a pair of i32->i64 extensions followed by a "bitwise or"
into COMBINE_rr.
* lib/Target/Hexagon/HexagonPeephole.cpp: Copy propagate Rx in the
instruction Rp = COMBINE_Ir_V4(0, Rx) to the uses of Rp:subreg_loreg.
* test/CodeGen/Hexagon/union-1.ll: New test.
* test/CodeGen/Hexagon/combine_ir.ll: Fix test.
llvm-svn: 180946
* lib/Target/Hexagon/HexagonInstrInfo.cpp (GetDotNewPredOp):
Given a jump opcode return the right pred.new jump opcode with
a taken vs not-taken hint based on branch probabilities provided
by the target independent module.
* lib/Target/Hexagon/HexagonVLIWPacketizer.cpp: Use the above function.
* lib/Target/Hexagon/HexagonNewValueJump.cpp(getNewvalueJumpOpcode):
Enhance existing function use branch probabilities like
HexagonInstrInfo::GetDotNewPredOp but for New Value (GPR) Jumps.
llvm-svn: 180923
All but two patterns have been converted to the new syntax. The
remaining two patterns will require COPY_TO_REGCLASS instructions, which
the VLIW DAG Scheduler cannot handle.
llvm-svn: 180922
Fortunately this pattern never matched, otherwise
we would have generated incorrect code.
Signed-off-by: Christian K??nig <christian.koenig@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 180921
at all of the operands. Previously it was skipping over implicit operands which
cause infinite looping when the two-address pass try to reschedule a
two-address instruction below the kill of tied operand.
I'm unable to come up with a reasonably sized test case.
rdar://13747577
llvm-svn: 180906
CodeModel: It's now possible to create an MCJIT instance with any CodeModel you like. Previously it was only possible to
create an MCJIT that used CodeModel::JITDefault.
EnableFastISel: It's now possible to turn on the fast instruction selector.
The CodeModel option required some trickery. The problem is that previously, we were ensuring future binary compatibility in
the MCJITCompilerOptions by mandating that the user bzero's the options struct and passes the sizeof() that he saw; the
bindings then bzero the remaining bits. This works great but assumes that the bitwise zero equivalent of any field is a
sensible default value.
But this is not the case for LLVMCodeModel, or its internal equivalent, llvm::CodeModel::Model. In both of those, the default
for a JIT is CodeModel::JITDefault (or LLVMCodeModelJITDefault), which is not bitwise zero.
Hence this change introduces LLVMInitializeMCJITCompilerOptions(), which will initialize the user's options struct with
defaults. The user will use this in the same way that they would have previously used memset() or bzero(). MCJITCAPITest.cpp
illustrates the change, as does the comment in ExecutionEngine.h.
llvm-svn: 180893
the things, and renames it to CBindingWrapping.h. I also moved
CBindingWrapping.h into Support/.
This new file just contains the macros for defining different wrap/unwrap
methods.
The calls to those macros, as well as any custom wrap/unwrap definitions
(like for array of Values for example), are put into corresponding C++
headers.
Doing this required some #include surgery, since some .cpp files relied
on the fact that including Wrap.h implicitly caused the inclusion of a
bunch of other things.
This also now means that the C++ headers will include their corresponding
C API headers; for example Value.h must include llvm-c/Core.h. I think
this is harmless, since the C API headers contain just external function
declarations and some C types, so I don't believe there should be any
nasty dependency issues here.
llvm-svn: 180881
report a fatal error. This allows us to continue processing the translation
unit. Test case to come on the clang side because we need an inline asm
diagnostics handler in place.
rdar://13446483
llvm-svn: 180873
The cause of the windows failures was fixed by r180791. Revert to the state
after Sabre's original revert.
Original message:
revert r179735, it has no testcases, and doesn't really make sense.
llvm-svn: 180844
This reverts commit r180802
There's ongoing discussion about whether this is the right place to make
this transformation. Reverting for now while we figure it out.
llvm-svn: 180834
Expand copy instructions between two accumulator registers before callee-saved
scan is done. Handle copies between integer GPR and hi/lo registers in
MipsSEInstrInfo::copyPhysReg. Delete pseudo-copy instructions that are not
needed.
llvm-svn: 180827
register-indirect address with an offset of 0.
It used to be that a DBG_VALUE is a register-indirect value if the offset
(operand 1) is nonzero. The new convention is that a DBG_VALUE is
register-indirect if the first operand is a register and the second
operand is an immediate. For plain registers use the combination reg, reg.
rdar://problem/13658587
llvm-svn: 180816
Always fold a shuffle-of-shuffle into a single shuffle when there's only one
input vector in the first place. Continue to be more conservative when there's
multiple inputs.
rdar://13402653
PR15866
llvm-svn: 180802
First, taking advantage of the fact that the virtual base registers are allocated in order of the local frame offsets, remove the quadratic register-searching behavior. Because of the ordering, we only need to check the last virtual base register created.
Second, store the frame index in the FrameRef structure, and get the frame index and the local offset from this structure at the top of the loop iteration. This allows us to de-nest the loops in insertFrameReferenceRegisters (and I think makes the code cleaner). I also moved the needsFrameBaseReg check into the first loop over instructions so that we don't bother pushing FrameRefs for instructions that don't want a virtual base register anyway.
Lastly, and this is the only functionality change, avoid the creation of single-use virtual base registers. These are currently not useful because, in general, they end up replacing what would be one r+r instruction with an add and a r+i instruction. Committing this removes the XFAIL in CodeGen/PowerPC/2007-09-07-LoadStoreIdxForms.ll
Jim has okayed this off-list.
llvm-svn: 180799
The actual storage was already using unsigned, but the interface was using
uint64_t. This is wasteful on 32 bits and looks to be the root causes of
a miscompilation on Windows where a value was being sign extended to 64bits
to compare with the result of getSlotIndex.
Patch by Pasi Parviainen!
llvm-svn: 180791
This fixes the optimization introduced in r179748 and reverted in r179750.
While the optimization was sound, it did not properly respect differences in
bit-width.
llvm-svn: 180777
1. VarArgStyleRegisters: functionality that emits "store" instructions for byval regs moved out into separated method "StoreByValRegs". Before this patch VarArgStyleRegisters had confused use-cases. It was used for both variadic functions and for regular functions with byval parameters. In last case it created new stack-frame and registered it as VarArg frame, that is wrong.
This patch replaces VarArgsStyleRegisters usage for byval parameters with StoreByValRegs method.
2. In ARMMachineFunctionInfo, "get/setVarArgsRegSaveSize" was renamed to "get/setArgRegsSaveSize". By the same reason. Sometimes it was used for variadic functions, and sometimes for byval parameters in regular functions. Actually, this property means the size of registers, that keeps arguments, and thats why it was renamed.
3. In ARMISelLowering.cpp, ARMTargetLowering class, in methods computeRegArea and StoreByValRegs, VARegXXXXXX was renamed to ArgRegsXXXXXX still by the same reasons.
llvm-svn: 180774