The current implementation of ThumbRegisterInfo::saveScavengerRegister
is bad for two reasons: one, it's buggy, and two, it blocks using R12
for other optimizations. So this patch gets rid of it, and adds the
necessary support for using an ordinary emergency spill slot on Thumb1.
(Specifically, I think saveScavengerRegister was broken by r305625, and
nobody noticed for two years because the codepath is almost never used.
The new code will also probably not be used much, but it now has better
tests, and if we fail to emit a necessary emergency spill slot we get a
reasonable error message instead of a miscompile.)
A rough outline of the changes in the patch:
1. Gets rid of ThumbRegisterInfo::saveScavengerRegister.
2. Modifies ARMFrameLowering::determineCalleeSaves to allocate an
emergency spill slot for Thumb1.
3. Implements useFPForScavengingIndex, so the emergency spill slot isn't
placed at a negative offset from FP on Thumb1.
4. Modifies the heuristics for allocating an emergency spill slot to
support Thumb1. This includes fixing ExtraCSSpill so we don't try to
use "lr" as a substitute for allocating an emergency spill slot.
5. Allocates a base pointer in more cases, so the emergency spill slot
is always accessible.
6. Modifies ARMFrameLowering::ResolveFrameIndexReference to compute the
right offset in the new cases where we're forcing a base pointer.
7. Ensures we never generate a load or store with an offset outside of
its frame object. This makes the heuristics more straightforward.
8. Changes Thumb1 prologue and epilogue emission so it never uses
register scavenging.
Some of the changes to the emergency spill slot heuristics in
determineCalleeSaves affect ARM/Thumb2; hopefully, they should allow
the compiler to avoid allocating an emergency spill slot in cases
where it isn't necessary. The rest of the changes should only affect
Thumb1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63677
llvm-svn: 364490
This provides the low-level support to start using MVE vector types in
LLVM IR, loading and storing them, passing them to __asm__ statements
containing hand-written MVE vector instructions, and *if* you have the
hard-float ABI turned on, using them as function parameters.
(In the soft-float ABI, vector types are passed in integer registers,
and combining all those 32-bit integers into a q-reg requires support
for selection DAG nodes like insert_vector_elt and build_vector which
aren't implemented yet for MVE. In fact I've also had to add
`arm_aapcs_vfpcc` to a couple of existing tests to avoid that
problem.)
Specifically, this commit adds support for:
* spills, reloads and register moves for MVE vector registers
* ditto for the VPT predication mask that lives in VPR.P0
* make all the MVE vector types legal in ISel, and provide selection
DAG patterns for BITCAST, LOAD and STORE
* make loads and stores of scalar FP types conditional on
`hasFPRegs()` rather than `hasVFP2Base()`. As a result a few
existing tests needed their llc command lines updating to use
`-mattr=-fpregs` as their method of turning off all hardware FP
support.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60708
llvm-svn: 364329
Introduce three pseudo instructions to be used during DAG ISel to
represent v8.1-m low-overhead loops. One maps to set_loop_iterations
while loop_decrement_reg is lowered to two, so that we can separate
the decrement and branching operations. The pseudo instructions are
expanded pre-emission, where we can still decide whether we actually
want to generate a low-overhead loop, in a new pass:
ARMLowOverheadLoops. The pass currently bails, reverting to an sub,
icmp and br, in the cases where a call or stack spill/restore happens
between the decrement and branching instructions, or if the loop is
too large.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63476
llvm-svn: 364288
Those two subtarget features were awkward because their semantics are
reversed: each one indicates the _lack_ of support for something in
the architecture, rather than the presence. As a consequence, you
don't get the behavior you want if you combine two sets of feature
bits.
Each SubtargetFeature for an FP architecture version now comes in four
versions, one for each combination of those options. So you can still
say (for example) '+vfp2' in a feature string and it will mean what
it's always meant, but there's a new string '+vfp2d16sp' meaning the
version without those extra options.
A lot of this change is just mechanically replacing positive checks
for the old features with negative checks for the new ones. But one
more interesting change is that I've rearranged getFPUFeatures() so
that the main FPU feature is appended to the output list *before*
rather than after the features derived from the Restriction field, so
that -fp64 and -d32 can override defaults added by the main feature.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: srhines, javed.absar, eraman, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, zzheng, Petar.Avramovic, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60691
llvm-svn: 361845
This takes sequences like "mov r4, sp; str r0, [r4]", and optimizes them
to something like "str r0, [sp]".
For regular stack variables, this optimization was already implemented:
we lower loads and stores using frame indexes, which are expanded later.
However, when constructing a call frame for a call with more than four
arguments, the existing optimization doesn't apply. We need to use
stores which are actually relative to the current value of sp, and don't
have an associated frame index.
This patch adds a special case to handle that construct. At the DAG
level, this is an ISD::STORE where the address is a CopyFromReg from SP
(plus a small constant offset).
This applies only to Thumb1: in Thumb2 or ARM mode, a regular store
instruction can access SP directly, so the COPY gets eliminated by
existing code.
The change to ARMDAGToDAGISel::SelectThumbAddrModeSP is a related
cleanup: we shouldn't pretend that it can select anything other than
frame indexes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59568
llvm-svn: 356601
The isScaledConstantInRange function takes upper and lower bounds which are
checked after dividing by the scale, so the bounds checks for half, single and
double precision should all be the same. Previously, we had wrong bounds checks
for half precision, so selected an immediate the instructions can't actually
represent.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58822
llvm-svn: 355305
This patch accompanies the RFC posted here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-October/127239.html
This patch adds a new CallBr IR instruction to support asm-goto
inline assembly like gcc as used by the linux kernel. This
instruction is both a call instruction and a terminator
instruction with multiple successors. Only inline assembly
usage is supported today.
This also adds a new INLINEASM_BR opcode to SelectionDAG and
MachineIR to represent an INLINEASM block that is also
considered a terminator instruction.
There will likely be more bug fixes and optimizations to follow
this, but we felt it had reached a point where we would like to
switch to an incremental development model.
Patch by Craig Topper, Alexander Ivchenko, Mikhail Dvoretckii
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53765
llvm-svn: 353563
In many places in the backend, we like to know whether we're
optimising for code size and this is performed by checking the
current machine function attributes. A subtarget is created on a
per-function basis, so it's possible to know when we're compiling for
code size on construction so record this in the new object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57812
llvm-svn: 353501
Constants can also be materialised using the negated value and a MVN, and this
case seem to have been missed for Thumb2. To check the constant materialisation
costs, we now call getT2SOImmVal twice, once for the original constant and then
also for its negated value, and this function checks if the constant can both
be splatted or rotated.
This was revealed by a test that optimises for minsize: instead of a LDR
literal pool load and having a literal pool entry, just a MVN with an immediate
is smaller (and also faster).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57327
llvm-svn: 352737
This attempts to optimise negative values used in load/store operands
a little. We currently try to selct them as rr, materialising the
negative constant using a MOV/MVN pair. This instead selects ri with
an immediate of 0, forcing the add node to become a simpler sub.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57121
llvm-svn: 352475
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
`MachineMemOperand` pointers attached to `MachineSDNodes` and instead
have the `SelectionDAG` fully manage the memory for this array.
Prior to this change, the memory management was deeply confusing here --
The way the MI was built relied on the `SelectionDAG` allocating memory
for these arrays of pointers using the `MachineFunction`'s allocator so
that the raw pointer to the array could be blindly copied into an
eventual `MachineInstr`. This creates a hard coupling between how
`MachineInstr`s allocate their array of `MachineMemOperand` pointers and
how the `MachineSDNode` does.
This change is motivated in large part by a change I am making to how
`MachineFunction` allocates these pointers, but it seems like a layering
improvement as well.
This would run the risk of increasing allocations overall, but I've
implemented an optimization that should avoid that by storing a single
`MachineMemOperand` pointer directly instead of allocating anything.
This is expected to be a net win because the vast majority of uses of
these only need a single pointer.
As a side-effect, this makes the API for updating a `MachineSDNode` and
a `MachineInstr` reasonably different which seems nice to avoid
unexpected coupling of these two layers. We can map between them, but we
shouldn't be *surprised* at where that occurs. =]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50680
llvm-svn: 339740
LLVM normally prefers to minimize the number of bits set in an AND
immediate, but that doesn't always match the available ARM instructions.
In Thumb1 mode, prefer uxtb or uxth where possible; otherwise, prefer
a two-instruction sequence movs+ands or movs+bics.
Some potential improvements outlined in
ARMTargetLowering::targetShrinkDemandedConstant, but seems to work
pretty well already.
The ARMISelDAGToDAG fix ensures we don't generate an invalid UBFX
instruction due to a larger-than-expected mask. (It's orthogonal, in
some sense, but as far as I can tell it's either impossible or nearly
impossible to reproduce the bug without this change.)
According to my testing, this seems to consistently improve codesize by
a small amount by forming bic more often for ISD::AND with an immediate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50030
llvm-svn: 339472
We don't ever check these again (unless you're using
-fno-integrated-as), so make sure the extracted bits are well-defined.
I don't think it's possible to trigger any of the assertions on trunk,
but it's difficult to prove. (The first one depends on DAGCombine to
minimize the number of set bits in AND masks; I think the others are
mathematically impossible to hit.)
llvm-svn: 335931
This patch adds support for the q versions of the dup
(load-to-all-lanes) NEON intrinsics, such as vld2q_dup_f16() for
example.
Currently, non-q versions of the dup intrinsics are implemented
in clang by generating IR that first loads the elements of the
structure into the first lane with the lane (to-single-lane)
intrinsics, and then propagating it other lanes. There are at
least two problems with this approach. First, there are no
double-spaced to-single-lane byte-element instructions. For
example, there is no such instruction as 'vld2.8 { d0[0], d2[0]
}, [r0]'. That means we cannot rely on the to-single-lane
intrinsics and instructions to implement the q versions of the
dup intrinsics. Note that to-all-lanes instructions do support
all sizes of data items, including bytes.
The second problem with the current approach is that we need a
separate vdup instruction to propagate the structure to each
lane. So for vld4q_dup_f16() we would need four vdup instructions
in addition to the initial vld instruction.
This patch introduces dup LLVM intrinsics and reworks handling of
the currently supported (non-q) NEON dup intrinsics to expand
them into those LLVM intrinsics, thus eliminating the need for
using to-single-lane intrinsics and instructions.
Additionally, this patch adds support for u64 and s64 dup NEON
intrinsics. These are marked as Arch64-only in the ARM NEON
Reference, but it seems there are no reasons to not support them
in AArch32 mode. Please correct, if that is wrong.
That's what we generate with this patch applied:
vld2q_dup_f16:
vld2.16 {d0[], d2[]}, [r0]
vld2.16 {d1[], d3[]}, [r0]
vld3q_dup_f16:
vld3.16 {d0[], d2[], d4[]}, [r0]
vld3.16 {d1[], d3[], d5[]}, [r0]
vld4q_dup_f16:
vld4.16 {d0[], d2[], d4[], d6[]}, [r0]
vld4.16 {d1[], d3[], d5[], d7[]}, [r0]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48439
llvm-svn: 335733
Thumb has more 16-bit encoding space dedicated to ADD than ORR, allowing both a
3-address encoding and a wider range of immediates. So, particularly when
optimizing for code size (but it doesn't make things worse elsewhere) it's
beneficial to select an OR operation to an ADD if we know overflow won't occur.
This is made even better by LLVM's penchant for putting operations in canonical
form by converting the other way.
llvm-svn: 335119
We currently support them only in AArch64. The NEON Reference,
however, says they are 'ARMv7, ARMv8' intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47447
llvm-svn: 334361
It looks like this got left in by accident in r289794; I can't think of
any reason this check would be necessary. (Maybe it was meant to be a
check that the AND has one use? But we check that a few lines earlier.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47921
llvm-svn: 334322
We currently support them only in AArch64. The NEON Reference,
however, says they are 'ARMv7, ARMv8' intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47120
llvm-svn: 333825
We currently support them only in AArch64. The NEON Reference,
however, says they are 'ARMv7, ARMv8' intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47121
llvm-svn: 333819
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
This is the groundwork for adding the Armv8.2-A FP16 vector intrinsics, which
uses v4f16 and v8f16 vector operands and return values. All the moving parts
are tested with two intrinsics, a 1-operand v8f16 and a 2-operand v4f16
intrinsic. In a follow-up patch the rest of the intrinsics and tests will be
added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44538
llvm-svn: 327839
r327171 "Improve Dependency analysis when doing multi-node Instruction Selection"
r328170 "[DAG] Enforce stricter NodeId invariant during Instruction selection"
Reverting patch as NodeId invariant change is causing pathological
increases in compile time on PPC
llvm-svn: 327197
Instruction Selection makes use of the topological ordering of nodes
by node id (a node's operands have smaller node id than it) when doing
cycle detection. During selection we may violate this property as a
selection of multiple nodes may induce a use dependence (and thus a
node id restriction) between two unrelated nodes. If a selected node
has an unselected successor this may allow us to miss a cycle in
detection an invalid selection.
This patch fixes this by marking all unselected successors of a
selected node have negated node id. We avoid pruning on such negative
ids but still can reconstruct the original id for pruning.
In-tree targets have been updated to replace DAG-level replacements
with ISel-level ones which enforce this property.
This preemptively fixes PR36312 before triggering commit r324359 relands
Reviewers: craig.topper, bogner, jyknight
Subscribers: arsenm, nhaehnle, javed.absar, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43198
llvm-svn: 327170
Code generation of VLD3, VLD4, VST3 and VST4 with register writeback is
broken due to 2 separate bugs:
1) VLD1d64TPseudoWB_register and VLD1d64QPseudoWB_register are missing
rules to expand them to non pseudo MIR. These are selected for
ARMISD::VLD3_UPD/VLD4_UPD with v1i64 vectors in SelectVLD.
2) Selection of the right VLD/VST instruction is broken for load and
store of 3 and 4 v1i64 vectors. SelectVLD and SelectVST are called
with MIR opcode for fixed writeback (ie increment is access size)
and call getVLDSTRegisterUpdateOpcode() to select an opcode with
register writeback if base register update is of a different size.
Since getVLDSTRegisterUpdateOpcode() only knows about
VLD1/VLD2/VST1/VST2 the call is currently conditional on the number
of element in the vector.
However, VLD1/VST1 is selected by SelectVLD/SelectVST's caller for
load and stores of 3 or 4 v1i64 vectors. Therefore the opcode is not
updated which later lead to a fixed writeback instruction being
constructed with an extra operand for the register writeback.
This patch addresses the two issues as follows:
- it adds the necessary mapping from VLD1d64TPseudoWB_register and
VLD1d64QPseudoWB_register to VLD1d64Twb_register and
VLD1d64Qwb_register respectively. Like for the existing _fixed
variants, the cost of these is bumped for unaligned access.
- it changes the logic in SelectVLD and SelectVSD to call isVLDfixed
and isVSTfixed respectively to decide whether the opcode should be
updated. It also reworks the logic and comments for pushing the
writeback offset operand and r0 operand to clarify the logic:
writeback offset needs to be pushed if it's a register writeback,
r0 needs to be pushed if not and the instruction is a
VLD1/VLD2/VST1/VST2.
Reviewers: rengolin, t.p.northover, samparker
Reviewed By: samparker
Patch by Thomas Preud'homme <thomas.preudhomme@arm.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42970
llvm-svn: 326570
This is the groundwork for Armv8.2-A FP16 code generation .
Clang passes and returns _Float16 values as floats, together with the required
bitconverts and truncs etc. to implement correct AAPCS behaviour, see D42318.
We will implement half-precision argument passing/returning lowering in the ARM
backend soon, but for now this means that this:
_Float16 sub(_Float16 a, _Float16 b) {
return a + b;
}
gets lowered to this:
define float @sub(float %a.coerce, float %b.coerce) {
entry:
%0 = bitcast float %a.coerce to i32
%tmp.0.extract.trunc = trunc i32 %0 to i16
%1 = bitcast i16 %tmp.0.extract.trunc to half
<SNIP>
%add = fadd half %1, %3
<SNIP>
}
When FullFP16 is *not* supported, we don't make f16 a legal type, and we get
legalization for "free", i.e. nothing changes and everything works as before.
And also f16 argument passing/returning is handled.
When FullFP16 is supported, we do make f16 a legal type, and have 2 places that
we need to patch up: f16 argument passing and returning, which involves minor
tweaks to avoid unnecessary code generation for some bitcasts.
As a "demonstrator" that this works for the different FP16, FullFP16, softfp
modes, etc., I've added match rules to the VSUB instruction description showing
that we can codegen this instruction from IR, but more importantly, also to
some conversion instructions. These conversions were causing issue before in
the FP16 and FullFP16 cases.
I've also added match rules to the VLDRH and VSTRH desriptions, so that we can
actually compile the entire half-precision sub code example above. This showed
that these loads and stores had the wrong addressing mode specified: AddrMode5
instead of AddrMode5FP16, which turned out not be implemented at all, so that
has also been added.
This is the minimal patch that shows all the different moving parts. In patch
2/3 I will add some efficient lowering of bitcasts, and in 2/3 I will add the
remaining Armv8.2-A FP16 instruction descriptions.
Thanks to Sam Parker and Oliver Stannard for their help and reviews!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38315
llvm-svn: 323512
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).
llvm-svn: 318490
This is a refactoring/cleanup of Arm `addrmode2` operand class. The patch
removes it completely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39832
llvm-svn: 318291
Moves encoding (SYSm) information of banked registers to ARMSystemRegister.td,
where it rightly belongs and forms a single point of reference in the code.
Reviewed by: @fhahn, @rovka, @olista01
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36219
llvm-svn: 309910
This patch cleans up and fixes issues in the M-Class system register handling:
1. It defines the system registers and the encoding (SYSm values) in one place:
a new ARMSystemRegister.td using SearchableTable, thereby removing the
hand-coded values which existed in multiple places.
2. Some system registers e.g. BASEPRI_MAX_NS which do not exist were being allowed!
Ref: ARMv6/7/8M architecture reference manual.
Reviewed by: @t.p.northover, @olist01, @john.brawn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35209
llvm-svn: 308456
Constants are crucial for code size in the ARM Thumb-1 instruction
set. The 16 bit instruction size often does not offer enough space
for immediate arguments. This means that additional instructions are
frequently used to load constants into registers. Since constants are
hoisted, this can lead to significant register spillage if they are
used multiple times in a single function. This can be avoided by
rematerialization, i.e. recomputing a constant instead of reloading
it from the stack. This patch fixes the rematerialization of literal
pool loads in the ARM Thumb instruction set.
Patch by Philip Ginsbach
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33936
llvm-svn: 308004
When we replaced the multiplicand the destination node might already exist.
When that happens the original gets CSEd and deleted. However, it's actually
used as the offset so nonsense is produced.
Should fix PR32726.
llvm-svn: 301983
Before, we assumed that any ConstantInt offset was precisely the access width,
so we could use the "[rN]!" form. ISelLowering only ever created that kind, but
further simplification during combining could lead to unexpected constants and
incorrect codegen.
Should fix PR32658.
llvm-svn: 300878
This will become asan errors once the patch lands that poisons the
memory after free. The x86 change is a hack, but I don't see how to
solve this properly at the moment.
llvm-svn: 300867
Create nodes for smulwb and smulwt and move their selection from
DAGToDAG to DAG combine. smlawb and smlawt can then be selected
using tablegen. Added some helper functions to detect shift patterns
as well as a wrapper around SimplifyDemandBits. Added a couple of
extra tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30708
llvm-svn: 297716
ARMISD::ADD[CE] nodes, instead of the generic ISD::ADD[CE].
Summary:
This allows for some simplification because the combines
are no longer limited to just one go at the node before
it gets legalized into an ARM target-specific one.
Reviewers: jmolloy, rogfer01
Subscribers: aemerson, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30401
llvm-svn: 297453