Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 4cf5743b77 Move the builtin headers to use the new license file header.
Summary:
These all had somewhat custom file headers with different text from the
ones I searched for previously, and so I missed them. Thanks to Hal and
Kristina and others who prompted me to fix this, and sorry it took so
long.

Reviewers: hfinkel

Subscribers: mcrosier, javed.absar, cfe-commits

Tags: #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60406

llvm-svn: 357941
2019-04-08 20:51:30 +00:00
Craig Topper 74c10e3236 [Builtins][Attributes][X86] Tag all X86 builtins with their required vector width. Add a min_vector_width function attribute and tag all x86 instrinsics with it
This is part of an ongoing attempt at making 512 bit vectors illegal in the X86 backend type legalizer due to CPU frequency penalties associated with wide vectors on Skylake Server CPUs. We want the loop vectorizer to be able to emit IR containing wide vectors as intermediate operations in vectorized code and allow these wide vectors to be legalized to 256 bits by the X86 backend even though we are targetting a CPU that supports 512 bit vectors. This is similar to what happens with an AVX2 CPU, the vectorizer can emit wide vectors and the backend will split them. We want this splitting behavior, but still be able to use new Skylake instructions that work on 256-bit vectors and support things like masking and gather/scatter.

Of course if the user uses explicit vector code in their source code we need to not split those operations. Especially if they have used any of the 512-bit vector intrinsics from immintrin.h. And we need to make it so that merely using the intrinsics produces the expected code in order to be backwards compatible.

To support this goal, this patch adds a new IR function attribute "min-legal-vector-width" that can indicate the need for a minimum vector width to be legal in the backend. We need to ensure this attribute is set to the largest vector width needed by any intrinsics from immintrin.h that the function uses. The inliner will be reponsible for merging this attribute when a function is inlined. We may also need a way to limit inlining in the future as well, but we can discuss that in the future.

To make things more complicated, there are two different ways intrinsics are implemented in immintrin.h. Either as an always_inline function containing calls to builtins(can be target specific or target independent) or vector extension code. Or as a macro wrapper around a taget specific builtin. I believe I've removed all cases where the macro was around a target independent builtin.

To support the always_inline function case this patch adds attribute((min_vector_width(128))) that can be used to tag these functions with their vector width. All x86 intrinsic functions that operate on vectors have been tagged with this attribute.

To support the macro case, all x86 specific builtins have also been tagged with the vector width that they require. Use of any builtin with this property will implicitly increase the min_vector_width of the function that calls it. I've done this as a new property in the attribute string for the builtin rather than basing it on the type string so that we can opt into it on a per builtin basis and avoid any impact to target independent builtins.

There will be future work to support vectors passed as function arguments and supporting inline assembly. And whatever else we can find that isn't covered by this patch.

Special thanks to Chandler who suggested this direction and reviewed a preview version of this patch. And thanks to Eric Christopher who has had many conversations with me about this issue.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48617

llvm-svn: 336583
2018-07-09 19:00:16 +00:00
Craig Topper 65ef3280b8 [X86] Fix the file header name on fmaintrin.h
llvm-svn: 332108
2018-05-11 17:37:40 +00:00
Craig Topper 9e032ed55a [X86] Use separate builtins for fma4 scalar intrinsics. Use negations to remove some of the scalar fma3 builtins.
fma4 instructions zero the upper bits of the xmm register. fma3 instructions leave the bits unmodified. This requires separate builtins for the different semantics.

While we're cleaning up the scalar builtins this also removes the fma3 fmsub/fnmadd/fnmsub builtins by using negates in the header file.

llvm-svn: 318985
2017-11-25 19:32:12 +00:00
Craig Topper b3d447356f [X86] Reduce the number of FMA builtins needed by the frontend by adding negates to operands of the fmadd and fmaddsub builtins.
The backend should be able to combine the negates to create fmsub, fnmadd, and fnmsub. faddsub converting to fsubadd still needs work I think, but should be very doable.

This matches what we already do for the masked builtins.

This only covers the packed builtins. Scalar builtins will be done after FMA4 is fixed.

llvm-svn: 317873
2017-11-10 05:20:32 +00:00
Craig Topper e5b84ec2a1 [X86] Rename the VEX scalar fma builtins to end with a '3' to match gcc
I think we need to use different builtins for the FMA4 instructions since those instructions zero the upper bits and FMA3 instructions pass the bits through.

So this moves the existing builtins to be the FMA3 versions. New versions will be added for FMA4.

llvm-svn: 317766
2017-11-09 04:10:46 +00:00
Craig Topper 1aa231e3aa [X86] Add typecasts to remove most assumptions about what __m128i/__m256i is defined as. Add similar typecasts for the fp types as well.
llvm-svn: 269632
2016-05-16 06:38:42 +00:00
Michael Kuperstein e45af54cdb [X86] Rename DEFAULT_FN_ATTR macro to __DEFAULT_FN_ATTR
llvm-svn: 241065
2015-06-30 13:36:19 +00:00
Eric Christopher 9fc7fb274e Update the intel intrinsic headers to use the target attribute support.
This involved removing the conditional inclusion and replacing them
with target attributes matching the original conditional inclusion
and checks. The testcase update removes the macro checks for each
file and replaces them with usage of the __target__ attribute, e.g.:

int __attribute__((__target__(("sse3")))) foo(int a) {
  _mm_mwait(0, 0);
  return 4;
}

This usage does require the enclosing function have the requisite
__target__ attribute for inlining and code generation - also for
any macro intrinsic uses in the enclosing function. There's no change
for existing uses of the intrinsic headers.

llvm-svn: 239883
2015-06-17 07:09:32 +00:00
Eric Christopher 4d185168e9 Use a define for per-file function attributes for the Intel intrinsic headers.
This is a precursor to changing them to use the new target attribute
code.

llvm-svn: 239882
2015-06-17 07:09:20 +00:00
Craig Topper 2b1eda344a Add fma3 intrinsic header file.
llvm-svn: 157913
2012-06-04 03:42:47 +00:00