This change doubles the allowable value for MVT::LAST_VALUETYPE. It does
this by doing several things.
1. Introduces MVT::MAX_ALLOWED_LAST_VALUETYPE which in this change has a
value of 64. This value contains the current maximum for the
MVT::LAST_VALUETYPE.
2. Instead of checking "MVT::LAST_VALUETYPE <= 32", all of those uses
now become "MVT::LAST_VALUETYPE <= MVT::MAX_ALLOWED_LAST_VALUETYPE"
3. Changes the dimension of the ValueTypeActions from 2 elements to four
elements and adds comments ahead of the declaration indicating the it is
"(MVT::MAX_ALLOWED_LAST_VALUETYPE/32) * 2". This at least lets us find
what is affected if and when MVT::MAX_ALLOWED_LAST_VALUETYPE gets
changed.
4. Adds initializers for the new elements of ValueTypeActions.
This does NOT add any types in MVT. That would be done separately.
This doubles the size of ValueTypeActions from 64 bits to 128 bits and
gives us the freedom to add more types for AVX.
llvm-svn: 74110
incomming chain of the RETURN node. The incomming chain must
be the outgoing chain of the CALL node. This causes the
backend to identify tail calls that are not tail calls. This
patch fixes this.
llvm-svn: 73387
build vectors with i64 elements will only appear on 32b x86 before legalize.
Since vector widening occurs during legalize, and produces i64 build_vector
elements, the dag combiner is never run on these before legalize splits them
into 32b elements.
Teach the build_vector dag combine in x86 back end to recognize consecutive
loads producing the low part of the vector.
Convert the two uses of TLI's consecutive load recognizer to pass LoadSDNodes
since that was required implicitly.
Add a testcase for the transform.
Old:
subl $28, %esp
movl 32(%esp), %eax
movl 4(%eax), %ecx
movl %ecx, 4(%esp)
movl (%eax), %eax
movl %eax, (%esp)
movaps (%esp), %xmm0
pmovzxwd %xmm0, %xmm0
movl 36(%esp), %eax
movaps %xmm0, (%eax)
addl $28, %esp
ret
New:
movl 4(%esp), %eax
pmovzxwd (%eax), %xmm0
movl 8(%esp), %eax
movaps %xmm0, (%eax)
ret
llvm-svn: 72957
code in preparation for code generation. The main thing it does
is handle the case when eh.exception calls (and, in a future
patch, eh.selector calls) are far away from landing pads. Right
now in practice you only find eh.exception calls close to landing
pads: either in a landing pad (the common case) or in a landing
pad successor, due to loop passes shifting them about. However
future exception handling improvements will result in calls far
from landing pads:
(1) Inlining of rewinds. Consider the following case:
In function @f:
...
invoke @g to label %normal unwind label %unwinds
...
unwinds:
%ex = call i8* @llvm.eh.exception()
...
In function @g:
...
invoke @something to label %continue unwind label %handler
...
handler:
%ex = call i8* @llvm.eh.exception()
... perform cleanups ...
"rethrow exception"
Now inline @g into @f. Currently this is turned into:
In function @f:
...
invoke @something to label %continue unwind label %handler
...
handler:
%ex = call i8* @llvm.eh.exception()
... perform cleanups ...
invoke "rethrow exception" to label %normal unwind label %unwinds
unwinds:
%ex = call i8* @llvm.eh.exception()
...
However we would like to simplify invoke of "rethrow exception" into
a branch to the %unwinds label. Then %unwinds is no longer a landing
pad, and the eh.exception call there is then far away from any landing
pads.
(2) Using the unwind instruction for cleanups.
It would be nice to have codegen handle the following case:
invoke @something to label %continue unwind label %run_cleanups
...
handler:
... perform cleanups ...
unwind
This requires turning "unwind" into a library call, which
necessarily takes a pointer to the exception as an argument
(this patch also does this unwind lowering). But that means
you are using eh.exception again far from a landing pad.
(3) Bugpoint simplifications. When bugpoint is simplifying
exception handling code it often generates eh.exception calls
far from a landing pad, which then causes codegen to assert.
Bugpoint then latches on to this assertion and loses sight
of the original problem.
Note that it is currently rare for this pass to actually do
anything. And in fact it normally shouldn't do anything at
all given the code coming out of llvm-gcc! But it does fire
a few times in the testsuite. As far as I can see this is
almost always due to the LoopStrengthReduce codegen pass
introducing pointless loop preheader blocks which are landing
pads and only contain a branch to another block. This other
block contains an eh.exception call. So probably by tweaking
LoopStrengthReduce a bit this can be avoided.
llvm-svn: 72276
anything larger than 64-bits, avoiding a crash. This should
really be fixed to use APInts, though type legalization happens
to help us out and we get good code on the attached testcase at
least.
This fixes rdar://6836460
llvm-svn: 70360
with SUBREG_TO_REG, teach SimpleRegisterCoalescing to coalesce
SUBREG_TO_REG instructions (which are similar to INSERT_SUBREG
instructions), and teach the DAGCombiner to take advantage of this on
targets which support it. This eliminates many redundant
zero-extension operations on x86-64.
This adds a new TargetLowering hook, isZExtFree. It's similar to
isTruncateFree, except it only applies to actual definitions, and not
no-op truncates which may not zero the high bits.
Also, this adds a new optimization to SimplifyDemandedBits: transform
operations like x+y into (zext (add (trunc x), (trunc y))) on targets
where all the casts are no-ops. In contexts where the high part of the
add is explicitly masked off, this allows the mask operation to be
eliminated. Fix the DAGCombiner to avoid undoing these transformations
to eliminate casts on targets where the casts are no-ops.
Also, this adds a new two-address lowering heuristic. Since
two-address lowering runs before coalescing, it helps to be able to
look through copies when deciding whether commuting and/or
three-address conversion are profitable.
Also, fix a bug in LiveInterval::MergeInClobberRanges. It didn't handle
the case that a clobber range extended both before and beyond an
existing live range. In that case, multiple live ranges need to be
added. This was exposed by the new subreg coalescing code.
Remove 2008-05-06-SpillerBug.ll. It was bugpoint-reduced, and the
spiller behavior it was looking for no longer occurrs with the new
instruction selection.
llvm-svn: 68576
and extern_weak_odr. These are the same as the non-odr versions,
except that they indicate that the global will only be overridden
by an *equivalent* global. In C, a function with weak linkage can
be overridden by a function which behaves completely differently.
This means that IP passes have to skip weak functions, since any
deductions made from the function definition might be wrong, since
the definition could be replaced by something completely different
at link time. This is not allowed in C++, thanks to the ODR
(One-Definition-Rule): if a function is replaced by another at
link-time, then the new function must be the same as the original
function. If a language knows that a function or other global can
only be overridden by an equivalent global, it can give it the
weak_odr linkage type, and the optimizers will understand that it
is alright to make deductions based on the function body. The
code generators on the other hand map weak and weak_odr linkage
to the same thing.
llvm-svn: 66339
so it changed it into a 31 via the TLO.ShrinkDemandedConstant() call. Then it
would go through the DAG combiner again. This time it had a value of 31, which
was turned into a -1 by TLI.SimplifyDemandedBits(). This would ping pong
forever.
Teach the TLO.ShrinkDemandedConstant() call not to lower a value if the demanded
value is an XOR of all ones.
llvm-svn: 65985
one bit set, because the bit may be shifted off the end. Instead,
just check for a constant 1 being shifted. This is still sufficient
to handle all the cases in test/CodeGen/X86/bt.ll. This fixes PR3583.
llvm-svn: 64622
in inline asm as signed (what gcc does). Add partial support
for x86-specific "e" and "Z" constraints, with appropriate
signedness for printing.
llvm-svn: 64400
It was transforming (x&y)==y to (x&y)!=0 in the case where
y is variable and known to have at most one bit set (e.g. z&1).
This is not correct; the expressions are not equivalent when y==0.
I believe this patch salvages what can be salvaged, including
all the cases in bt.ll. Dan, please review.
Fixes gcc.c-torture/execute/20040709-[12].c
llvm-svn: 64314
Many targets build placeholder nodes for special operands, e.g.
GlobalBaseReg on X86 and PPC for the PIC base. There's no
sensible way to associate debug info with these. I've left
them built with getNode calls with explicit DebugLoc::getUnknownLoc operands.
I'm not too happy about this but don't see a good improvement;
I considered adding a getPseudoOperand or something, but it
seems to me that'll just make it harder to read.
llvm-svn: 63992
returned by getShiftAmountTy may be too small
to hold shift values (it is an i8 on x86-32).
Before and during type legalization, use a large
but legal type for shift amounts: getPointerTy;
afterwards use getShiftAmountTy, fixing up any
shift amounts with a big type during operation
legalization. Thanks to Dan for writing the
original patch (which I shamelessly pillaged).
llvm-svn: 63482
dagcombines that help it match in several more cases. Add
several more cases to test/CodeGen/X86/bt.ll. This doesn't
yet include matching for BT with an immediate operand, it
just covers more register+register cases.
llvm-svn: 63266
new isOperationLegalOrCustom, which does what isOperationLegal
previously did.
Update a bunch of callers to use isOperationLegalOrCustom
instead of isOperationLegal. In some case it wasn't obvious
which behavior is desired; when in doubt I changed then to
isOperationLegalOrCustom as that preserves their previous
behavior.
This is for the second half of PR3376.
llvm-svn: 63212
promote from i1 all the way up to the canonical SetCC type.
In order to discover an appropriate type to use, pass
MVT::Other to getSetCCResultType. In order to be able to
do this, change getSetCCResultType to take a type as an
argument, not a value (this is also more logical).
llvm-svn: 61542
multiplies.
Some more cleverness would be nice, though. It would be nice if we
could do this transformation on illegal types. Also, we would
prefer a narrower constant when possible so that we can use a narrower
multiply, which can be cheaper.
llvm-svn: 60283
(e.g. a bitfield test) narrow the load as much as possible.
The has the potential to avoid unnecessary partial-word
load-after-store conflicts, which cause stalls on several targets.
Also a size win on x86 (testb vs testl).
llvm-svn: 58825
and add a TargetLowering hook for it to use to determine when this
is legal (i.e. not in PIC mode, etc.)
This allows instruction selection to emit folded constant offsets
in more cases, such as the included testcase, eliminating the need
for explicit arithmetic instructions.
This eliminates the need for the C++ code in X86ISelDAGToDAG.cpp
that attempted to achieve the same effect, but wasn't as effective.
Also, fix handling of offsets in GlobalAddressSDNodes in several
places, including changing GlobalAddressSDNode's offset from
int to int64_t.
The Mips, Alpha, Sparc, and CellSPU targets appear to be
unaware of GlobalAddress offsets currently, so set the hook to
false on those targets.
llvm-svn: 57748
i.e. conditions that cannot be checked with a single instruction. For example,
SETONE and SETUEQ on x86.
- Teach legalizer to implement *illegal* setcc as a and / or of a number of
legal setcc nodes. For now, only implement FP conditions. e.g. SETONE is
implemented as SETO & SETNE, SETUEQ is SETUO | SETEQ.
- Move x86 target over.
llvm-svn: 57542
FPROUND_F80_F32, FPROUND_PPCF128_F32,
FPROUND_F80_F64, FPROUND_PPCF128_F64
Support for soften float fp_round operands is added, Mips
needs this to round f64->f32.
Also added support to soften float FABS result, Mips doesn't
support double fabs results while in 'single float only' mode.
llvm-svn: 54484
SINT_TO_FP libcall plus additional operations:
it might as well be a direct UINT_TO_FP libcall.
So only turn it into an SINT_TO_FP if the target
has special handling for SINT_TO_FP.
llvm-svn: 53461
Lack of these caused a bootstrap failure with Fortran
on x86-64 with LegalizeTypes turned on. While there,
be nice to 16 bit machines and support expansion of
i32 too.
llvm-svn: 53408
For this it is convenient to permit floats to
be used with EXTRACT_ELEMENT, so I tweaked
things to allow that. I also added libcalls
for ppcf128 to i32 forms of FP_TO_XINT, since
they exist in libgcc and this case can certainly
occur (and does occur in the testsuite) - before
the i64 libcall was being used. Also, the
XINT_TO_FP result seemed to be wrong when
the argument is an i128: the wrong fudge
factor was added (the i32 and i64 cases were
handled directly, but the i128 code fell
through to some generic softening code which
seemed to think it was i64 to f32!). So I
fixed it by adding a fudge factor that I
found in my breakfast cereal.
llvm-svn: 52739
of apint codegen failure is the DAG combiner doing
the wrong thing because it was comparing MVT's using
< rather than comparing the number of bits. Removing
the < method makes this mistake impossible to commit.
Instead, add helper methods for comparing bits and use
them.
llvm-svn: 52098
and better control the abstraction. Rename the type
to MVT. To update out-of-tree patches, the main
thing to do is to rename MVT::ValueType to MVT, and
rewrite expressions like MVT::getSizeInBits(VT) in
the form VT.getSizeInBits(). Use VT.getSimpleVT()
to extract a MVT::SimpleValueType for use in switch
statements (you will get an assert failure if VT is
an extended value type - these shouldn't exist after
type legalization).
This results in a small speedup of codegen and no
new testsuite failures (x86-64 linux).
llvm-svn: 52044
When choosing between constraints with multiple options,
like "ir", test to see if we can use the 'i' constraint and
go with that if possible. This produces more optimal ASM in
all cases (sparing a register and an instruction to load it),
and fixes inline asm like this:
void test () {
asm volatile (" %c0 %1 " : : "imr" (42), "imr"(14));
}
Previously we would dump "42" into a memory location (which
is ok for the 'm' constraint) which would cause a problem
because the 'c' modifier is not valid on memory operands.
Isn't it great how inline asm turns 'missed optimization'
into 'compile failed'??
Incidentally, this was the todo in
PowerPC/2007-04-24-InlineAsm-I-Modifier.ll
Please do NOT pull this into Tak.
llvm-svn: 50315
- Make targetlowering.h fit in 80 cols.
- Make LowerAsmOperandForConstraint const.
- Make lowerXConstraint -> LowerXConstraint
- Make LowerXConstraint return a const char* instead of taking a string byref.
llvm-svn: 50312
on any current target and aren't optimized in DAGCombiner. Instead
of using intermediate nodes, expand the operations, choosing between
simple loads/stores, target-specific code, and library calls,
immediately.
Previously, the code to emit optimized code for these operations
was only used at initial SelectionDAG construction time; now it is
used at all times. This fixes some cases where rep;movs was being
used for small copies where simple loads/stores would be better.
This also cleans up code that checks for alignments less than 4;
let the targets make that decision instead of doing it in
target-independent code. This allows x86 to use rep;movs in
low-alignment cases.
Also, this fixes a bug that resulted in the use of rep;stos for
memsets of 0 with non-constant memory size when the alignment was
at least 4. It's better to use the library in this case, which
can be significantly faster when the size is large.
This also preserves more SourceValue information when memory
intrinsics are lowered into simple loads/stores.
llvm-svn: 49572
Change several cases in SimplifyDemandedMask that don't ever do any
simplifying to reuse the logic in ComputeMaskedBits instead of
duplicating it.
llvm-svn: 47648
the return value is zero-extended if it isn't
sign-extended. It may also be any-extended.
Also, if a floating point value was returned
in a larger floating point type, pass 1 as the
second operand to FP_ROUND, which tells it
that all the precision is in the original type.
I think this is right but I could be wrong.
Finally, when doing libcalls, set isZExt on
a parameter if it is "unsigned". Currently
isSExt is set when signed, and nothing is
set otherwise. This should be right for all
calls to standard library routines.
llvm-svn: 47122
1) ConstantFP is now expand by default
2) ConstantFP is not turned into TargetConstantFP during Legalize
if it is legal.
This allows ConstantFP to be handled like Constant, allowing for
targets that can encode FP immediates as MachineOperands.
As a bonus, fix up Itanium FP constants, which now correctly match,
and match more constants! Hooray.
llvm-svn: 47121
and StoreSDNode into their common base class LSBaseSDNode. Member
functions getLoadedVT and getStoredVT are replaced with the common
getMemoryVT to simplify code that will handle both loads and stores.
llvm-svn: 46538
1. Legalize now always promotes truncstore of i1 to i8.
2. Remove patterns and gunk related to truncstore i1 from targets.
3. Rename the StoreXAction stuff to TruncStoreAction in TLI.
4. Make the TLI TruncStoreAction table a 2d table to handle from/to conversions.
5. Mark a wide variety of invalid truncstores as such in various targets, e.g.
X86 currently doesn't support truncstore of any of its integer types.
6. Add legalize support for truncstores with invalid value input types.
7. Add a dag combine transform to turn store(truncate) into truncstore when
safe.
The later allows us to compile CodeGen/X86/storetrunc-fp.ll to:
_foo:
fldt 20(%esp)
fldt 4(%esp)
faddp %st(1)
movl 36(%esp), %eax
fstps (%eax)
ret
instead of:
_foo:
subl $4, %esp
fldt 24(%esp)
fldt 8(%esp)
faddp %st(1)
fstps (%esp)
movl 40(%esp), %eax
movss (%esp), %xmm0
movss %xmm0, (%eax)
addl $4, %esp
ret
llvm-svn: 46140
Likewise fix up a bunch of other libcalls. While
there I remove NEG_F32 and NEG_F64 since they are
not used anywhere. This fixes 9 Ada ACATS failures.
llvm-svn: 45833
use ISD::{S,U}DIVREM and ISD::{S,U}MUL_HIO. Move the lowering code
associated with these operators into target-independent in LegalizeDAG.cpp
and TargetLowering.cpp.
llvm-svn: 42762
basic arithmetic works.
Rename RTLIB long double functions to distinguish
different flavors of long double; the lib functions
have different names, alas.
llvm-svn: 42644
(constants are still not handled). Adds ConvertActions
to control fp-to-fp conversions (these are currently
defaulted for all other targets, so no changes there).
llvm-svn: 40958
updating it with calls to setIndexedLoadAction/setIndexedStoreAction,
which only update a few bits at a time. This avoids ostensible
undefined behavior of operationg on values which may be
trap-representations, and as a practical matter fixes errors from
valgrind, which doesn't track uninitialized memory with bit
granularity.
llvm-svn: 38468
illegal value type will be transformed to, for code that needs the
register type after all transformations instead of just after the first
transformation.
Factor out the code that uses this information to do copy-from-regs and
copy-to-regs for various purposes into separate functions so that they
are done consistently.
llvm-svn: 37781
extended vector types. Remove the special SDNode opcodes used for pre-legalize
vector operations, and the special MVT::Vector type used with them. Adjust
lowering and legalize to work with the normal SDNode kinds instead, and to
use the normal MVT functions to work with vector types instead of using the
two special operands that the pre-legalize nodes held.
This allows pre-legalize and post-legalize DAGs, and the code that operates
on them, to be more consistent. Pre-legalize vector operators can be handled
more consistently with scalar operators. And, -view-dag-combine1-dags and
-view-legalize-dags now look prettier for vector code.
llvm-svn: 37719
TargetLowering to SelectionDAG so that they have more convenient
access to the current DAG, in preparation for the ValueType routines
being changed from standalone functions to members of SelectionDAG for
the pre-legalize vector type changes.
llvm-svn: 37704