Summary:
Currently it's a module pass. Make it a function pass so that we can
move it to PassManagerBuilder's EP_EarlyAsPossible extension point,
which only accepts function passes.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: tra, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18615
llvm-svn: 264919
Summary:
This gives callers flexibility to pass lambdas with captures, which lets
callers avoid the C-style void*-ptr closure style. (Currently, callers
in clang store state in the PassManagerBuilderBase arg.)
No functional change, and the new API is backwards-compatible.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: joker.eph, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18613
llvm-svn: 264918
The TailDup transform was removed in r138841 in 2011, along with most
of the tests for it. This test, however, was missed. Probably because
it had already been XFAIL'd for 3 years at that point (since r52243!)
and continued to fail when the opt flag for -tailduplicate stopped
being valid.
llvm-svn: 264916
There is code under review that requires StringMap to have a copy constructor,
and this makes StringMap more consistent with our other containers (like
DenseMap) that have copy constructors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18506
llvm-svn: 264906
This change prevents the loop vectorizer from vectorizing when all of the vector
types it generates will be scalarized. I've run into this problem on the PPC's QPX
vector ISA, which only holds floating-point vector types. The loop vectorizer
will, however, happily vectorize loops with purely integer computation. Here's
an example:
LV: The Smallest and Widest types: 32 / 32 bits.
LV: The Widest register is: 256 bits.
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 1 For instruction: %indvars.iv25 = phi i64 [ 0, %entry ], [ %indvars.iv.next26, %for.body ]
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 1 For instruction: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds [1600 x i32], [1600 x i32]* %a, i64 0, i64 %indvars.iv25
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 1 For instruction: %2 = trunc i64 %indvars.iv25 to i32
LV: Found an estimated cost of 1 for VF 1 For instruction: store i32 %2, i32* %arrayidx, align 4
LV: Found an estimated cost of 1 for VF 1 For instruction: %indvars.iv.next26 = add nuw nsw i64 %indvars.iv25, 1
LV: Found an estimated cost of 1 for VF 1 For instruction: %exitcond27 = icmp eq i64 %indvars.iv.next26, 1600
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 1 For instruction: br i1 %exitcond27, label %for.cond.cleanup, label %for.body
LV: Scalar loop costs: 3.
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 2 For instruction: %indvars.iv25 = phi i64 [ 0, %entry ], [ %indvars.iv.next26, %for.body ]
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 2 For instruction: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds [1600 x i32], [1600 x i32]* %a, i64 0, i64 %indvars.iv25
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 2 For instruction: %2 = trunc i64 %indvars.iv25 to i32
LV: Found an estimated cost of 2 for VF 2 For instruction: store i32 %2, i32* %arrayidx, align 4
LV: Found an estimated cost of 1 for VF 2 For instruction: %indvars.iv.next26 = add nuw nsw i64 %indvars.iv25, 1
LV: Found an estimated cost of 1 for VF 2 For instruction: %exitcond27 = icmp eq i64 %indvars.iv.next26, 1600
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 2 For instruction: br i1 %exitcond27, label %for.cond.cleanup, label %for.body
LV: Vector loop of width 2 costs: 2.
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 4 For instruction: %indvars.iv25 = phi i64 [ 0, %entry ], [ %indvars.iv.next26, %for.body ]
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 4 For instruction: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds [1600 x i32], [1600 x i32]* %a, i64 0, i64 %indvars.iv25
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 4 For instruction: %2 = trunc i64 %indvars.iv25 to i32
LV: Found an estimated cost of 4 for VF 4 For instruction: store i32 %2, i32* %arrayidx, align 4
LV: Found an estimated cost of 1 for VF 4 For instruction: %indvars.iv.next26 = add nuw nsw i64 %indvars.iv25, 1
LV: Found an estimated cost of 1 for VF 4 For instruction: %exitcond27 = icmp eq i64 %indvars.iv.next26, 1600
LV: Found an estimated cost of 0 for VF 4 For instruction: br i1 %exitcond27, label %for.cond.cleanup, label %for.body
LV: Vector loop of width 4 costs: 1.
...
LV: Selecting VF: 8.
LV: The target has 32 registers
LV(REG): Calculating max register usage:
LV(REG): At #0 Interval # 0
LV(REG): At #1 Interval # 1
LV(REG): At #2 Interval # 2
LV(REG): At #4 Interval # 1
LV(REG): At #5 Interval # 1
LV(REG): VF = 8
The problem is that the cost model here is not wrong, exactly. Since all of
these operations are scalarized, their cost (aside from the uniform ones) are
indeed VF*(scalar cost), just as the model suggests. In fact, the larger the VF
picked, the lower the relative overhead from the loop itself (and the
induction-variable update and check), and so in a sense, picking the largest VF
here is the right thing to do.
The problem is that vectorizing like this, where all of the vectors will be
scalarized in the backend, isn't really vectorizing, but rather interleaving.
By itself, this would be okay, but then the vectorizer itself also interleaves,
and that's where the problem manifests itself. There's aren't actually enough
scalar registers to support the normal interleave factor multiplied by a factor
of VF (8 in this example). In other words, the problem with this is that our
register-pressure heuristic does not account for scalarization.
While we might want to improve our register-pressure heuristic, I don't think
this is the right motivating case for that work. Here we have a more-basic
problem: The job of the vectorizer is to vectorize things (interleaving aside),
and if the IR it generates won't generate any actual vector code, then
something is wrong. Thus, if every type looks like it will be scalarized (i.e.
will be split into VF or more parts), then don't consider that VF.
This is not a problem specific to PPC/QPX, however. The problem comes up under
SSE on x86 too, and as such, this change fixes PR26837 too. I've added Sanjay's
reduced test case from PR26837 to this commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18537
llvm-svn: 264904
PGOFuncNames are used as the key to retrieve the Function definition from the
MD5 stored in the profile. For internal linkage function, we prefix the source
file name to the PGOFuncNames. LTO's internalization privatizes many global linkage
symbols. This happens after value profile annotation, but those internal
linkage functions should not have a source prefix. To differentiate compiler
generated internal symbols from original ones, PGOFuncName meta data are
created and attached to the original internal symbols in the value profile
annotation step. If a symbol does not have the meta data, its original linkage
must be non-internal.
Also add a new map that maps PGOFuncName's MD5 value to the function definition.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17895
llvm-svn: 264902
What we are really trying to do here is to figure out if we are using
the 2015 STL. Unfortunately, so far as I know the MSVC STL does not
define a version macro that we can check directly. Instead I wrote a
check to see if char16_t works.
llvm-svn: 264881
Using ArrayRef in annotateValueSite's parameter instead of using an array
and it's size.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18568
llvm-svn: 264879
Summary:
This results in higher register usage, but should make it easier for
the compiler to hide latency.
This pass is a prerequisite for some more scheduler improvements, and I
think the increase register usage with this patch is acceptable, because
when combined with the scheduler improvements, the total register usage
will decrease.
shader-db stats:
2382 shaders in 478 tests
Totals:
SGPRS: 48672 -> 49088 (0.85 %)
VGPRS: 34148 -> 34847 (2.05 %)
Code Size: 1285816 -> 1289128 (0.26 %) bytes
LDS: 28 -> 28 (0.00 %) blocks
Scratch: 492544 -> 573440 (16.42 %) bytes per wave
Max Waves: 6856 -> 6846 (-0.15 %)
Wait states: 0 -> 0 (0.00 %)
Depends on D18451
Reviewers: nhaehnle, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18452
llvm-svn: 264876
For compatability with GAS, nop and nopr are recognized as alises for
bc and bcr, respectively. A mask of 0 turns these instructions
effectively into no-operations.
Reviewed by Ulrich Weigand.
llvm-svn: 264875
These checks are redundant and can be removed
Reviewers: hans
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18564
llvm-svn: 264872
This reverts commit r264869. I am seeing Windows bot failures due to the
"\" in the path being mishandled at some point (seems to be interpreted
wrongly at some point and llvm-as | llvm-dis is yielding some junk
characters). Need to investigate.
llvm-svn: 264871
XOP's VPPERM has some great 'permute operations' that it can do as well as part of shuffling the bytes of a 128-bit vector - in this case we use it to perform BITREVERSE in a single instruction.
llvm-svn: 264870
Summary:
This change serializes out and in the SourceFileName to LLVM assembly
so that it is preserved through "llvm-dis | llvm-as". This is
necessary to ensure that the global identifiers created for local values
in the module summary index are the same even if the bitcode is
streamed out and read back from LLVM assembly.
Serializing the summary itself to LLVM assembly is in progress.
Reviewers: joker.eph
Subscribers: llvm-commits, joker.eph
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18588
llvm-svn: 264869
We are currently doing a REALLY bad job of packing results of vector comparisons into the legalized <X x i1> result equivalents - a mixture of PACKSS/PMOVMSKB would be much better here.
llvm-svn: 264867
We already try not to truncate PHIs in computeMinimalBitwidths. LoopVectorize can't handle it and we really don't need to, because both induction and reduction PHIs are truncated by other means.
However, we weren't bailing out in all the places we should have, and we ended up by returning a PHI to be truncated, which has caused PR27018.
This fixes PR17018.
llvm-svn: 264852
operations.
Specifically, we had code that tried to badly approximate reconstructing
all of the possible variations on addressing modes in two x86
instructions based on those in one pseudo instruction. This is not the
first bug uncovered with doing this, so stop doing it altogether.
Instead generically and pedantically copy every operand from the address
over to both new instructions, and strip kill flags from any register
operands.
This fixes a subtle bug seen in the wild where we would mysteriously
drop parts of the addressing mode, causing for example the index
argument in the added test case to just be completely ignored.
Hypothetically, this was an extremely bad miscompile because it actually
caused a predictable and leveragable write of a 64bit quantity to an
unintended offset (the first element of the array intead of whatever
other element was intended). As a consequence, in theory this could even
have introduced security vulnerabilities.
However, this was only something that could happen with an atomic
floating point add. No other operation could trigger this bug, so it
seems extremely unlikely to have occured widely in the wild.
But it did in fact occur, and frequently in scientific applications
which were using relaxed atomic updates of a floating point value after
adding a delta. Those would end up being quite badly miscompiled by
LLVM, which is how we found this. Of course, this often looks like
a race condition in the code, but it was actually a miscompile.
I suspect that this whole RELEASE_FADD thing was a complete mistake.
There is no such operation, and I worry that anything other than add
will get remarkably worse codegeneration. But that's not for this
change....
llvm-svn: 264845
Prior to this patch, the MemorySSA caching visitor would cache all
calls that it visited. When paired with phi optimization, this can be
problematic. Consider:
define void @foo() {
; 1 = MemoryDef(liveOnEntry)
call void @clobberFunction()
br i1 undef, label %if.end, label %if.then
if.then:
; MemoryUse(??)
call void @readOnlyFunction()
; 2 = MemoryDef(1)
call void @clobberFunction()
br label %if.end
if.end:
; 3 = MemoryPhi(...)
; MemoryUse(?)
call void @readOnlyFunction()
ret void
}
When optimizing MemoryUse(?), we visit defs 1 and 2, so we note to
cache them later. We ultimately end up not being able to optimize
passed the Phi, so we set MemoryUse(?) to point to the Phi. We then
cache the clobbering call for def 1 to be the Phi.
This commit changes this behavior so that we wipe out any calls
added to VisistedCalls while visiting the defs of a phi we couldn't
optimize.
Aside: With this patch, we now can bootstrap clang/LLVM without a
single MemorySSA verifier failure. Woohoo. :)
llvm-svn: 264820
This patch teaches the caching MemorySSA walker a few things:
1. Not to walk Phis we've walked before. It seems that we tried to do
this before, but it didn't work so well in cases like:
define void @foo() {
%1 = alloca i8
%2 = alloca i8
br label %begin
begin:
; 3 = MemoryPhi({%0,liveOnEntry},{%end,2})
; 1 = MemoryDef(3)
store i8 0, i8* %2
br label %end
end:
; MemoryUse(?)
load i8, i8* %1
; 2 = MemoryDef(1)
store i8 0, i8* %2
br label %begin
}
Because we wouldn't put Phis in Q.Visited until we tried to visit them.
So, when trying to optimize MemoryUse(?):
- We would visit 3 above
- ...Which would make us put {%0,liveOnEntry} in Q.Visited
- ...Which would make us visit {%0,liveOnEntry}
- ...Which would make us put {%end,2} in Q.Visited
- ...Which would make us visit {%end,2}
- ...Which would make us visit 3
- ...Which would realize we've already visited everything in 3
- ...Which would make us conservatively return 3.
In the added test-case, (@looped_visitedonlyonce) this behavior would
cause us to give incorrect results. Specifically, we'd visit 4 twice
in the same query, but on the second visit, we'd skip while.cond because
it had been visited, visit if.then/if.then2, and cache "1" as the
clobbering def on the way back.
2. If we try to walk the defs of a {Phi,MemLoc} and see it has been
visited before, just hand back the Phi we're trying to optimize.
I promise this isn't as terrible as it seems. :)
We now insert {Phi,MemLoc} pairs just before walking the Phi's upward
defs. So, we check the cache for the {Phi,MemLoc} pair before checking
if we've already walked the Phi.
The {Phi,MemLoc} pair is (almost?) always guaranteed to have a cache
entry if we've already fully walked it, because we cache as we go.
So, if the {Phi,MemLoc} pair isn't in cache, either:
(a) we must be in the process of visiting it (in which case, we can't
give a better answer in a cache-as-we-go DFS walker)
(b) we visited it, but didn't cache it on the way back (...which seems
to require `ModifyingAccess` to not dominate `StartingAccess`,
so I'm 99% sure that would be an error. If it's not an error, I
haven't been able to get it to happen locally, so I suspect it's
rare.)
- - - - -
As a consequence of this change, we no longer skip upward defs of phis,
so we can kill the `VisitedOnlyOne` check. This gives us better accuracy
than we had before, at the cost of potentially doing a bit more work
when we have a loop.
llvm-svn: 264814
This is effectively NFC, minus the renaming of the options
(-cyclone-prefetch-distance -> -prefetch-distance).
The change was requested by Tim in D17943.
llvm-svn: 264806
We have known races on profile counters, which can be reproduced by enabling
-fsanitize=thread and -fprofile-instr-generate simultaneously on a
multi-threaded program. This patch avoids reporting those races by not
instrumenting the reads and writes coming from the instruction profiler.
llvm-svn: 264805
During ADCE, track which debug info scopes still have live references
from the code, and delete debug info intrinsics for the dead ones.
These intrinsics describe the locations of variables (in registers or
stack slots). If there's no code left corresponding to a variable's
scope, then there's no way to reference the variable in the debugger and
it doesn't matter what its value is.
I add a DEBUG printout when the described location in an SSA register,
in case it helps some trying to track down why locations get lost.
However, we still delete these; the scope itself isn't attached to any
real code, so the ship has already sailed.
llvm-svn: 264800
1. Removed the run line for mingw32 and made the Darwin triples unknown.
This is a test of 32-bit vs. 64-bit platform and the underlying hardware.
We have other tests for checking behavioral differences of the OS platform.
2. Changed the CPU specifiers to the attributes they were meant to represent.
Any CPU that doesn't have SSE4.2 is assumed to have slow unaligned 16-byte accesses,
so it won't use those here.
3. Although the stores really could all be CHECK-DAG, I left them as CHECK-NEXT to
show the strange behavior of the instruction scheduler in the SLOW_32 case.
4. The odd-looking instructions are due to the use of a null pointer in the IR, so
we have integer immediate store addresses. Cute.
llvm-svn: 264796
This makes check failures much easier to understand.
Make it empty (but leave it in the class) for NDEBUG builds.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18529
llvm-svn: 264780
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/nm.html .
1) For Mach-O files the code was not printing the values in hex as is the default.
2) The values printed had leading zeros which they should not have.
3) The address for undefined symbols was printed as spaces instead of 0.
4) With the -A option with posix output for an archive did not use square
brackets around the archive member name.
rdar://25311883 and rdar://25299678
llvm-svn: 264778
They were previously expanded to CAS loops in a custom isel expansion,
but AtomicExpandPass knows how to do that generically.
Testing is covered by the existing sparc atomics.ll testcases.
llvm-svn: 264771