Commit Graph

594 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
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
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Craig Topper ba3ab78291 [X86] Initialize and Register X86CondBrFoldingPass
To make X86CondBrFoldingPass can be run with --run-pass option, this can test one wrong assertion on analyzeCompare function for SUB32ri when its operand is not imm

Patch by Jianping Chen

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55412

llvm-svn: 348620
2018-12-07 18:10:34 +00:00
David Green ca29c271d2 [Targets] Add errors for tiny and kernel codemodel on targets that don't support them
Adds fatal errors for any target that does not support the Tiny or Kernel
codemodels by rejigging the getEffectiveCodeModel calls.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50141

llvm-svn: 348585
2018-12-07 12:10:23 +00:00
Mircea Trofin f1a49e8525 Revert "Revert r347596 "Support for inserting profile-directed cache prefetches""
Summary:
This reverts commit d8517b96dfbd42e6a8db33c50d1fa1e58e63fbb9.

Fix: correct  the use of DenseMap.

Reviewers: davidxl, hans, wmi

Reviewed By: wmi

Subscribers: mgorny, eraman, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55088

llvm-svn: 347938
2018-11-30 01:01:52 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 6e3be9d12e Revert r347596 "Support for inserting profile-directed cache prefetches"
It causes asserts building BoringSSL. See https://crbug.com/91009#c3 for
repro.

This also reverts the follow-ups:
Revert r347724 "Do not insert prefetches with unsupported memory operands."
Revert r347606 "[X86] Add dependency from X86 to ProfileData after rL347596"
Revert r347607 "Add new passes to X86 pipeline tests"

llvm-svn: 347864
2018-11-29 13:58:02 +00:00
Mircea Trofin cfbc1788d6 Support for inserting profile-directed cache prefetches
Summary:
Support for profile-driven cache prefetching (X86)

This change is part of a larger system, consisting of a cache prefetches recommender, create_llvm_prof (https://github.com/google/autofdo), and LLVM.

A proof of concept recommender is DynamoRIO's cache miss analyzer. It processes memory access traces obtained from a running binary and identifies patterns in cache misses. Based on them, it produces a csv file with recommendations. The expectation is that, by leveraging such recommendations, we can reduce the amount of clock cycles spent waiting for data from memory. A microbenchmark based on the DynamoRIO analyzer is available as a proof of concept: https://goo.gl/6TM2Xp.

The recommender makes prefetch recommendations in terms of:

* the binary offset of an instruction with a memory operand;
* a delta;
* and a type (nta, t0, t1, t2)

meaning: a prefetch of that type should be inserted right before the instrution at that binary offset, and the prefetch should be for an address delta away from the memory address the instruction will access.

For example:

0x400ab2,64,nta

and assuming the instruction at 0x400ab2 is:

movzbl (%rbx,%rdx,1),%edx

means that the recommender determined it would be beneficial for a prefetchnta instruction to be inserted right before this instruction, as such:

prefetchnta 0x40(%rbx,%rdx,1)
movzbl (%rbx, %rdx, 1), %edx

The workflow for prefetch cache instrumentation is as follows (the proof of concept script details these steps as well):

1. build binary, making sure -gmlt -fdebug-info-for-profiling is passed. The latter option will enable the X86DiscriminateMemOps pass, which ensures instructions with memory operands are uniquely identifiable (this causes ~2% size increase in total binary size due to the additional debug information).

2. collect memory traces, run analysis to obtain recommendations (see above-referenced DynamoRIO demo as a proof of concept).

3. use create_llvm_prof to convert recommendations to reference insertion locations in terms of debug info locations.

4. rebuild binary, using the exact same set of arguments used initially, to which -mllvm -prefetch-hints-file=<file> needs to be added, using the afdo file obtained at step 3.

Note that if sample profiling feedback-driven optimization is also desired, that happens before step 1 above. In this case, the sample profile afdo file that was used to produce the binary at step 1 must also be included in step 4.

The data needed by the compiler in order to identify prefetch insertion points is very similar to what is needed for sample profiles. For this reason, and given that the overall approach (memory tracing-based cache recommendation mechanisms) is under active development, we use the afdo format as a syntax for capturing this information. We avoid confusing semantics with sample profile afdo data by feeding the two types of information to the compiler through separate files and compiler flags. Should the approach prove successful, we can investigate improvements to this encoding mechanism.

Reviewers: davidxl, wmi, craig.topper

Reviewed By: davidxl, wmi, craig.topper

Subscribers: davide, danielcdh, mgorny, aprantl, eraman, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54052

llvm-svn: 347596
2018-11-26 21:36:18 +00:00
Rong Xu 3a38175723 [X86] Disable Condbr_merge pass
Disable Condbr_merge pass for now due to PR39658.
Will reenable the pass once the bug is fixed.

llvm-svn: 347079
2018-11-16 19:35:00 +00:00
Matthias Braun a9f900561e X86: Consistently declare pass initializers in X86.h; NFC
This avoids declaring them twice: in X86TargetMachine.cpp and the file
implementing the pass.

llvm-svn: 345801
2018-11-01 00:38:01 +00:00
Craig Topper 813064bf4d [X86] Change X86 backend to look for 'min-legal-vector-width' attribute instead of 'required-vector-width' when determining whether 512-bit vectors should be legal.
The required-vector-width attribute was only used for backend testing and has never been generated by clang.

I believe clang is now generating min-legal-vector-width for vector uses in user code.

With this I believe passing -mprefer-vector-width=256 to clang should prevent use of zmm registers in the generated assembly unless the user used a 512-bit intrinsic in their source code.

llvm-svn: 345317
2018-10-25 21:16:06 +00:00
Rong Xu 3d2efdfdea Recommit r343993: [X86] condition branches folding for three-way conditional codes
Fix the memory issue exposed by sanitizer.

llvm-svn: 344085
2018-10-09 22:03:40 +00:00
Rong Xu 47fd015163 [X86] Revert r343993 condition branches folding for three-way conditional codes
Some buildbots failed.

llvm-svn: 343998
2018-10-08 22:08:43 +00:00
Rong Xu 67b1b328f7 [X86] condition branches folding for three-way conditional codes
This patch implements a pass that optimizes condition branches on x86 by
taking advantage of the three-way conditional code generated by compare
instructions.

Currently, it tries to hoisting EQ and NE conditional branch to a dominant
conditional branch condition where the same EQ/NE conditional code is
computed. An example:
bb_0:
  cmp %0, 19
  jg bb_1
  jmp bb_2
bb_1:
  cmp %0, 40
  jg bb_3
  jmp bb_4
bb_4:
  cmp %0, 20
  je bb_5
  jmp bb_6
Here we could combine the two compares in bb_0 and bb_4 and have the
following code:

bb_0:
  cmp %0, 20
  jg bb_1
  jl bb_2
  jmp bb_5
bb_1:
  cmp %0, 40
  jg bb_3
  jmp bb_6

For the case of %0 == 20 (bb_5), we eliminate two jumps, and the control height
for bb_6 is also reduced. bb_4 is gone after the optimization.

This optimization is motivated by the branch pattern generated by the switch
lowering: we always have pivot-1 compare for the inner nodes and we do a pivot
compare again the leaf (like above pattern).

This pass currently is enabled on Intel's Sandybridge and later arches. Some
reviewers pointed out that on some arches (like AMD Jaguar), this pass may
increase branch density to the point where it hurts the performance of the
branch predictor.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46662

llvm-svn: 343993
2018-10-08 18:52:39 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 664aa868f5 [x86/SLH] Add a real Clang flag and LLVM IR attribute for Speculative
Load Hardening.

Wires up the existing pass to work with a proper IR attribute rather
than just a hidden/internal flag. The internal flag continues to work
for now, but I'll likely remove it soon.

Most of the churn here is adding the IR attribute. I talked about this
Kristof Beyls and he seemed at least initially OK with this direction.
The idea of using a full attribute here is that we *do* expect at least
some forms of this for other architectures. There isn't anything
*inherently* x86-specific about this technique, just that we only have
an implementation for x86 at the moment.

While we could potentially expose this as a Clang-level attribute as
well, that seems like a good question to defer for the moment as it
isn't 100% clear whether that or some other programmer interface (or
both?) would be best. We'll defer the programmer interface side of this
for now, but at least get to the point where the feature can be enabled
without relying on implementation details.

This also allows us to do something that was really hard before: we can
enable *just* the indirect call retpolines when using SLH. For x86, we
don't have any other way to mitigate indirect calls. Other architectures
may take a different approach of course, and none of this is surfaced to
user-level flags.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51157

llvm-svn: 341363
2018-09-04 12:38:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 00c35c7794 [x86] Actually initialize the SLH pass with the x86 backend and use
a shorter name ('x86-slh') for the internal flags and pass name.

Without this, you can't use the -stop-after or -stop-before
infrastructure. I seem to have just missed this when originally adding
the pass.

The shorter name solves two problems. First, the flag names were ...
really long and hard to type/manage. Second, the pass name can't be the
exact same as the flag name used to enable this, and there are already
some users of that flag name so I'm avoiding changing it unnecessarily.

llvm-svn: 339836
2018-08-16 01:22:19 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 980c4df037 Re-land r335297 "[X86] Implement more of x86-64 large and medium PIC code models"
Don't try to generate large PIC code for non-ELF targets. Neither COFF
nor MachO have relocations for large position independent code, and
users have been using "large PIC" code models to JIT 64-bit code for a
while now. With this change, if they are generating ELF code, their
JITed code will truly be PIC, but if they target MachO or COFF, it will
contain 64-bit immediates that directly reference external symbols. For
a JIT, that's perfectly fine.

llvm-svn: 337740
2018-07-23 21:14:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 90358e1ef1 [SLH] Introduce a new pass to do Speculative Load Hardening to mitigate
Spectre variant #1 for x86.

There is a lengthy, detailed RFC thread on llvm-dev which discusses the
high level issues. High level discussion is probably best there.

I've split the design document out of this patch and will land it
separately once I update it to reflect the latest edits and updates to
the Google doc used in the RFC thread.

This patch is really just an initial step. It isn't quite ready for
prime time and is only exposed via debugging flags. It has two major
limitations currently:
1) It only supports x86-64, and only certain ABIs. Many assumptions are
   currently hard-coded and need to be factored out of the code here.
2) It doesn't include any options for more fine-grained control, either
   of which control flow edges are significant or which loads are
   important to be hardened.
3) The code is still quite rough and the testing lighter than I'd like.

However, this is enough for people to begin using. I have had numerous
requests from people to be able to experiment with this patch to
understand the trade-offs it presents and how to use it. We would also
like to encourage work to similar effect in other toolchains.

The ARM folks are actively developing a system based on this for
AArch64. We hope to merge this with their efforts when both are far
enough along. But we also don't want to block making this available on
that effort.

Many thanks to the *numerous* people who helped along the way here. For
this patch in particular, both Eric and Craig did a ton of review to
even have confidence in it as an early, rough cut at this functionality.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44824

llvm-svn: 336990
2018-07-13 11:13:58 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere b757fc3878 Revert "Re-land r335297 "[X86] Implement more of x86-64 large and medium PIC code models""
Reverting because this is causing failures in the LLDB test suite on
GreenDragon.

  LLVM ERROR: unsupported relocation with subtraction expression, symbol
  '__GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_' can not be undefined in a subtraction
  expression

llvm-svn: 335894
2018-06-28 17:56:43 +00:00
Jessica Paquette dafa198c96 [MachineOutliner] Define MachineOutliner support in TargetOptions
Targets should be able to define whether or not they support the outliner
without the outliner being added to the pass pipeline. Before this, the
outliner pass would be added, and ask the target whether or not it supports the
outliner.

After this, it's possible to query the target in TargetPassConfig, before the
outliner pass is created. This ensures that passing -enable-machine-outliner
will not modify the pass pipeline of any target that does not support it.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D48683

llvm-svn: 335887
2018-06-28 17:45:43 +00:00
Matthias Braun da5e7e11d1 SelectionDAGBuilder, mach-o: Skip trap after noreturn call (for Mach-O)
Add NoTrapAfterNoreturn target option which skips emission of traps
behind noreturn calls even if TrapUnreachable is enabled.

Enable the feature on Mach-O to save code size; Comments suggest it is
not possible to enable it for the other users of TrapUnreachable.

rdar://41530228

DifferentialRevision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48674
llvm-svn: 335877
2018-06-28 17:00:45 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 88fee5fdbc Re-land r335297 "[X86] Implement more of x86-64 large and medium PIC code models"
The large code model allows code and data segments to exceed 2GB, which
means that some symbol references may require a displacement that cannot
be encoded as a displacement from RIP. The large PIC model even relaxes
the assumption that the GOT itself is within 2GB of all code. Therefore,
we need a special code sequence to materialize it:
  .LtmpN:
    leaq .LtmpN(%rip), %rbx
    movabsq $_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_-.LtmpN, %rax # Scratch
    addq %rax, %rbx # GOT base reg

From that, non-local references go through the GOT base register instead
of being PC-relative loads. Local references typically use GOTOFF
symbols, like this:
    movq extern_gv@GOT(%rbx), %rax
    movq local_gv@GOTOFF(%rbx), %rax

All calls end up being indirect:
    movabsq $local_fn@GOTOFF, %rax
    addq %rbx, %rax
    callq *%rax

The medium code model retains the assumption that the code segment is
less than 2GB, so calls are once again direct, and the RIP-relative
loads can be used to access the GOT. Materializing the GOT is easy:
    leaq _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_(%rip), %rbx # GOT base reg

DSO local data accesses will use it:
    movq local_gv@GOTOFF(%rbx), %rax

Non-local data accesses will use RIP-relative addressing, which means we
may not always need to materialize the GOT base:
    movq extern_gv@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax

Direct calls are basically the same as they are in the small code model:
They use direct, PC-relative addressing, and the PLT is used for calls
to non-local functions.

This patch adds reasonably comprehensive testing of LEA, but there are
lots of interesting folding opportunities that are unimplemented.

I restricted the MCJIT/eh-lg-pic.ll test to Linux, since the large PIC
code model is not implemented for MachO yet.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47211

llvm-svn: 335508
2018-06-25 18:16:27 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 3a2fd1c2f3 Revert r335297 "[X86] Implement more of x86-64 large and medium PIC code models"
MCJIT can't handle R_X86_64_GOT64 yet.

llvm-svn: 335300
2018-06-21 22:19:05 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 247fe6aeab [X86] Implement more of x86-64 large and medium PIC code models
Summary:
The large code model allows code and data segments to exceed 2GB, which
means that some symbol references may require a displacement that cannot
be encoded as a displacement from RIP. The large PIC model even relaxes
the assumption that the GOT itself is within 2GB of all code. Therefore,
we need a special code sequence to materialize it:
  .LtmpN:
    leaq .LtmpN(%rip), %rbx
    movabsq $_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_-.LtmpN, %rax # Scratch
    addq %rax, %rbx # GOT base reg

From that, non-local references go through the GOT base register instead
of being PC-relative loads. Local references typically use GOTOFF
symbols, like this:
    movq extern_gv@GOT(%rbx), %rax
    movq local_gv@GOTOFF(%rbx), %rax

All calls end up being indirect:
    movabsq $local_fn@GOTOFF, %rax
    addq %rbx, %rax
    callq *%rax

The medium code model retains the assumption that the code segment is
less than 2GB, so calls are once again direct, and the RIP-relative
loads can be used to access the GOT. Materializing the GOT is easy:
    leaq _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_(%rip), %rbx # GOT base reg

DSO local data accesses will use it:
    movq local_gv@GOTOFF(%rbx), %rax

Non-local data accesses will use RIP-relative addressing, which means we
may not always need to materialize the GOT base:
    movq extern_gv@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax

Direct calls are basically the same as they are in the small code model:
They use direct, PC-relative addressing, and the PLT is used for calls
to non-local functions.

This patch adds reasonably comprehensive testing of LEA, but there are
lots of interesting folding opportunities that are unimplemented.

Reviewers: chandlerc, echristo

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47211

llvm-svn: 335297
2018-06-21 21:55:08 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 98117a47e6 [MS][ARM64] Hoist __ImageBase handling into TargetLoweringObjectFileCOFF
All COFF targets should use @IMGREL32 relocations for symbol differences
against __ImageBase. Do the same for getSectionForConstant, so that
immediates lowered to globals get merged across TUs.

Patch by Chris January

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47783

llvm-svn: 334523
2018-06-12 18:56:05 +00:00
Petar Jovanovic e2bfcd6394 Correct dwarf unwind information in function epilogue
This patch aims to provide correct dwarf unwind information in function
epilogue for X86.
It consists of two parts. The first part inserts CFI instructions that set
appropriate cfa offset and cfa register in emitEpilogue() in
X86FrameLowering. This part is X86 specific.

The second part is platform independent and ensures that:

* CFI instructions do not affect code generation (they are not counted as
  instructions when tail duplicating or tail merging)
* Unwind information remains correct when a function is modified by
  different passes. This is done in a late pass by analyzing information
  about cfa offset and cfa register in BBs and inserting additional CFI
  directives where necessary.

Added CFIInstrInserter pass:

* analyzes each basic block to determine cfa offset and register are valid
  at its entry and exit
* verifies that outgoing cfa offset and register of predecessor blocks match
  incoming values of their successors
* inserts additional CFI directives at basic block beginning to correct the
  rule for calculating CFA

Having CFI instructions in function epilogue can cause incorrect CFA
calculation rule for some basic blocks. This can happen if, due to basic
block reordering, or the existence of multiple epilogue blocks, some of the
blocks have wrong cfa offset and register values set by the epilogue block
above them.
CFIInstrInserter is currently run only on X86, but can be used by any target
that implements support for adding CFI instructions in epilogue.

Patch by Violeta Vukobrat.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42848

llvm-svn: 330706
2018-04-24 10:32:08 +00:00
Tim Northover 271d3d2771 MachO: trap unreachable instructions
Debugability is more important than saving 4 bytes to let us to fall
through to nonense.

llvm-svn: 330073
2018-04-13 22:25:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 19618fc639 [x86] Introduce a pass to begin more systematically fixing PR36028 and similar issues.
The key idea is to lower COPY nodes populating EFLAGS by scanning the
uses of EFLAGS and introducing dedicated code to preserve the necessary
state in a GPR. In the vast majority of cases, these uses are cmovCC and
jCC instructions. For such cases, we can very easily save and restore
the necessary information by simply inserting a setCC into a GPR where
the original flags are live, and then testing that GPR directly to feed
the cmov or conditional branch.

However, things are a bit more tricky if arithmetic is using the flags.
This patch handles the vast majority of cases that seem to come up in
practice: adc, adcx, adox, rcl, and rcr; all without taking advantage of
partially preserved EFLAGS as LLVM doesn't currently model that at all.

There are a large number of operations that techinaclly observe EFLAGS
currently but shouldn't in this case -- they typically are using DF.
Currently, they will not be handled by this approach. However, I have
never seen this issue come up in practice. It is already pretty rare to
have these patterns come up in practical code with LLVM. I had to resort
to writing MIR tests to cover most of the logic in this pass already.
I suspect even with its current amount of coverage of arithmetic users
of EFLAGS it will be a significant improvement over the current use of
pushf/popf. It will also produce substantially faster code in most of
the common patterns.

This patch also removes all of the old lowering for EFLAGS copies, and
the hack that forced us to use a frame pointer when EFLAGS copies were
found anywhere in a function so that the dynamic stack adjustment wasn't
a problem. None of this is needed as we now lower all of these copies
directly in MI and without require stack adjustments.

Lots of thanks to Reid who came up with several aspects of this
approach, and Craig who helped me work out a couple of things tripping
me up while working on this.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45146

llvm-svn: 329657
2018-04-10 01:41:17 +00:00
Vlad Tsyrklevich e3446017ed Add the ShadowCallStack pass
Summary:
The ShadowCallStack pass instruments functions marked with the
shadowcallstack attribute. The instrumented prolog saves the return
address to [gs:offset] where offset is stored and updated in [gs:0].
The instrumented epilog loads/updates the return address from [gs:0]
and checks that it matches the return address on the stack before
returning.

Reviewers: pcc, vitalybuka

Reviewed By: pcc

Subscribers: cryptoad, eugenis, craig.topper, mgorny, llvm-commits, kcc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44802

llvm-svn: 329139
2018-04-04 01:21:16 +00:00
Lama Saba 927468309f [X86] Reduce Store Forward Block issues in HW - Recommit after fixing Bug 36346
If a load follows a store and reloads data that the store has written to memory, Intel microarchitectures can in many cases forward the data directly from the store to the load, This "store forwarding" saves cycles by enabling the load to directly obtain the data instead of accessing the data from cache or memory.
A "store forward block" occurs in cases that a store cannot be forwarded to the load. The most typical case of store forward block on Intel Core microarchiticutre that a small store cannot be forwarded to a large load.
The estimated penalty for a store forward block is ~13 cycles.

This pass tries to recognize and handle cases where "store forward block" is created by the compiler when lowering memcpy calls to a sequence
of a load and a store.

The pass currently only handles cases where memcpy is lowered to XMM/YMM registers, it tries to break the memcpy into smaller copies.
breaking the memcpy should be possible since there is no atomicity guarantee for loads and stores to XMM/YMM.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41330

Change-Id: Ib48836ccdf6005989f7d4466fa2035b7b04415d9
llvm-svn: 328973
2018-04-02 13:48:28 +00:00
David Blaikie 6054e650ff Move TargetLoweringObjectFile from CodeGen to Target to fix layering
It's implemented in Target & include from other Target headers, so the
header should be in Target.

llvm-svn: 328392
2018-03-23 23:58:19 +00:00
Richard Smith ade53736b0 Revert r325128 ("[X86] Reduce Store Forward Block issues in HW").
This is causing miscompiles in some situations. See the llvm-commits thread for the commit for details.

llvm-svn: 325852
2018-02-23 01:43:46 +00:00
Lama Saba fe1016c485 [X86] Reduce Store Forward Block issues in HW - Recommit after fixing Bug 36346
If a load follows a store and reloads data that the store has written to memory, Intel microarchitectures can in many cases forward the data directly from the store to the load, This "store forwarding" saves cycles by enabling the load to directly obtain the data instead of accessing the data from cache or memory.
A "store forward block" occurs in cases that a store cannot be forwarded to the load. The most typical case of store forward block on Intel Core microarchiticutre that a small store cannot be forwarded to a large load.
The estimated penalty for a store forward block is ~13 cycles.

This pass tries to recognize and handle cases where "store forward block" is created by the compiler when lowering memcpy calls to a sequence
of a load and a store.

The pass currently only handles cases where memcpy is lowered to XMM/YMM registers, it tries to break the memcpy into smaller copies.
breaking the memcpy should be possible since there is no atomicity guarantee for loads and stores to XMM/YMM.

Change-Id: Ic41aa9ade6512e0478db66e07e2fde41b4fb35f9
llvm-svn: 325128
2018-02-14 14:58:53 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 7e19dfc45f Revert r324835 "[X86] Reduce Store Forward Block issues in HW"
It asserts building Chromium; see PR36346.

(This also reverts the follow-up r324836.)

> If a load follows a store and reloads data that the store has written to memory, Intel microarchitectures can in many cases forward the data directly from the store to the load, This "store forwarding" saves cycles by enabling the load to directly obtain the data instead of accessing the data from cache or memory.
> A "store forward block" occurs in cases that a store cannot be forwarded to the load. The most typical case of store forward block on Intel Core microarchiticutre that a small store cannot be forwarded to a large load.
> The estimated penalty for a store forward block is ~13 cycles.
>
> This pass tries to recognize and handle cases where "store forward block" is created by the compiler when lowering memcpy calls to a sequence
> of a load and a store.
>
> The pass currently only handles cases where memcpy is lowered to XMM/YMM registers, it tries to break the memcpy into smaller copies.
> breaking the memcpy should be possible since there is no atomicity guarantee for loads and stores to XMM/YMM.

llvm-svn: 324887
2018-02-12 12:43:39 +00:00
Lama Saba c2ba6c387e [X86] Reduce Store Forward Block issues in HW
If a load follows a store and reloads data that the store has written to memory, Intel microarchitectures can in many cases forward the data directly from the store to the load, This "store forwarding" saves cycles by enabling the load to directly obtain the data instead of accessing the data from cache or memory.
A "store forward block" occurs in cases that a store cannot be forwarded to the load. The most typical case of store forward block on Intel Core microarchiticutre that a small store cannot be forwarded to a large load.
The estimated penalty for a store forward block is ~13 cycles.

This pass tries to recognize and handle cases where "store forward block" is created by the compiler when lowering memcpy calls to a sequence
of a load and a store.

The pass currently only handles cases where memcpy is lowered to XMM/YMM registers, it tries to break the memcpy into smaller copies.
breaking the memcpy should be possible since there is no atomicity guarantee for loads and stores to XMM/YMM.

Change-Id: I620b6dc91583ad9a1444591e3ddc00dd25d81748
llvm-svn: 324835
2018-02-11 09:34:12 +00:00
Craig Topper 24d3b28d93 [X86] Don't make 512-bit vectors legal when preferred vector width is 256 bits and 512 bits aren't required
This patch adds a new function attribute "required-vector-width" that can be set by the frontend to indicate the maximum vector width present in the original source code. The idea is that this would be set based on ABI requirements, intrinsics or explicit vector types being used, maybe simd pragmas, etc. The backend will then use this information to determine if its save to make 512-bit vectors illegal when the preference is for 256-bit vectors.

For code that has no vectors in it originally and only get vectors through the loop and slp vectorizers this allows us to generate code largely similar to our AVX2 only output while still enabling AVX512 features like mask registers and gather/scatter. The loop vectorizer doesn't always obey TTI and will create oversized vectors with the expectation the backend will legalize it. In order to avoid changing the vectorizer and potentially harm our AVX2 codegen this patch tries to make the legalizer behavior similar.

This is restricted to CPUs that support AVX512F and AVX512VL so that we have good fallback options to use 128 and 256-bit vectors and still get masking.

I've qualified every place I could find in X86ISelLowering.cpp and added tests cases for many of them with 2 different values for the attribute to see the codegen differences.

We still need to do frontend work for the attribute and teach the inliner how to merge it, etc. But this gets the codegen layer ready for it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42724

llvm-svn: 324834
2018-02-11 08:06:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c58f2166ab Introduce the "retpoline" x86 mitigation technique for variant #2 of the speculative execution vulnerabilities disclosed today, specifically identified by CVE-2017-5715, "Branch Target Injection", and is one of the two halves to Spectre..
Summary:
First, we need to explain the core of the vulnerability. Note that this
is a very incomplete description, please see the Project Zero blog post
for details:
https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2018/01/reading-privileged-memory-with-side.html

The basis for branch target injection is to direct speculative execution
of the processor to some "gadget" of executable code by poisoning the
prediction of indirect branches with the address of that gadget. The
gadget in turn contains an operation that provides a side channel for
reading data. Most commonly, this will look like a load of secret data
followed by a branch on the loaded value and then a load of some
predictable cache line. The attacker then uses timing of the processors
cache to determine which direction the branch took *in the speculative
execution*, and in turn what one bit of the loaded value was. Due to the
nature of these timing side channels and the branch predictor on Intel
processors, this allows an attacker to leak data only accessible to
a privileged domain (like the kernel) back into an unprivileged domain.

The goal is simple: avoid generating code which contains an indirect
branch that could have its prediction poisoned by an attacker. In many
cases, the compiler can simply use directed conditional branches and
a small search tree. LLVM already has support for lowering switches in
this way and the first step of this patch is to disable jump-table
lowering of switches and introduce a pass to rewrite explicit indirectbr
sequences into a switch over integers.

However, there is no fully general alternative to indirect calls. We
introduce a new construct we call a "retpoline" to implement indirect
calls in a non-speculatable way. It can be thought of loosely as
a trampoline for indirect calls which uses the RET instruction on x86.
Further, we arrange for a specific call->ret sequence which ensures the
processor predicts the return to go to a controlled, known location. The
retpoline then "smashes" the return address pushed onto the stack by the
call with the desired target of the original indirect call. The result
is a predicted return to the next instruction after a call (which can be
used to trap speculative execution within an infinite loop) and an
actual indirect branch to an arbitrary address.

On 64-bit x86 ABIs, this is especially easily done in the compiler by
using a guaranteed scratch register to pass the target into this device.
For 32-bit ABIs there isn't a guaranteed scratch register and so several
different retpoline variants are introduced to use a scratch register if
one is available in the calling convention and to otherwise use direct
stack push/pop sequences to pass the target address.

This "retpoline" mitigation is fully described in the following blog
post: https://support.google.com/faqs/answer/7625886

We also support a target feature that disables emission of the retpoline
thunk by the compiler to allow for custom thunks if users want them.
These are particularly useful in environments like kernels that
routinely do hot-patching on boot and want to hot-patch their thunk to
different code sequences. They can write this custom thunk and use
`-mretpoline-external-thunk` *in addition* to `-mretpoline`. In this
case, on x86-64 thu thunk names must be:
```
  __llvm_external_retpoline_r11
```
or on 32-bit:
```
  __llvm_external_retpoline_eax
  __llvm_external_retpoline_ecx
  __llvm_external_retpoline_edx
  __llvm_external_retpoline_push
```
And the target of the retpoline is passed in the named register, or in
the case of the `push` suffix on the top of the stack via a `pushl`
instruction.

There is one other important source of indirect branches in x86 ELF
binaries: the PLT. These patches also include support for LLD to
generate PLT entries that perform a retpoline-style indirection.

The only other indirect branches remaining that we are aware of are from
precompiled runtimes (such as crt0.o and similar). The ones we have
found are not really attackable, and so we have not focused on them
here, but eventually these runtimes should also be replicated for
retpoline-ed configurations for completeness.

For kernels or other freestanding or fully static executables, the
compiler switch `-mretpoline` is sufficient to fully mitigate this
particular attack. For dynamic executables, you must compile *all*
libraries with `-mretpoline` and additionally link the dynamic
executable and all shared libraries with LLD and pass `-z retpolineplt`
(or use similar functionality from some other linker). We strongly
recommend also using `-z now` as non-lazy binding allows the
retpoline-mitigated PLT to be substantially smaller.

When manually apply similar transformations to `-mretpoline` to the
Linux kernel we observed very small performance hits to applications
running typical workloads, and relatively minor hits (approximately 2%)
even for extremely syscall-heavy applications. This is largely due to
the small number of indirect branches that occur in performance
sensitive paths of the kernel.

When using these patches on statically linked applications, especially
C++ applications, you should expect to see a much more dramatic
performance hit. For microbenchmarks that are switch, indirect-, or
virtual-call heavy we have seen overheads ranging from 10% to 50%.

However, real-world workloads exhibit substantially lower performance
impact. Notably, techniques such as PGO and ThinLTO dramatically reduce
the impact of hot indirect calls (by speculatively promoting them to
direct calls) and allow optimized search trees to be used to lower
switches. If you need to deploy these techniques in C++ applications, we
*strongly* recommend that you ensure all hot call targets are statically
linked (avoiding PLT indirection) and use both PGO and ThinLTO. Well
tuned servers using all of these techniques saw 5% - 10% overhead from
the use of retpoline.

We will add detailed documentation covering these components in
subsequent patches, but wanted to make the core functionality available
as soon as possible. Happy for more code review, but we'd really like to
get these patches landed and backported ASAP for obvious reasons. We're
planning to backport this to both 6.0 and 5.0 release streams and get
a 5.0 release with just this cherry picked ASAP for distros and vendors.

This patch is the work of a number of people over the past month: Eric, Reid,
Rui, and myself. I'm mailing it out as a single commit due to the time
sensitive nature of landing this and the need to backport it. Huge thanks to
everyone who helped out here, and everyone at Intel who helped out in
discussions about how to craft this. Also, credit goes to Paul Turner (at
Google, but not an LLVM contributor) for much of the underlying retpoline
design.

Reviewers: echristo, rnk, ruiu, craig.topper, DavidKreitzer

Subscribers: sanjoy, emaste, mcrosier, mgorny, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41723

llvm-svn: 323155
2018-01-22 22:05:25 +00:00
Marina Yatsina 0bf841ac2a Separate LoopTraversal, ReachingDefAnalysis and BreakFalseDeps into their own files.
This is the one of multiple patches that fix bugzilla https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33869
Most of the patches are intended at refactoring the existent code.

Additional relevant reviews:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40330
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40331
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40332
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40334

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40333

Change-Id: Ie5f8eb34d98cfdfae23a3072eb69b5794f0e2d56
llvm-svn: 323095
2018-01-22 10:06:50 +00:00
Marina Yatsina 3d8efa4f0c Rename ExecutionDepsFix files to ExecutionDomainFix
This is the one of multiple patches that fix bugzilla https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33869
Most of the patches are intended at refactoring the existent code.

Additional relevant reviews:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40330
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40331
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40333
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40334

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40332

Change-Id: I6a048cca7fdafbfc42fb1bac94343e483befded8
llvm-svn: 323094
2018-01-22 10:06:33 +00:00
Marina Yatsina 6fc2aaae8d Separate ExecutionDepsFix into 4 parts:
1. ReachingDefsAnalysis - Allows to identify for each instruction what is the “closest” reaching def of a certain register. Used by BreakFalseDeps (for clearance calculation) and ExecutionDomainFix (for arbitrating conflicting domains).
2. ExecutionDomainFix - Changes the variant of the instructions in order to minimize domain crossings.
3. BreakFalseDeps - Breaks false dependencies.
4. LoopTraversal - Creatws a traversal order of the basic blocks that is optimal for loops (introduced in revision L293571). Both ExecutionDomainFix and ReachingDefsAnalysis use this to determine the order they will traverse the basic blocks.

This also included the following changes to ExcecutionDepsFix original logic:
1. BreakFalseDeps and ReachingDefsAnalysis logic no longer restricted by a register class.
2. ReachingDefsAnalysis tracks liveness of reg units instead of reg indices into a given reg class.

Additional changes in affected files:
1. X86 and ARM targets now inherit from ExecutionDomainFix instead of ExecutionDepsFix. BreakFalseDeps also was added to the passes they activate.
2. Comments and references to ExecutionDepsFix replaced with ExecutionDomainFix and BreakFalseDeps, as appropriate.

Additional refactoring changes will follow.

This commit is (almost) NFC.
The only functional change is that now BreakFalseDeps will break dependency for all register classes.
Since no additional instructions were added to the list of instructions that have false dependencies, there is no actual change yet.
In a future commit several instructions (and tests) will be added.

This is the first of multiple patches that fix bugzilla https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33869
Most of the patches are intended at refactoring the existent code.

Additional relevant reviews:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40331
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40332
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40333
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40334

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40330

Change-Id: Icaeb75e014eff96a8f721377783f9a3e6c679275
llvm-svn: 323087
2018-01-22 10:05:23 +00:00
Craig Topper 0d797a34d8 [X86] Add support for passing 'prefer-vector-width' function attribute into X86Subtarget and exposing via X86's getRegisterWidth TTI interface.
This will cause the vectorizers to do some limiting of the vector widths they create. This is not a strict limit. There are reasons I know of that the loop vectorizer will generate larger vectors for.

I've written this in such a way that the interface will only return a properly supported width(0/128/256/512) even if the attribute says something funny like 384 or 10.

This has been split from D41895 with the remainder in a follow up commit.

llvm-svn: 323015
2018-01-20 00:26:08 +00:00
Oren Ben Simhon 1c6308ecd5 Instrument Control Flow For Indirect Branch Tracking
CET (Control-Flow Enforcement Technology) introduces a new mechanism called IBT (Indirect Branch Tracking).
According to IBT, each Indirect branch should land on dedicated ENDBR instruction (End Branch).
The new pass adds ENDBR instructions for every indirect jmp/call (including jumps using jump tables / switches).
For more information, please see the following:
https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/4d/2a/control-flow-enforcement-technology-preview.pdf

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40482

Change-Id: Icb754489faf483a95248f96982a4e8b1009eb709
llvm-svn: 322062
2018-01-09 08:51:18 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 26d11ca4b0 (Re-landing) Expose a TargetMachine::getTargetTransformInfo function
Re-land r321234.  It had to be reverted because it broke the shared
library build.  The shared library build broke because there was a
missing LLVMBuild dependency from lib/Passes (which calls
TargetMachine::getTargetIRAnalysis) to lib/Target.  As far as I can
tell, this problem was always there but was somehow masked
before (perhaps because TargetMachine::getTargetIRAnalysis was a
virtual function).

Original commit message:

This makes the TargetMachine interface a bit simpler.  We still need
the std::function in TargetIRAnalysis to avoid having to add a
dependency from Analysis to Target.

See discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119749.html

I avoided adding all of the backend owners to this review since the
change is simple, but let me know if you feel differently about this.

Reviewers: echristo, MatzeB, hfinkel

Reviewed By: hfinkel

Subscribers: jholewinski, jfb, arsenm, dschuff, mcrosier, sdardis, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41464

llvm-svn: 321375
2017-12-22 18:21:59 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 747d1114d6 Revert "Expose a TargetMachine::getTargetTransformInfo function"
This reverts commit r321234.  It breaks the -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON build.

llvm-svn: 321243
2017-12-21 02:34:39 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 0c3de350b4 Expose a TargetMachine::getTargetTransformInfo function
Summary:
This makes the TargetMachine interface a bit simpler.  We still need
the std::function in TargetIRAnalysis to avoid having to add a
dependency from Analysis to Target.

See discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119749.html

I avoided adding all of the backend owners to this review since the
change is simple, but let me know if you feel differently about this.

Reviewers: echristo, MatzeB, hfinkel

Reviewed By: hfinkel

Subscribers: jholewinski, jfb, arsenm, dschuff, mcrosier, sdardis, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41464

llvm-svn: 321234
2017-12-21 01:06:58 +00:00
David Blaikie b3bde2ea50 Fix a bunch more layering of CodeGen headers that are in Target
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
2017-11-17 01:07:10 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 7adb2fdbba Revert "Correct dwarf unwind information in function epilogue for X86"
This reverts r317579, originally committed as r317100.

There is a design issue with marking CFI instructions duplicatable. Not
all targets support the CFIInstrInserter pass, and targets like Darwin
can't cope with duplicated prologue setup CFI instructions. The compact
unwind info emission fails.

When the following code is compiled for arm64 on Mac at -O3, the CFI
instructions end up getting tail duplicated, which causes compact unwind
info emission to fail:
  int a, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m;
  void n(int o, int *b) {
    if (g)
      f = 0;
    for (; f < o; f++) {
      m = a;
      if (l > j * k > i)
        j = i = k = d;
      h = b[c] - e;
    }
  }

We get assembly that looks like this:
; BB#1:                                 ; %if.then
Lloh3:
	adrp	x9, _f@GOTPAGE
Lloh4:
	ldr	x9, [x9, _f@GOTPAGEOFF]
	mov	 w8, wzr
Lloh5:
	str		wzr, [x9]
	stp	x20, x19, [sp, #-16]!   ; 8-byte Folded Spill
	.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
	.cfi_offset w19, -8
	.cfi_offset w20, -16
	cmp		w8, w0
	b.lt	LBB0_3
	b	LBB0_7
LBB0_2:                                 ; %entry.if.end_crit_edge
Lloh6:
	adrp	x8, _f@GOTPAGE
Lloh7:
	ldr	x8, [x8, _f@GOTPAGEOFF]
Lloh8:
	ldr		w8, [x8]
	stp	x20, x19, [sp, #-16]!   ; 8-byte Folded Spill
	.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
	.cfi_offset w19, -8
	.cfi_offset w20, -16
	cmp		w8, w0
	b.ge	LBB0_7
LBB0_3:                                 ; %for.body.lr.ph

Note the multiple .cfi_def* directives. Compact unwind info emission
can't handle that.

llvm-svn: 317726
2017-11-08 21:31:14 +00:00
Petar Jovanovic e2a585dddc Reland "Correct dwarf unwind information in function epilogue for X86"
Reland r317100 with minor fix regarding ComputeCommonTailLength function in
BranchFolding.cpp. Skipping top CFI instructions block needs to executed on
several more return points in ComputeCommonTailLength().

Original r317100 message:

"Correct dwarf unwind information in function epilogue for X86"

This patch aims to provide correct dwarf unwind information in function
epilogue for X86.

It consists of two parts. The first part inserts CFI instructions that set
appropriate cfa offset and cfa register in emitEpilogue() in
X86FrameLowering. This part is X86 specific.

The second part is platform independent and ensures that:

- CFI instructions do not affect code generation
- Unwind information remains correct when a function is modified by
  different passes. This is done in a late pass by analyzing information
  about cfa offset and cfa register in BBs and inserting additional CFI
  directives where necessary.

Changed CFI instructions so that they:

- are duplicable
- are not counted as instructions when tail duplicating or tail merging
- can be compared as equal

Added CFIInstrInserter pass:

- analyzes each basic block to determine cfa offset and register valid at
  its entry and exit
- verifies that outgoing cfa offset and register of predecessor blocks match
  incoming values of their successors
- inserts additional CFI directives at basic block beginning to correct the
  rule for calculating CFA

Having CFI instructions in function epilogue can cause incorrect CFA
calculation rule for some basic blocks. This can happen if, due to basic
block reordering, or the existence of multiple epilogue blocks, some of the
blocks have wrong cfa offset and register values set by the epilogue block
above them.

CFIInstrInserter is currently run only on X86, but can be used by any target
that implements support for adding CFI instructions in epilogue.

Patch by Violeta Vukobrat.

llvm-svn: 317579
2017-11-07 14:40:27 +00:00
Petar Jovanovic bb5c84fb57 Revert "Correct dwarf unwind information in function epilogue for X86"
This reverts r317100 as it introduced sanitizer-x86_64-linux-autoconf
buildbot failure (build #15606).

llvm-svn: 317136
2017-11-01 23:05:52 +00:00
Petar Jovanovic f2faee92aa Correct dwarf unwind information in function epilogue for X86
This patch aims to provide correct dwarf unwind information in function
epilogue for X86.

It consists of two parts. The first part inserts CFI instructions that set
appropriate cfa offset and cfa register in emitEpilogue() in
X86FrameLowering. This part is X86 specific.

The second part is platform independent and ensures that:

- CFI instructions do not affect code generation
- Unwind information remains correct when a function is modified by
  different passes. This is done in a late pass by analyzing information
  about cfa offset and cfa register in BBs and inserting additional CFI
  directives where necessary.

Changed CFI instructions so that they:

- are duplicable
- are not counted as instructions when tail duplicating or tail merging
- can be compared as equal

Added CFIInstrInserter pass:

- analyzes each basic block to determine cfa offset and register valid at
  its entry and exit
- verifies that outgoing cfa offset and register of predecessor blocks match
  incoming values of their successors
- inserts additional CFI directives at basic block beginning to correct the
  rule for calculating CFA

Having CFI instructions in function epilogue can cause incorrect CFA
calculation rule for some basic blocks. This can happen if, due to basic
block reordering, or the existence of multiple epilogue blocks, some of the
blocks have wrong cfa offset and register values set by the epilogue block
above them.

CFIInstrInserter is currently run only on X86, but can be used by any target
that implements support for adding CFI instructions in epilogue.


Patch by Violeta Vukobrat.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35844

llvm-svn: 317100
2017-11-01 16:04:11 +00:00
Zvi Rackover c6d0b6c103 X86: Register the X86CallFrameOptimization pass
Summary:
The motivation of this change is to enable .mir testing for this pass.
Added one test case to cover the functionality, this same case will be improved by
a future patch.

Reviewers: igorb, guyblank, DavidKreitzer

Reviewed By: guyblank, DavidKreitzer

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38729

llvm-svn: 316412
2017-10-24 05:47:07 +00:00
Guy Blank 92d5ce3bd4 [X86] Add a pass to convert instruction chains between domains.
The pass scans the function to find instruction chains that define
registers in the same domain (closures).
It then calculates the cost of converting the closure to another domain.
If found profitable, the instructions are converted to instructions in
the other domain and the register classes are changed accordingly.

This commit adds the pass infrastructure and a simple conversion from
the GPR domain to the Mask domain.

Differential Revision:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37251

Change-Id: Ic2cf1d76598110401168326d411128ae2580a604
llvm-svn: 316288
2017-10-22 11:43:08 +00:00
Matthias Braun bb8507e63c Revert "TargetMachine: Merge TargetMachine and LLVMTargetMachine"
Reverting to investigate layering effects of MCJIT not linking
libCodeGen but using TargetMachine::getNameWithPrefix() breaking the
lldb bots.

This reverts commit r315633.

llvm-svn: 315637
2017-10-12 22:57:28 +00:00
Matthias Braun 3a9c114b24 TargetMachine: Merge TargetMachine and LLVMTargetMachine
Merge LLVMTargetMachine into TargetMachine.

- There is no in-tree target anymore that just implements TargetMachine
  but not LLVMTargetMachine.
- It should still be possible to stub out all the various functions in
  case a target does not want to use lib/CodeGen
- This simplifies the code and avoids methods ending up in the wrong
  interface.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38489

llvm-svn: 315633
2017-10-12 22:28:54 +00:00
Amjad Aboud 8ef85a088e [X86][NFC] Add X86CmovConverterPass to the pass registry.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38355

llvm-svn: 314726
2017-10-02 21:46:37 +00:00
Quentin Colombet 250e050a50 [GlobalISel] Make GlobalISel a non-optional library.
With this change, the GlobalISel library gets always built. In
particular, this is not possible to opt GlobalISel out of the build
using the LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL variable any more.

llvm-svn: 309990
2017-08-03 21:52:25 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 79e238afee Delete Default and JITDefault code models
IMHO it is an antipattern to have a enum value that is Default.

At any given piece of code it is not clear if we have to handle
Default or if has already been mapped to a concrete value. In this
case in particular, only the target can do the mapping and it is nice
to make sure it is always done.

This deletes the two default enum values of CodeModel and uses an
explicit Optional<CodeModel> when it is possible that it is
unspecified.

llvm-svn: 309911
2017-08-03 02:16:21 +00:00
Amjad Aboud 4563c062b1 [X86] X86::CMOV to Branch heuristic based optimization.
LLVM compiler recognizes opportunities to transform a branch into IR select instruction(s) - later it will be lowered into X86::CMOV instruction, assuming no other optimization eliminated the SelectInst.
However, it is not always profitable to emit X86::CMOV instruction. For example, branch is preferable over an X86::CMOV instruction when:
1. Branch is well predicted
2. Condition operand is expensive, compared to True-value and the False-value operands

In CodeGenPrepare pass there is a shallow optimization that tries to convert SelectInst into branch, but it is not enough.
This commit, implements machine optimization pass that converts X86::CMOV instruction(s) into branch, based on a conservative heuristic.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34769

llvm-svn: 308142
2017-07-16 17:39:56 +00:00
Quentin Colombet 8cf805ae89 [X86] Move GISel accessor initialization from TargetMachine to Subtarget.
NFC

llvm-svn: 306921
2017-07-01 00:45:50 +00:00
Davide Italiano 9b8e3d308f [Solaris] emit .init_array instead of .ctors on Solaris (Sparc/x86)
Patch by Fedor Sergeev.

Differential Revision:  https://reviews.llvm.org/D33868

llvm-svn: 305948
2017-06-21 20:36:32 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6bda14b313 Sort the remaining #include lines in include/... and lib/....
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.

I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.

This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.

Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).

llvm-svn: 304787
2017-06-06 11:49:48 +00:00
Dehao Chen 6b737ddce7 Add LiveRangeShrink pass to shrink live range within BB.
Summary: LiveRangeShrink pass moves instruction right after the definition with the same BB if the instruction and its operands all have more than one use. This pass is inexpensive and guarantees optimal live-range within BB.

Reviewers: davidxl, wmi, hfinkel, MatzeB, andreadb

Reviewed By: MatzeB, andreadb

Subscribers: hiraditya, jyknight, sanjoy, skatkov, gberry, jholewinski, qcolombet, javed.absar, krytarowski, atrick, spatel, RKSimon, andreadb, MatzeB, mehdi_amini, mgorny, efriedma, davide, dberlin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32563

llvm-svn: 304371
2017-05-31 23:25:25 +00:00
Matthias Braun 5e394c3d6f TargetPassConfig: Keep a reference to an LLVMTargetMachine; NFC
TargetPassConfig is not useful for targets that do not use the CodeGen
library, so we may just as well store a pointer to an
LLVMTargetMachine instead of just to a TargetMachine.

While at it, also change the constructor to take a reference instead of a
pointer as the TM must not be nullptr.

llvm-svn: 304247
2017-05-30 21:36:41 +00:00
Daniel Sanders a1b2db7919 [globalisel][tablegen] Demote OptForSize/OptForMinSize/ForCodeSize to per-function predicates.
Summary:
This causes them to be re-computed more often than necessary but resolves
objections that were raised post-commit on r301750.

Reviewers: qcolombet, ab, t.p.northover, rovka, kristof.beyls

Reviewed By: qcolombet

Subscribers: igorb, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32861

llvm-svn: 303418
2017-05-19 11:08:33 +00:00
Hans Wennborg b00ffd8cb7 Revert r302938 "Add LiveRangeShrink pass to shrink live range within BB."
This also reverts follow-ups r303292 and r303298.

It broke some Chromium tests under MSan, and apparently also internal
tests at Google.

llvm-svn: 303369
2017-05-18 18:50:05 +00:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih 8b61764cbb [LegacyPassManager] Remove TargetMachine constructors
This provides a new way to access the TargetMachine through
TargetPassConfig, as a dependency.

The patterns replaced here are:

* Passes handling a null TargetMachine call
  `getAnalysisIfAvailable<TargetPassConfig>`.

* Passes not handling a null TargetMachine
  `addRequired<TargetPassConfig>` and call
  `getAnalysis<TargetPassConfig>`.

* MachineFunctionPasses now use MF.getTarget().

* Remove all the TargetMachine constructors.
* Remove INITIALIZE_TM_PASS.

This fixes a crash when running `llc -start-before prologepilog`.

PEI needs StackProtector, which gets constructed without a TargetMachine
by the pass manager. The StackProtector pass doesn't handle the case
where there is no TargetMachine, so it segfaults.

Related to PR30324.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33222

llvm-svn: 303360
2017-05-18 17:21:13 +00:00
Lama Saba 2ea271b54a [X86] Replace slow LEA instructions in X86
According to Intel's Optimization Reference Manual for SNB+:
  " For LEA instructions with three source operands and some specific situations, instruction latency has increased to 3 cycles, and must
    dispatch via port 1:
  - LEA that has all three source operands: base, index, and offset
  - LEA that uses base and index registers where the base is EBP, RBP,or R13
  - LEA that uses RIP relative addressing mode
  - LEA that uses 16-bit addressing mode "
  This patch currently handles the first 2 cases only.
 
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32277

llvm-svn: 303333
2017-05-18 08:11:50 +00:00
Dehao Chen 02828a93e8 Only enable LiveRangeShrink for x86.
Summary: Moving LiveRangeShrink to x86 as this pass is mostly useful for archtectures with great register pressure.

Reviewers: MatzeB, qcolombet

Reviewed By: qcolombet

Subscribers: jholewinski, jyknight, javed.absar, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33294

llvm-svn: 303292
2017-05-17 20:18:13 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 0ad69fc89f Revert "[X86] Replace slow LEA instructions in X86"
This reverts commit r303183, it broke various buildbots and introduced
sanitizer errors.

llvm-svn: 303199
2017-05-16 19:55:03 +00:00
Lama Saba 52e892577d [X86] Replace slow LEA instructions in X86
According to Intel's Optimization Reference Manual for SNB+:
  " For LEA instructions with three source operands and some specific situations, instruction latency has increased to 3 cycles, and must
    dispatch via port 1:
  - LEA that has all three source operands: base, index, and offset
  - LEA that uses base and index registers where the base is EBP, RBP,or R13
  - LEA that uses RIP relative addressing mode
  - LEA that uses 16-bit addressing mode "
  This patch currently handles the first 2 cases only.
 
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32277

llvm-svn: 303183
2017-05-16 16:01:36 +00:00
Nikolai Bozhenov b7bf386e80 [X86] Clang option -fuse-init-array has no effect when generating for MCU target
Reviewers: Eugene.Zelenko, dschuff, craig.topper

Reviewed By: craig.topper

Subscribers: ahatanak, aaboud, DavidKreitzer, llvm-commits, cfe-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32543
Patch by AndreiGrischenko <andrei.l.grischenko@intel.com>

llvm-svn: 302513
2017-05-09 10:14:03 +00:00
Daniel Sanders e9fdba39e0 [globalisel][tablegen] Compute available feature bits correctly.
Summary:
Predicate<> now has a field to indicate how often it must be recomputed.
Currently, there are two frequencies, per-module (RecomputePerFunction==0)
and per-function (RecomputePerFunction==1). Per-function predicates are
currently recomputed more frequently than necessary since the only predicate
in this category is cheap to test. Per-module predicates are now computed in
getSubtargetImpl() while per-function predicates are computed in selectImpl().

Tablegen now manages the PredicateBitset internally. It should only be
necessary to add the required includes.

Also fixed a problem revealed by the test case where
constrainSelectedInstRegOperands() would attempt to tie operands that
BuildMI had already tied.

Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar

Reviewed By: rovka

Subscribers: kristof.beyls, igorb, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32491

llvm-svn: 301750
2017-04-29 17:30:09 +00:00
Daniel Sanders e7b0d66080 [globalisel][tablegen] Import SelectionDAG's rule predicates and support the equivalent in GIRule.
Summary:
The SelectionDAG importer now imports rules with Predicate's attached via
Requires, PredicateControl, etc. These predicates are implemented as
bitset's to allow multiple predicates to be tested together. However,
unlike the MC layer subtarget features, each target only pays for it's own
predicates (e.g. AArch64 doesn't have 192 feature bits just because X86
needs a lot).

Both AArch64 and X86 derive at least one predicate from the MachineFunction
or Function so they must re-initialize AvailableFeatures before each
function. They also declare locals in <Target>InstructionSelector so that
computeAvailableFeatures() can use the code from SelectionDAG without
modification.

Reviewers: rovka, qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar, t.p.northover, ab

Reviewed By: rovka

Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, igorb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31418

llvm-svn: 300993
2017-04-21 15:59:56 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 419efdd55b Revert r300964 + r300970 - [globalisel][tablegen] Import SelectionDAG's rule predicates and support the equivalent in GIRule.
It's causing llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win to fail to compile and I
haven't worked out why. Reverting to make it green while I figure it out.

llvm-svn: 300978
2017-04-21 14:09:20 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 279d03527e [globalisel][tablegen] Import SelectionDAG's rule predicates and support the equivalent in GIRule.
Summary:
The SelectionDAG importer now imports rules with Predicate's attached via
Requires, PredicateControl, etc. These predicates are implemented as
bitset's to allow multiple predicates to be tested together. However,
unlike the MC layer subtarget features, each target only pays for it's own
predicates (e.g. AArch64 doesn't have 192 feature bits just because X86
needs a lot).

Both AArch64 and X86 derive at least one predicate from the MachineFunction
or Function so they must re-initialize AvailableFeatures before each
function. They also declare locals in <Target>InstructionSelector so that
computeAvailableFeatures() can use the code from SelectionDAG without
modification.

Reviewers: rovka, qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar, t.p.northover, ab

Reviewed By: rovka

Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, igorb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31418

llvm-svn: 300964
2017-04-21 10:27:20 +00:00
Daniel Sanders 0b5293f6ae [globalisel][tablegen] Move <Target>InstructionSelector declarations to anonymous namespaces
Summary: This resolves the issue of tablegen-erated includes in the headers for non-GlobalISel builds in a simpler way than before.

Reviewers: qcolombet, ab

Reviewed By: ab

Subscribers: igorb, ab, mgorny, dberris, rovka, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30998

llvm-svn: 299637
2017-04-06 09:49:34 +00:00
Igor Breger 531a203a06 [GlobalISel][X86] support G_FRAME_INDEX instruction selection.
Summary:
    Support G_FRAME_INDEX instruction selection.

    Reviewers: zvi, rovka, ab, qcolombet

    Reviewed By: ab

    Subscribers: llvm-commits, dberris, kristof.beyls, eladcohen, guyblank

    Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30980

llvm-svn: 298800
2017-03-26 08:11:12 +00:00
Davide Italiano 200e5e184a [X86] Remove extra semicolon to placate GCC. NFCI.
llvm-svn: 298423
2017-03-21 19:17:23 +00:00
Matthias Braun e6ff30b696 ExecutionDepsFix: Let targets specialize the pass; NFC
Let targets specialize the pass with the register class so we can get a
parameterless default constructor and can put the pass into the pass
registry to enable testing with -run-pass=.

llvm-svn: 298184
2017-03-18 05:08:58 +00:00
Matthias Braun e9f8209e87 ExecutionDepsFix: Normalize names; NFC
Normalize ExeDepsFix, execution-fix, ExecutionDependencyFix and
ExecutionDepsFix to the last one.

llvm-svn: 298183
2017-03-18 05:05:40 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 5a7e0f8357 [GlobalISel] Fix compiler warnings and make assert assert something.
llvm-svn: 295827
2017-02-22 12:59:47 +00:00
Igor Breger f7359d893a [X86][GlobalISel] Initial implementation , select G_ADD gpr, gpr
Summary: Initial implementation for X86InstructionSelector. Handle selection COPY and G_ADD/G_SUB gpr, gpr .

Reviewers: qcolombet, rovka, zvi, ab

Reviewed By: rovka

Subscribers: mgorny, dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29816

llvm-svn: 295824
2017-02-22 12:25:09 +00:00
Igor Breger 6677999e17 add #ifdef, fix compilation error in case LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL=OFF
llvm-svn: 294726
2017-02-10 07:33:14 +00:00
Igor Breger b4442f34cd [X86][GlobalISel] Add general-purpose Register Bank
Summary:
[X86][GlobalISel] Add general-purpose Register Bank.
Add trivial  handling of G_ADD legalization .
Add Regestry Bank selection for COPY and G_ADD  instructions

Reviewers: rovka, zvi, ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet

Reviewed By: qcolombet

Subscribers: qcolombet, mgorny, dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29771

llvm-svn: 294723
2017-02-10 07:05:56 +00:00
Eric Christopher 0824096cc0 Temporarily revert "For X86-64 linux and PPC64 linux align int128 to 16 bytes."
until we can get better TargetMachine::isCompatibleDataLayout to compare - otherwise
we can't code generate existing bitcode without a string equality data layout.

This reverts commit r294702.

llvm-svn: 294709
2017-02-10 04:35:32 +00:00
Eric Christopher 42b9248803 For X86-64 linux and PPC64 linux align int128 to 16 bytes.
For other platforms we should find out what they need and likely
make the same change, however, a smaller additional change is easier
for platforms we know have it specified	in the ABI. As part of this
rewrite some of the handling in the backends for data layout and update
a bunch of testcases.

Based on a patch by Simonas Kazlauskas!

llvm-svn: 294702
2017-02-10 03:32:21 +00:00
Eugene Zelenko fbd13c5c12 [X86] Fix some Clang-tidy modernize and Include What You Use warnings; other minor fixes (NFC).
llvm-svn: 293949
2017-02-02 22:55:55 +00:00
Evandro Menezes 94edf02923 [CodeGen] Move MacroFusion to the target
This patch moves the class for scheduling adjacent instructions,
MacroFusion, to the target.

In AArch64, it also expands the fusion to all instructions pairs in a
scheduling block, beyond just among the predecessors of the branch at the
end.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28489

llvm-svn: 293737
2017-02-01 02:54:34 +00:00
Gadi Haber 19c4fc5e62 This is a large patch for X86 AVX-512 of an optimization for reducing code size by encoding EVEX AVX-512 instructions using the shorter VEX encoding when possible.
There are cases of AVX-512 instructions that have two possible encodings. This is the case with instructions that use vector registers with low indexes of 0 - 15 and do not use the zmm registers or the mask k registers.
The EVEX encoding prefix requires 4 bytes whereas the VEX prefix can take only up to 3 bytes. Consequently, using the VEX encoding for these instructions results in a code size reduction of ~2 bytes even though it is compiled with the AVX-512 features enabled.

Reviewers: Craig Topper, Zvi Rackoover, Elena Demikhovsky 
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27901

llvm-svn: 290663
2016-12-28 10:12:48 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha 5228603387 [GlobalISel] Drop workaround for Legalizer member/class sharing a name. NFC.
MachineLegalizer used to be the name of both the class and the member,
causing GCC errors. r276522 fixed that by renaming the member to just
'Legalizer'.  The 'class' workaround isn't necessary anymore; drop it.

llvm-svn: 289848
2016-12-15 18:45:30 +00:00
Matthias Braun 115efcd3d1 MachineScheduler: Export function to construct "default" scheduler.
This makes the createGenericSchedLive() function that constructs the
default scheduler available for the public API. This should help when
you want to get a scheduler and the default list of DAG mutations.

This also shrinks the list of default DAG mutations:
{Load|Store}ClusterDAGMutation and MacroFusionDAGMutation are no longer
added by default. Targets can easily add them if they need them. It also
makes it easier for targets to add alternative/custom macrofusion or
clustering mutations while staying with the default
createGenericSchedLive(). It also saves the callback back and forth in
TargetInstrInfo::enableClusterLoads()/enableClusterStores().

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26986

llvm-svn: 288057
2016-11-28 20:11:54 +00:00
Zvi Rackover 76dbf26599 [X86][GlobalISel] Add minimal call lowering support to the IRTranslator
Summary:
    Add basic functionality to support call lowering for X86.
    Currently only supports functions which return void and take zero arguments.
    Inspired by commit 286573.

Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26593

llvm-svn: 286935
2016-11-15 06:34:33 +00:00
David L Kreitzer 01a057a0c4 Add a pass to optimize patterns of vectorized interleaved memory accesses for
X86. The pass optimizes as a unit the entire wide load + shuffles pattern
produced by interleaved vectorization. This initial patch optimizes one pattern
(64-bit elements interleaved by a factor of 4). Future patches will generalize
to additional patterns.

Patch by Farhana Aleen

Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24681

llvm-svn: 284260
2016-10-14 18:20:41 +00:00
Mehdi Amini f42454b94b Move the global variables representing each Target behind accessor function
This avoids "static initialization order fiasco"

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25412

llvm-svn: 283702
2016-10-09 23:00:34 +00:00
Petr Hosek e023d62e76 [Triple] Add triple for Fuchsia
Fuchsia is a new operating system.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25116

llvm-svn: 283419
2016-10-06 05:17:26 +00:00
Sanjay Patel bfdbea6481 [Target] move reciprocal estimate settings from TargetOptions to TargetLowering
The motivation for the change is that we can't have pseudo-global settings for
codegen living in TargetOptions because that doesn't work with LTO.

Ideally, these reciprocal attributes will be moved to the instruction-level via
FMF, metadata, or something else. But making them function attributes is at least
an improvement over the current state.

The ingredients of this patch are:

    Remove the reciprocal estimate command-line debug option.
    Add TargetRecip to TargetLowering.
    Remove TargetRecip from TargetOptions.
    Clean up the TargetRecip implementation to work with this new scheme.
    Set the default reciprocal settings in TargetLoweringBase (everything is off).
    Update the PowerPC defaults, users, and tests.
    Update the x86 defaults, users, and tests.

Note that if this patch needs to be reverted, the related clang patch checked in
at r283251 should be reverted too.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24816

llvm-svn: 283252
2016-10-04 20:46:43 +00:00
Davide Italiano a9f85d68cc [CodeGen] Add support for emitting .init_array instead of .ctors on FreeBSD.
PR: 30494
llvm-svn: 282451
2016-09-26 22:53:15 +00:00
Eric Christopher 5653e5dffc Remove the default subtarget from the x86 port as it isn't necessary (or
correct) anymore.

llvm-svn: 282031
2016-09-20 22:19:33 +00:00
Eric Christopher ef579d2195 Remove a use of subtarget initialization in the X86 backend so we can get rid of the default subtarget.
NFC intended.

llvm-svn: 281982
2016-09-20 16:04:59 +00:00
Craig Topper f4151bea72 [AVX512] Add initial support for the Execution Domain fixing pass to change some EVEX instructions.
llvm-svn: 276393
2016-07-22 05:00:52 +00:00
Nico Weber 5bb284226b Don't optimize movs to pushes in -O0 builds.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D22362

llvm-svn: 275431
2016-07-14 15:40:22 +00:00
Nico Weber ead8f8ffdd Delete some trailing whitespace.
llvm-svn: 275429
2016-07-14 15:07:44 +00:00