Darwin TLS accesses most closely resemble ELF's general-dynamic situation,
since they have to be able to handle all possible situations. The descriptors
and so on are obviously slightly different though.
llvm-svn: 257039
Serialize will perform a hardware serialization operation, and is
acting as a memory barrier. Therefore it must have the hasSideEffects
flag set so it will be treated as a global memory object.
Reviewed by Ulrich Weigand
llvm-svn: 257036
getTargetShuffleMask may return shuffle masks with SM_SentinelZero (-2) values (currently just for PSHUFB but VPERM2X128 as well with this patch). Although some calling functions can make use of this (mainly for shuffle combining), others can not and their inclusion makes shuffle mask comparisons more difficult.
This patch adds a flag to getTargetShuffleMask to indicate if the calling function can't handle SM_SentinelZero; getTargetShuffleMask will then return false if it occurs to make handling much easier.
I've tidied up some uses of getTargetShuffleMask to better indicate what is going on - more could be done but at present I don't have test cases to demonstrate it.
Some upcoming patches will make use of this to both support more uses where SM_SentinelZero is not permitted (e.g. combineShuffleToAddSub), and also will allow us to add INSERTPS support to getTargetShuffleMask as part of better zero handling discussed in D14261.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15378
llvm-svn: 256992
Summary:
This is admittedly something that you could only run into by manually
playing around with shader assembly because the SITypeWriter pass is
skipped for compute.
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15902
llvm-svn: 256980
The first instruction in a block is what the rend() iterator points to, so
if it moves, we need to re-evaluate rend() so that we continue to iterate
through the rest of the instructions.
llvm-svn: 256953
As discussed on D15378, move the mask.empty() tests to after the switch statement and consider any shuffle decode where the extracted target shuffle mask is empty as a failure.
llvm-svn: 256921
In the discussion on http://reviews.llvm.org/D15730, Andy pointed out we had a utility function for merging MMO lists. Since it turned we actually had two copies and there's another review in progress (http://reviews.llvm.org/D15230) which needs the same, extract it into a utility function and clean up the interfaces to make it easier to use with a MachineInstBuilder.
I introduced a pair here to track size and allocation together. I think we should probably move in the direction of the MachineOperandsRef helper class, but I'm leaving that for further work. I want to get the poison state introduced before I make major changes to the interface.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15757
llvm-svn: 256909
Due to the SGPR init bug, every program claims to use the same number
of SGPRs anyway, so there's no point in trying to shift those registers
down from their initial spot of reservation.
Add a test that uses VGPR spilling and blocks most SGPRs from being used for
the scratch resource register. Previously, this would run into an assertion.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15724
llvm-svn: 256870
We queried hasFP before we hit ExpandISelPseudos. ExpandISelPseudos
manipulated state that hasFP relied on, potentially changing the result
after it has been queried elsewhere.
While I am not aware of any particular bug due to this state of affairs,
it seems best to avoid it entirely by changing the state during DAG
construction.
llvm-svn: 256849
PBLEND/BLENDPD/BLENDPS are no different to the other target shuffles and this will make future improvements to the target shuffle combines more straightforward.
llvm-svn: 256819
The red zone consists of 128 bytes beyond the stack pointer so that the
allocation of objects in leaf functions doesn't require decrementing
rsp. In r255656, we introduced an optimization that would cheaply
materialize certain constants via push/pop. Push decrements the stack
pointer and stores it's result at what is now the top of the stack.
However, this means that using push/pop would encroach on the red zone.
PR26023 gives an example where this corrupts an object in the red zone.
llvm-svn: 256808
Summary:
We had to sets of identical FLAT patterns one inside the
HasFlatAddressSpace predicate and one inside the useFlatForGloabl
predicate. This patch merges these sets into a single pattern
under the isCIVI predicate.
The reason we can remove the predicates is that when MUBUF instructions
are legal, the instruction selector will prefer selecting those over
FLAT instructions because MUBUF patterns have a higher complexity score.
So, in this case having patterns for FLAT instructions will have no effect.
This change also simplifies the process for forcing global address space
loads to use FLAT instructions, since we no only have to disable the
MUBUF patterns instead of having to disable the MUBUF patterns and
enable the FLAT patterns.
Reviewers: arsenm, cfang
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 256807
Unfortunately this fix had the effect of exposing the
-verify-machineinstrs FIXME of X86InstrInfo.cpp in two testcases for
which I disabled it for now.
Two testcases also have additional pushq/popq where the corrected code
cannot prove that %rax is dead any longer. Looking at the examples, this
could potentially be fixed by improving computeRegisterLiveness() to check
the live-in lists of the successors blocks when reaching the end of a
block.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR25951.
llvm-svn: 256799
Summary:
Enabling this feature will account for the two SGPRs used by the hardware
to store the XNACK_MASK physically.
The hardware only requires this reservation when the XNACK feature is
explicitly enabled. At some point, HSA will probably want to do that, but
it does increase SGPR register pressure, so leave it disabled by default
for now (but do add a small test).
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15869
llvm-svn: 256794
Summary: This was accidently moved to CIInstructions.td in r256282
Reviewers: cfang, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15763
llvm-svn: 256775
Summary:
The comment explains it: emitError does not necessarily exit the compilation
process, and then using NoRegister leads to assertions later on.
This generates incorrect code, of course, but the user should know to not use
the result when an error has been emitted.
It would be nice to have a test-case for this inside the LLVM repository,
but llc exits on error. shader-db tests trigger the underlying issue at least
on Tonga.
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD, mareko
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15826
llvm-svn: 256757
We need a frame pointer if there is a push/pop sequence after the
prologue in order to unwind the stack. Scanning the instructions to
figure out if this happened made hasFP not constant-time which is a
violation of expectations. Let's compute this up-front and reuse that
computation when we need it.
llvm-svn: 256730
Summary:
There are a number of files in the tree which have been accidentally checked in with DOS line endings. Convert these to native line endings.
There are also a few files which have DOS line endings on purpose, and I have set the svn:eol-style property to 'CRLF' on those.
Reviewers: joerg, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, sanjoy, dsanders, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15848
llvm-svn: 256707
LLVM's targets need to know if stack pointer adjustments occur after the
prologue. This is needed to correctly determine if the red-zone is
appropriate to use or if a frame pointer is required.
Normally, LLVM can figure this out very precisely by reasoning about the
contents of the MachineFunction. There is an interesting corner case:
inline assembly.
The vast majority of inline assembly which will perform a push or pop is
done so to pair up with pushf or popf as appropriate. Unfortunately,
this inline assembly doesn't mark the stack pointer as clobbered
because, well, it isn't. The stack pointer is decremented and then
immediately incremented. Because of this, LLVM was changed in r256456
to conservatively assume that inline assembly contain a sequence of
stack operations. This is unfortunate because the vast majority of
inline assembly will not end up manipulating the stack pointer in any
way at all.
Instead, let's provide a more principled solution: an intrinsic.
FWIW, other compilers (MSVC and GCC among them) also provide this
functionality as an intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 256685
Not folding these cases tends to avoid partial register updates:
sqrtss (%eax), %xmm0
Has a partial update of %xmm0, while
movss (%eax), %xmm0
sqrtss %xmm0, %xmm0
Has a clobber of the high lanes immediately before the partial update,
avoiding a potential stall.
Given this, we only want to fold when optimizing for size.
This is consistent with the patterns we already have for some of
the fp/int converts, and in X86InstrInfo::foldMemoryOperandImpl()
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15741
llvm-svn: 256671
This restores the previous behavior of not including the mnemonic in the classes table for every target that starts instruction lines with the mnemonic. Not only did the table size increase by 1 entry, but the class enum increased in size which caused every class in the array to increase in size. It also grew the size of the function that parsers tokens into classes by a substantial amount.
This adds a new HasMnemonicFirst flag to all AsmParsers. It's set to 1 by default and Hexagon target overrides it to 0.
For the X86 target alone this recovers 324KB of size on the llvm-mc executable.
I believe the current state is still a bad design choice for the Hexagon target as it causes most of the parsing to do a linear search through the entire match table to comparing operands against every instruction until it finds one that works. At least for the other targets we do a binary search based on mnemonic over which to do the linear scan.
llvm-svn: 256669
Summary:
* avoid generating POP {LR} in Thumb1 epilogues
* combine MOV LR, Rx + BX LR -> BX Rx in a peephole optimization pass
* combine POP {LR} + B + BX LR -> POP {PC} on v5T+
Test cases by Ana Pazos
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15707
llvm-svn: 256523
The cost is calculated for all X86 targets. When gather/scatter instruction
is not supported we calculate the cost of scalar sequence.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15677
llvm-svn: 256519
This adds support for the MCU psABI in a way different from r251223 and r251224,
basically reverting most of these two patches. The problem with the approach
taken in r251223/4 is that it only handled libcalls that originated from the backend.
However, the mid-end also inserts quite a few libcalls and assumes these use the
platform's default calling convention.
The previous patch tried to insert inregs when necessary both in the FE and,
somewhat hackily, in the CG. Instead, we now define a new default calling convention
for the MCU, which doesn't use inreg marking at all, similarly to what x86-64 does.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15054
llvm-svn: 256494
lower broadcast<type>x<vector> to shuffles.
there are two cases:
1.src is 128 bits and dest is 512 bits: in this case we will lower it to shuffle with imm = 0.
2.src is 256 bit and dest is 512 bits: in this case we will lower it to shuffle with imm = 01000100b (0x44) that way we will broadcast the 256bit source: ymm[0,1,2,3] => zmm[0,1,2,3,0,1,2,3] then it will mask it with the passthru value (in case it's mask op).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15790
llvm-svn: 256490
I believe this also fixes a case where a 64-bit memory form that is documented as being unsupported in 32-bit mode was able to be selected there.
llvm-svn: 256483
Fix TRUNCATE lowering vector to vector i1, use LSB and not MSB.
Implement VPMOVB/W/D/Q2M intrinsic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15675
llvm-svn: 256470
A frame pointer must be used if stack pointer is modified after the
prologue. LLVM will emit pushf/popf if we need to save/restore the
FLAGS register, requiring us to have a frame pointer for the function.
There is a small twist: this sequence might exist in user code via
inline-assembly. For now, conservatively assume that such functions
require a frame pointer. For real world justification, please see
clang's implementation of __readeflags.
This fixes PR25945.
llvm-svn: 256456
Move RegStackify after coalescing and teach it to use LiveIntervals instead
of depending on SSA form. This avoids a problem where a register in a COPY
instruction is stackified and then subsequently coalesced with a register
that is not stackified.
This also puts it after the scheduler, which allows us to simplify the
EXPR_STACK constraint, as we no longer have instructions being reordered
after stackification and before coloring.
llvm-svn: 256402
The patterns that set a mask register to 0/1
KXOR %kn, %kn, %kn / KXNOR %kn, %kn, %kn
are replaced with
KXOR %k0, %k0, %kn / KXNOR %k0, %k0, %kn - AVX-512 targets optimization.
KNL does not recognize dependency-breaking idioms for mask registers,
so kxnor %k1, %k1, %k2 has a RAW dependence on %k1.
Using %k0 as the undef input register is a performance heuristic based
on the assumption that %k0 is used less frequently than the other mask
registers, since it is not usable as a write mask.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15739
llvm-svn: 256365
First step towards making better use of AVX's implicit zeroing of the upper half of a 256-bit vector by instructions that only act on the lower 128-bit vector - discussed on D14151.
As well as the fact that 128-bit shuffle instructions are generally more capable, this can be performant for older CPUs with 128-bit ALUs (e.g. Jaguar, Sandy Bridge) that must treat 256-bit vectors as multiple micro-ops.
Moved the similar subvector extraction shuffle combines from PerformShuffleCombine256 to lowerVectorShuffle as well.
Note: I've avoided combining shuffles that reference elements from the upper halves of the input vectors - this may be reviewed in future work as well (AVX1 would probably always gain, but AVX2 does have some cross-lane shuffle instructions).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15477
llvm-svn: 256332
Summary:
For some reason doing executing an MUBUF instruction with the addr64
bit set and a zero base pointer in the resource descriptor causes
the memory operation to be dropped when the shader is executed using
the HSA runtime.
This kind of MUBUF instruction is commonly used when the pointer is
stored in VGPRs. The base pointer field in the resource descriptor
is set to zero and and the pointer is stored in the vaddr field.
This patch resolves the issue by only using flat instructions for
global memory operations when targeting HSA. This is an overly
conservative fix as all other configurations of MUBUF instructions
appear to work.
NOTE: re-commit by fixing a failure in Codegen/AMDGPU/llvm.dbg.value.ll
Reviewers: tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15543
llvm-svn: 256282
Summary:
For some reason doing executing an MUBUF instruction with the addr64
bit set and a zero base pointer in the resource descriptor causes
the memory operation to be dropped when the shader is executed using
the HSA runtime.
This kind of MUBUF instruction is commonly used when the pointer is
stored in VGPRs. The base pointer field in the resource descriptor
is set to zero and and the pointer is stored in the vaddr field.
This patch resolves the issue by only using flat instructions for
global memory operations when targeting HSA. This is an overly
conservative fix as all other configurations of MUBUF instructions
appear to work.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15543
llvm-svn: 256273
This patch removes all weight-related interfaces from BPI and replace
them by probability versions. With this patch, we won't use edge weight
anymore in either IR or MC passes. Edge probabilitiy is a better
representation in terms of CFG update and validation.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15519
llvm-svn: 256263
This is a recommit of r256004 which was reverted in r256160. The issue was the
incorrect promotion for half and byte loads transformed into mov instructions.
This fix will replace half and byte type loads only with bit field extracts.
Original commit message:
This change promotes load instructions which directly read from stored by
replacing them with mov instructions. If the store is wider than the load,
the load will be replaced with a bitfield extract.
For example :
STRWui %W1, %X0, 1
%W0 = LDRHHui %X0, 3
becomes
STRWui %W1, %X0, 1
%W0 = UBFMWri %W1, 16, 31
llvm-svn: 256249
Today, we always take into account the possibility that object files
produced by MC may be consumed by an incremental linker. This results
in us initialing fields which vary with time (TimeDateStamp) which harms
hermetic builds (e.g. verifying a self-host went well) and produces
sub-optimal code because we cannot assume anything about the relative
position of functions within a section (call sites can get redirected
through incremental linker thunks).
Let's provide an MCTargetOption which controls this behavior so that we
can disable this functionality if we know a-priori that the build will
not rely on /incremental.
llvm-svn: 256203
This patch transforms truncation between vectors of integers into
X86ISD::PACKUS/PACKSS operations during DAG combine. We don't do it in
lowering phase because after type legalization, the original truncation
will be turned into a BUILD_VECTOR with each element that is extracted
from a vector and then truncated, and from them it is difficult to do
this optimization. This greatly improves the performance of truncations
on some specific types.
Cost table is updated accordingly.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14588
llvm-svn: 256194
Summary:
These register has different encodings on CI and VI, so we add pseudo
FLAT_SCRACTH registers to be used before MC, and subtarget specific
registers to be used by the MC layer.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15661
llvm-svn: 256178
This patch adds to the target description two additional patterns for matching
extract-extend operations to SMOV. The patterns catch the v16i8-to-i64 and
v8i16-to-i64 cases. The existing patterns miss these cases because the
extracted elements must first be legalized to i32, resulting in any_extend
nodes.
This was originally implemented as a DAG combine (r255895), but was reverted
due to failing out-of-tree tests.
llvm-svn: 256176
This allows the AsmMatcherEmitter to properly tokenize the AsmStrings for
load and store instructions. This is a step towards asm parsing.
llvm-svn: 256166
Disable post-ra scheduler for perturbed tests to appease the bots and to
preserve the history of the tests.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15652
llvm-svn: 256158
It resolves clang selfhosting with std::once() for Cygwin.
FIXME: It may be EmulatedTLS-generic also for X86-Android.
FIXME: Pass EmulatedTLS to LLVM CodeGen from Clang with -femulated-tls.
llvm-svn: 256134
This allows "icmp ugt %a, 4294967295" and "icmp uge %a, 4294967296" to be optimized into right shifts by 32 which can fold the immediate into the shift instruction. These patterns show up with some regularity in real code.
Unfortunately, since getImmCost can't see the icmp predicate we can't be tell if we're only catching these specific cases.
llvm-svn: 256126
Summary:
This adds the core AVR TableGen file, along with the register descriptions.
Lines in AVR.td which require other TableGen files which haven't been committed
yet are commented out.
This is a fairly trivial patch, and should only require a quick review.
I kept the line width smaller than 80 columns, but there are a few exceptions
because I'm not sure how to split a string over several lines.
Reviewers: stoklund
Subscribers: dylanmckay, agnat
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14684
llvm-svn: 256120
Summary:
r250697 fixed the mapping for ARM mode. We have to do the same for Thumb2 otherwise the same llvm.arm.ssat() will generate different saturating amount for ARM and Thumb.
r250697: http://reviews.llvm.org/rL250697
Reviewers: rmaprath
Subscribers: aemerson, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15653
llvm-svn: 256115
Summary:
The analysis of shader inputs was completely wrong. We were passing the
wrong index to AttributeSet::hasAttribute() and the logic for which
inputs where in SGPRs was wrong too.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15608
llvm-svn: 256082
noduplicate prevents unrolling of small loops that happen to have
barriers in them. If a loop has a barrier in it, it is OK to duplicate
it for the unroll.
llvm-svn: 256075
Summary:
When copying aggregate registers within the same register class, there may
be an overlap between source and destination that forces us to do the copy
backwards.
Do the simplest possible thing that guarantees the correct order of moves
when there are overlaps, and does whatever when there is no overlap. (The
last part forces some trivial adjustments to test cases.)
Together with r255906, this fixes a VM fault in Unreal Elemental Demo.
While at it, change the generation of kill and def flags to something that
looks more reasonable. This method is used very late during compilation, so
it probably doesn't matter in practice, and to be honest, I don't know if
this change is actually correct because the semantics in connection with
aggregate registers vs. sub-registers are not clear to me.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=93264
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15622
llvm-svn: 256072
This change promotes load instructions which directly read from stores by
replacing them with mov instructions. If the store is wider than the load,
the load will be replaced with a bitfield extract.
For example :
STRWui %W1, %X0, 1
%W0 = LDRHHui %X0, 3
becomes
STRWui %W1, %X0, 1
%W0 = UBFMWri %W1, 16, 31
llvm-svn: 256004
Use the 3-byte (4 with REX prefix) push-pop sequence for materializing
small constants. This is smaller than using a mov (5, 6 or 7 bytes
depending on size and REX prefix), but it's likely to be slower, so
only used for 'minsize'.
This is a follow-up to r255656.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15549
llvm-svn: 255936
Summary:
The method insertNOPs expected the number of wait states to be passed as
parameter, while eliminateFrameIndex passed the immediate argument for the
S_NOP, leading to an off-by-one error. Rename the method to make the
meaning of its parameter clearer. The number of 4 / 5 wait states (which
is what the method has always _tried_ to do according to the comment) is
correct according to the hardware docs.
I stumbled upon this while trying to track down the cause of
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=93264. While clearly needed,
this patch unfortunately does not fix that bug...
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15542
llvm-svn: 255906
These days relocations are created and stored in a deterministic way.
The order they are created is also suitable for the .o file, so we don't
need an explicit sort.
The last remaining exception is MIPS.
llvm-svn: 255902
This patch enables PostRAScheduler specifically for AArch64 generic build,
which is beneficial from the performance perspective.
Speedups up to 2 to 7% for some benchmarks on A57 and A53 are observed.
Also benchmarks from LLVM test-suite did not regress.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15557
llvm-svn: 255896
This patch adds a DAG combine for (any_extend (extract_vector_elt v, i)) ->
(extract_vector_elt v, i). The combine enables us to better match some SMOV
patterns.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15515
llvm-svn: 255895
Add option to enable/disable LEA optimization pass. By default the pass is disabled.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15573
llvm-svn: 255881
This creates the initial infrastructure for writing ELF output files. It
doesn't yet have any implementation for encoding instructions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15555
llvm-svn: 255869
Summary:
Implement eliminateCallFramePsuedo to handle ADJCALLSTACKUP/DOWN
pseudo-instructions. Add a test calling a vararg function which causes non-0
adjustments. This revealed an issue with RegisterCoalescer wherein it
eliminates a COPY from SP32 to a vreg but failes to update the live ranges
of EXPR_STACK, causing a machineinstr verifier failure (so this test
is commented out).
Also add a dynamic alloca test, which causes a callseq_end dag node with
a 0 (instead of undef) second argument to be generated. We currently fail to
select that, so adjust the ADJCALLSTACKUP tablegen code to handle it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15587
llvm-svn: 255844
This matches the other MIB methods, none of which modify the builder.
Without this, we can't chain copyImplicitOps.
Also reformat the few users, in PPCEarlyReturn.
llvm-svn: 255828
The access function has a short entry and a short exit, the initialization
block is only run the first time. To improve the performance, we want to
have a short frame at the entry and exit.
We explicitly handle most of the CSRs via copies. Only the CSRs that are not
handled via copies will be in CSR_SaveList.
Frame lowering and prologue/epilogue insertion will generate a short frame
in the entry and exit according to CSR_SaveList. The majority of the CSRs will
be handled by register allcoator. Register allocator will try to spill and
reload them in the initialization block.
We add CSRsViaCopy, it will be explicitly handled during lowering.
1> we first set FunctionLoweringInfo->SplitCSR if conditions are met (the target
supports it for the given machine function and the function has only return
exits). We also call TLI->initializeSplitCSR to perform initialization.
2> we call TLI->insertCopiesSplitCSR to insert copies from CSRsViaCopy to
virtual registers at beginning of the entry block and copies from virtual
registers to CSRsViaCopy at beginning of the exit blocks.
3> we also need to make sure the explicit copies will not be eliminated.
The target independent portion was committed as r255353.
rdar://problem/23557469
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15341
llvm-svn: 255821
The SystemZ linkers provide an optimization to transform a general-
or local-dynamic TLS sequence into an initial-exec sequence if possible.
Do do that, the compiler generates a function call to __tls_get_offset,
which is a brasl instruction annotated with *two* relocations:
- a R_390_PLT32DBL to install __tls_get_offset as branch target
- a R_390_TLS_GDCALL / R_390_TLS_LDCALL to inform the linker that
the TLS optimization should be performed if possible
If the optimization is performed, the brasl is replaced by an ld load
instruction.
However, *both* relocs are processed independently by the linker.
Therefore it is crucial that the R_390_PLT32DBL is processed *first*
(installing the branch target for the brasl) and the R_390_TLS_GDCALL
is processed *second* (replacing the whole brasl with an ld).
If the relocs are swapped, the linker will first replace the brasl
with an ld, and *then* install the __tls_get_offset branch target
offset. Since ld has a different layout than brasl, this may even
result in a completely different (or invalid) instruction; in any
case, the resulting code is corrupted.
Unfortunately, the way the MC common code sorts relocations causes
these two to *always* end up the wrong way around, resulting in
wrong code generation by the linker and crashes.
This patch overrides the sortRelocs routine to detect this particular
pair of relocs and enforce the required order.
llvm-svn: 255787
When comparing a zero-extended value against a constant small enough to
be in range of the inner type, it doesn't matter whether a signed or
unsigned compare operation (for the outer type) is being used. This is
why the code in adjustSubwordCmp had this assertion:
assert(C.ICmpType == SystemZICMP::Any &&
"Signedness shouldn't matter here.");
assuming the the caller had already detected that fact. However, it
turns out that there cases, in particular with always-true or always-
false conditions that have not been eliminated when compiling at -O0,
where this is not true.
Instead of failing an assertion if C.ICmpType is not SystemZICMP::Any
here, we can simply *set* it safely to SystemZICMP::Any, however.
llvm-svn: 255786
This removes an unpleasant hack involving a global variable for special
lowering of certain memcpy calls. These are now lowered as intended in
EmitTargetCodeForMemcpy in the same way that other targets do it.
llvm-svn: 255785
ARMv8.2-A adds 16-bit floating point versions of all existing SIMD
floating-point instructions. This is an optional extension, so all of
these instructions require the FeatureFullFP16 subtarget feature.
Note that VFP without SIMD is not a valid combination for any version of
ARMv8-A, but I have ensured that these instructions all depend on both
FeatureNEON and FeatureFullFP16 for consistency.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15039
llvm-svn: 255764
ARMv8.2-A adds 16-bit floating point versions of all existing VFP
floating-point instructions. This is an optional extension, so all of
these instructions require the FeatureFullFP16 subtarget feature.
The assembly for these instructions uses S registers (AArch32 does not
have H registers), but the instructions have ".f16" type specifiers
rather than ".f32" or ".f64". The top 16 bits of each source register
are ignored, and the top 16 bits of the destination register are set to
zero.
These instructions are mostly the same as the 32- and 64-bit versions,
but they use coprocessor 9 rather than 10 and 11.
Two new instructions, VMOVX and VINS, have been added to allow packing
and extracting two 16-bit floats stored in the top and bottom halves of
an S register.
New fixup kinds have been added for the PC-relative load and store
instructions, but no ELF relocations have been added as they have a
range of 512 bytes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15038
llvm-svn: 255762
This folds (ashr (shl a, [56,48,32,24,16]), SarConst)
into (shl, (sext (a), [56,48,32,24,16] - SarConst))
or into (lshr, (sext (a), SarConst - [56,48,32,24,16]))
depending on sign of (SarConst - [56,48,32,24,16])
sexts in X86 are MOVs.
The MOVs have the same code size as above SHIFTs (only SHIFT by 1 has lower code size).
However the MOVs have 2 advantages to SHIFTs on x86:
1. MOVs can write to a register that differs from source.
2. MOVs accept memory operands.
This fixes PR24373.
Patch by: evgeny.v.stupachenko@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13161
llvm-svn: 255761
It adjusts from RSP-after-prologue to RBP, which is what SEH filters
need to do before they can use llvm.localrecover.
Fixes SEH filter captures, which were broken in r250088.
Issue reported by Alex Crichton.
llvm-svn: 255707
This patch improves on the suggested codegen from PR24475:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24475
but only for the fmaxf() case to start, so we can sort out any bugs before
extending to fmin, f64, and vectors.
The fmax / maxnum definitions provide us flexibility for signed zeros, so the
only thing we have to worry about in this replacement sequence is NaN handling.
Note 1: It may be better to implement this as lowerFMAXNUM(), but that exposes
a problem: SelectionDAGBuilder::visitSelect() transforms compare/select
instructions into FMAXNUM nodes if we declare FMAXNUM legal or custom. Perhaps
that should be checking for NaN inputs or global unsafe-math before transforming?
As it stands, that bypasses a big set of optimizations that the x86 backend
already has in PerformSELECTCombine().
Note 2: The v2f32 test reveals another bug; the vector is extended to v4f32, so
we have completely unnecessary operations happening on undef elements of the
vector.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15294
llvm-svn: 255700
Summary: I'm not sure how things worked before without this.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15492
llvm-svn: 255692