Summary:
It's better to use our shuffle lowering code to handle these than loading an immediate into a k-register.
It really feels like this should be a DAG combine optimization rather than a lowering operation, but that's a problem for another day.
Reviewers: RKSimon, delena, zvi
Reviewed By: delena
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38932
llvm-svn: 315849
We should be able to fold constant conditions by converting to shuffles, but fixing that would break these tests in their current form. Since they are really trying to test masking ops, add a non-constant mask to the selects.
llvm-svn: 315848
If we are applying a byte mask to a value extracted from a shuffle, see if we can combine the mask into shuffle.
Fixes the last issue with PR22415
llvm-svn: 315807
Summary:
Operand variable lookups are now performed by the RuleMatcher rather than
searching the whole matcher hierarchy for a match. This revealed a wrong-code
bug that currently affects ARM and X86 where patterns that use a variable more
than once in the match pattern will be imported but won't check that the
operands are identical. This can cause the tablegen-erated matcher to
accept matches that should be rejected.
Depends on D36569
Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: aemerson, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36618
llvm-svn: 315780
This is particularly important for AVX512VL where we are better able to recognize the VBROADCAST loads to fold with other operations.
For AVX512VL we now use X86ISD::VBROADCAST for all of the patterns and remove the 128-bit X86ISD::VMOVDDUP.
We may be able to use this for AVX1 as well which would allow us to remove more isel patterns.
I also had to add X86ISD::VBROADCAST as a node to call combineShuffle for so that we treat it similar to X86ISD::MOVDDUP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38836
llvm-svn: 315768
This adds Intel's Knights Mill CPU to valid CPU names for the backend. For now its an alias of "knl", but ultimately we need to support AVX5124FMAPS and AVX5124VNNIW instruction sets for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38811
llvm-svn: 315722
There's no advantage to using these instructions when they aren't masked. This enables some additional execution domain switching without needing to update the table.
llvm-svn: 315674
Legalization of fp128 assumes things that we should have asserts for,
so that's another potential improvement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38771
llvm-svn: 315485
Eg:
insert v4i32 V, (v2i16 X), 2 --> shuffle v8i16 V', X', {0,1,2,3,8,9,6,7}
This is a generalization of the IR fold in D38316 to handle insertion into a non-undef vector.
We may want to abandon that one if we can't find value in squashing the more specific pattern sooner.
We're using the existing legal shuffle target hook to avoid AVX512 horror with vXi1 shuffles.
There may be room for improvement in the shuffle lowering here, but that would be follow-up work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38388
llvm-svn: 315460
Adding this test files now so after another commit that will add a new pattern for
TESTM and TESTNM instructions will show the improvemnts that have been done.
Change-Id: If3908b7f91897d764053312365a2bc1de78b291d
llvm-svn: 315443
This patch ensures that the rule:
fold (zext (load x)) -> (zext (truncate (zextload x)))
propagates the SDLoc of the load to the zextload.
<rdar://problem/33755881>
llvm-svn: 315340
NFC.
Updated 6 regression tests to differentiate between HASWELL and SKYLAKE scheduling information.
The fix is in preparation of a patch to update the information of the Skylake Client scheduling to include the appropriate load and store latencies.
Reviewers: zvi, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38685
Change-Id: Ifc6b98d9eaf266913698f24c766fd994fc977555
llvm-svn: 315291
Summary:
This suppresses the generation of .Lcfi labels in our textual assembler.
It was annoying that this generated cascading .Lcfi labels:
llc foo.ll -o - | llvm-mc | llvm-mc
After three trips through MCAsmStreamer, we'd have three labels in the
output when none are necessary. We should only bother creating the
labels and frame data when making a real object file.
This supercedes D38605, which moved the entire .seh_ implementation into
MCObjectStreamer.
This has the advantage that we do more checking when emitting textual
assembly, as a minor efficiency cost. Outputting textual assembly is not
performance critical, so this shouldn't matter.
Reviewers: majnemer, MatzeB
Subscribers: qcolombet, nemanjai, javed.absar, eraman, hiraditya, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38638
llvm-svn: 315259
We end up creating COPY's that are either truncating/extending and this
should be illegal.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37640
Patch for X86 and ARM by igorb, rovka
llvm-svn: 315240
Summary:
On behalf of julia.koval@intel.com
The patch transforms canonical version of unsigned saturation, which is sub(max(a,b),a) or sub(a,min(a,b)) to special psubus insturuction on targets, which support it(8bit and 16bit uints).
umax(a,b) - b -> subus(a,b)
a - umin(a,b) -> subus(a,b)
There is also extra case handled, when right part of sub is 32 bit and can be truncated, using UMIN(this transformation was discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D25987).
The example of special case code:
```
void foo(unsigned short *p, int max, int n) {
int i;
unsigned m;
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
m = *--p;
*p = (unsigned short)(m >= max ? m-max : 0);
}
}
```
Max in this example is truncated to max_short value, if it is greater than m, or just truncated to 16 bit, if it is not. It is vaid transformation, because if max > max_short, result of the expression will be zero.
Here is the table of types, I try to support, special case items are bold:
| Size | 128 | 256 | 512
| ----- | ----- | ----- | -----
| i8 | v16i8 | v32i8 | v64i8
| i16 | v8i16 | v16i16 | v32i16
| i32 | | **v8i32** | **v16i32**
| i64 | | | **v8i64**
Reviewers: zvi, spatel, DavidKreitzer, RKSimon
Reviewed By: zvi
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37534
llvm-svn: 315237
We believe that despite AMD's documentation, that they really do support all 32 comparision predicates under AVX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38609
llvm-svn: 315201
Summary:
We currently disable some converting of shuffles to MOVSS/MOVSD during legalization if SSE41 is enabled. But later during shuffle combining we go back to prefering MOVSS/MOVSD.
Additionally we have patterns that look for BLENDIs to detect scalar arithmetic operations. I believe due to the combining using MOVSS/MOVSD these are unnecessary.
Interestingly, we still codegen blend instructions even though lowering/isel emit movss/movsd instructions. Turns out machine CSE commutes them to blend, and then commuting those blends back into blends that are equivalent to the original movss/movsd.
This patch fixes the inconsistency in legalization to prefer MOVSS/MOVSD. The one test change was caused by this change. The problem is that we have integer types and are mostly selecting integer instructions except for the shufps. This shufps forced the execution domain, but the vpblendw couldn't have its domain changed with a naive instruction swap. We could fix this by special casing VPBLENDW based on the immediate to widen the element type.
The rest of the patch is removing all the excess scalar patterns.
Long term we should probably add isel patterns to make MOVSS/MOVSD emit blends directly instead of relying on the double commute. We may also want to consider emitting movss/movsd for optsize. I also wonder if we should still use the VEX encoded blendi instructions even with AVX512. Blends have better throughput, and that may outweigh the register constraint.
Reviewers: RKSimon, zvi
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38023
llvm-svn: 315181
Adding the scheduling information for the SkylakeServer (SKX) target.
This patch adds the instruction scheduling information for the SkylakeServer (SKX) architecture target by adding the file X86SchedSkylakeServer.td located under the X86 Target.
We used the scheduling information retrieved from the Skylake architects in order to create the file.
The scheduling information includes latency, number of micro-Ops and used ports by each SKL instruction.
The patch continues the scheduling replacement and insertion effort started with the SNB target in r310792, the HSW target in r311879 and the SkylakeClient (SKL) target in rL313613.
Please expect some performance fluctuations due to code alignment effects.
Reviewers: zvi, RKSimon, craig.topper, chandlerc, aymanmu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38443
Change-Id: I5c228fcc09e9e5a99b6116e62b356c4f9b971185
llvm-svn: 315175