There is no situation where this rarely-used argument cannot be
substituted with a DIExpression and removing it allows us to simplify
the DWARF backend. Note that this patch does not yet remove any of
the newly dead code.
rdar://problem/33580047
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35951
llvm-svn: 309426
Summary: Continuing the work from https://reviews.llvm.org/D33240, this change introduces an element unordered-atomic memset intrinsic. This intrinsic is essentially memset with the implementation requirement that all stores used for the assignment are done with unordered-atomic stores of a given element size.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, reames, mkazantsev, skatkov
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: jfb, dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, efriedma, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34885
llvm-svn: 307854
Summary: Continuing the work from https://reviews.llvm.org/D33240, this change introduces an element unordered-atomic memmove intrinsic. This intrinsic is essentially memmove with the implementation requirement that all loads/stores used for the copy are done with unordered-atomic loads/stores of a given element size.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, reames, mkazantsev, skatkov
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34884
llvm-svn: 307796
OpenCL 2.0 introduces the notion of memory scopes in atomic operations to
global and local memory. These scopes restrict how synchronization is
achieved, which can result in improved performance.
This change extends existing notion of synchronization scopes in LLVM to
support arbitrary scopes expressed as target-specific strings, in addition to
the already defined scopes (single thread, system).
The LLVM IR and MIR syntax for expressing synchronization scopes has changed
to use *syncscope("<scope>")*, where <scope> can be "singlethread" (this
replaces *singlethread* keyword), or a target-specific name. As before, if
the scope is not specified, it defaults to CrossThread/System scope.
Implementation details:
- Mapping from synchronization scope name/string to synchronization scope id
is stored in LLVM context;
- CrossThread/System and SingleThread scopes are pre-defined to efficiently
check for known scopes without comparing strings;
- Synchronization scope names are stored in SYNC_SCOPE_NAMES_BLOCK in
the bitcode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21723
llvm-svn: 307722
This change fixes a bug in SelectionDAGBuilder::visitInsertValue and SelectionDAGBuilder::visitExtractValue where constant expressions (InsertValueConstantExpr and ExtractValueConstantExpr) would be treated as non-constant instructions (InsertValueInst and ExtractValueInst). This bug resulted in an incorrect memory access, which manifested as an assertion failure in SDValue::SDValue.
Fixes PR#33094.
Submitted on behalf of @Praetonus (Benoit Vey)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34538
llvm-svn: 307502
If we are lowering a libcall after legalization, we'll split the return type into a pair of legal values.
Patch by Jatin Bhateja and Eli Friedman.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34240
llvm-svn: 307207
Summary:
Background: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112779.html
This change is to alter the prototype for the atomic memcpy intrinsic. The prototype itself is being changed to more closely resemble the semantics and parameters of the llvm.memcpy intrinsic -- to ease later combination of the llvm.memcpy and atomic memcpy intrinsics. Furthermore, the name of the atomic memcpy intrinsic is being changed to make it clear that it is not a generic atomic memcpy, but specifically a memcpy is unordered atomic.
Reviewers: reames, sanjoy, efriedma
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, anna, llvm-commits, skatkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33240
llvm-svn: 305558
The code assumed that we process instructions in basic block order. FastISel
processes instructions in reverse basic block order. We need to pre-assign
virtual registers before selecting otherwise we get def-use relationships wrong.
This only affects code with swifterror registers.
rdar://32659327
llvm-svn: 305484
By target hookifying getRegisterType, getNumRegisters, getVectorBreakdown,
backends can request that LLVM to scalarize vector types for calls
and returns.
The MIPS vector ABI requires that vector arguments and returns are passed in
integer registers. With SelectionDAG's new hooks, the MIPS backend can now
handle LLVM-IR with vector types in calls and returns. E.g.
'call @foo(<4 x i32> %4)'.
Previously these cases would be scalarized for the MIPS O32/N32/N64 ABI for
calls and returns if vector types were not legal. If vector types were legal,
a single 128bit vector argument would be assigned to a single 32 bit / 64 bit
integer register.
By teaching the MIPS backend to inspect the original types, it can now
implement the MIPS vector ABI which requires a particular method of
scalarizing vectors.
Previously, the MIPS backend relied on clang to scalarize types such as "call
@foo(<4 x float> %a) into "call @foo(i32 inreg %1, i32 inreg %2, i32 inreg %3,
i32 inreg %4)".
This patch enables the MIPS backend to take either form for vector types.
The previous version of this patch had a "conditional move or jump depends on
uninitialized value".
Reviewers: zoran.jovanovic, jaydeep, vkalintiris, slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27845
llvm-svn: 305083
This fixes an oversight in r300522, which changed alloca
dbg.values to no longer emit a DW_OP_deref.
The array.ll testcase was regenerated from source.
Fixes PR33166:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33166
llvm-svn: 303897
C++14 added user-defined literal support for complex numbers so that you can
write something like "complex<double> val = 2i". However, there is an existing
GNU extension supporting this syntax and interpreting the result as a _Complex
type.
This changes parsing so that such literals are interpreted in terms of C++14's
operators if an overload is present but otherwise falls back to the original
GNU extension.
llvm-svn: 303694
This function gives the wrong answer on some non-ELF platforms in some
cases. The function that does the right thing lives in Mangler.h. To try to
discourage people from using this function, give it a different name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33162
llvm-svn: 303134
This patch adds min/max population count, leading/trailing zero/one bit counting methods.
The min methods return answers based on bits that are known without considering unknown bits. The max methods give answers taking into account the largest count that unknown bits could give.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32931
llvm-svn: 302925
Before r247167, the pass manager builder controlled which AA
implementations were used, exporting them all in the AliasAnalysis
analysis group.
Now, AAResultsWrapperPass always uses BasicAA, but still uses other AA
implementations if made available in the pass pipeline.
But regardless, SDAGISel is required at O0, and really doesn't need to
be doing fancy optimizations based on useful AA results.
Don't require AA at CodeGenOpt::None, and only use it otherwise.
This does have a functional impact (and one testcase is pessimized
because we can't reuse a load). But I think that's desirable no matter
what.
Note that this alone doesn't result in less DT computations: TwoAddress
was previously able to reuse the DT we computed for SDAG. That will be
fixed separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32766
llvm-svn: 302611
Using arguments with attribute inalloca creates problems for verification
of machine representation. This attribute instructs the backend that the
argument is prepared in stack prior to CALLSEQ_START..CALLSEQ_END
sequence (see http://llvm.org/docs/InAlloca.htm for details). Frame size
stored in CALLSEQ_START in this case does not count the size of this
argument. However CALLSEQ_END still keeps total frame size, as caller can
be responsible for cleanup of entire frame. So CALLSEQ_START and
CALLSEQ_END keep different frame size and the difference is treated by
MachineVerifier as stack error. Currently there is no way to distinguish
this case from actual errors.
This patch adds additional argument to CALLSEQ_START and its
target-specific counterparts to keep size of stack that is set up prior to
the call frame sequence. This argument allows MachineVerifier to calculate
actual frame size associated with frame setup instruction and correctly
process the case of inalloca arguments.
The changes made by the patch are:
- Frame setup instructions get the second mandatory argument. It
affects all targets that use frame pseudo instructions and touched many
files although the changes are uniform.
- Access to frame properties are implemented using special instructions
rather than calls getOperand(N).getImm(). For X86 and ARM such
replacement was made previously.
- Changes that reflect appearance of additional argument of frame setup
instruction. These involve proper instruction initialization and
methods that access instruction arguments.
- MachineVerifier retrieves frame size using method, which reports sum of
frame parts initialized inside frame instruction pair and outside it.
The patch implements approach proposed by Quentin Colombet in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27481#c1.
It fixes 9 tests failed with machine verifier enabled and listed
in PR27481.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32394
llvm-svn: 302527
- This change allows targets to opt-in to using them instead of the log2
shufflevector algorithm.
- The SLP and Loop vectorizers have the common code to do shuffle reductions
factored out into LoopUtils, and now have a unified interface for generating
reductions regardless of the preference of the target. LoopUtils now uses TTI
to determine what kind of reductions the target wants to handle.
- For CodeGen, basic legalization support is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30086
llvm-svn: 302514
This reverts commit r302461.
It appears to be causing failures compiling gtest with debug info on the
Linux sanitizer bot. I was unable to reproduce the failure locally,
however.
llvm-svn: 302504
Summary:
For inalloca functions, this is a very common code pattern:
%argpack = type <{ i32, i32, i32 }>
define void @f(%argpack* inalloca %args) {
entry:
%a = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 0
%b = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 1
%c = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 2
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %a, ... "a")
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %c, ... "b")
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %b, ... "c")
Even though these GEPs can be simplified to a constant offset from EBP
or RSP, we don't do that at -O0, and each GEP is computed into a
register. Registers used to compute argument addresses are typically
spilled and clobbered very quickly after the initial computation, so
live debug variable tracking loses information very quickly if we use
DBG_VALUE instructions.
This change moves processing of dbg.declare between argument lowering
and basic block isel, so that we can ask if an argument has a frame
index or not. If the argument lives in a register as is the case for
byval arguments on some targets, then we don't put it in the side table
and during ISel we emit DBG_VALUE instructions.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32980
llvm-svn: 302483
Summary:
An llvm.dbg.declare of a static alloca is always added to the
MachineFunction dbg variable map, so these values are entirely
redundant. They survive all the way through codegen to be ignored by
DWARF emission.
Effectively revert r113967
Two bugpoint-reduced test cases from 2012 broke as a result of this
change. Despite my best efforts, I haven't been able to rewrite the test
case using dbg.value. I'm not too concerned about the lost coverage
because these were reduced from the test-suite, which we still run.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32920
llvm-svn: 302461
This patch introduces an LLVM intrinsic and a target opcode for custom event
logging in XRay. Initially, its use case will be to allow users of XRay to log
some type of string ("poor man's printf"). The target opcode compiles to a noop
sled large enough to enable calling through to a runtime-determined relative
function call. At runtime, when X-Ray is enabled, the sled is replaced by
compiler-rt with a trampoline to the logic for creating the custom log entries.
Future patches will implement the compiler-rt parts and clang-side support for
emitting the IR corresponding to this intrinsic.
Reviewers: timshen, dberris
Subscribers: igorb, pelikan, rSerge, timshen, echristo, dberris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27503
llvm-svn: 302405
No functional change other than improving dbgs logging accuracy on
constant dbg values. Previously we would add things like "i32 42" as
debug values, and then log that we were dropping the debug info, which
is silly.
Delete some dead code that was checking for static allocas. This
remained after r207165, but served no purpose. Currently, static alloca
dbg.values are always sent through the DanglingDebugInfoMap, and are
usually made valid the first time the alloca is used.
llvm-svn: 302267
PR31088 demonstrated that we were assuming that only integers require promotion from <1 x iX> types, when in fact float types may require it as well - in this case half floats.
This patch adds support for extension/truncation for both integer and float types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32391
llvm-svn: 301910
This eliminates many extra 'Idx' induction variables in loops over
arguments in CodeGen/ and Target/. It also reduces the number of places
where we assume that ReturnIndex is 0 and that we should add one to
argument numbers to get the corresponding attribute list index.
NFC
llvm-svn: 301666
Summary:
The motivation example is like below which has 13 cases but only 2 distinct targets
```
lor.lhs.false2: ; preds = %if.then
switch i32 %Status, label %if.then27 [
i32 -7012, label %if.end35
i32 -10008, label %if.end35
i32 -10016, label %if.end35
i32 15000, label %if.end35
i32 14013, label %if.end35
i32 10114, label %if.end35
i32 10107, label %if.end35
i32 10105, label %if.end35
i32 10013, label %if.end35
i32 10011, label %if.end35
i32 7008, label %if.end35
i32 7007, label %if.end35
i32 5002, label %if.end35
]
```
which is compiled into a balanced binary tree like this on AArch64 (similar on X86)
```
.LBB853_9: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #10012
cmp w19, w8
b.gt .LBB853_14
// BB#10: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #5001
cmp w19, w8
b.gt .LBB853_18
// BB#11: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #-10016
cmp w19, w8
b.eq .LBB853_23
// BB#12: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #-10008
cmp w19, w8
b.eq .LBB853_23
// BB#13: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #-7012
cmp w19, w8
b.eq .LBB853_23
b .LBB853_3
.LBB853_14: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #14012
cmp w19, w8
b.gt .LBB853_21
// BB#15: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #-10105
add w8, w19, w8
cmp w8, #9 // =9
b.hi .LBB853_17
// BB#16: // %lor.lhs.false2
orr w9, wzr, #0x1
lsl w8, w9, w8
mov w9, #517
and w8, w8, w9
cbnz w8, .LBB853_23
.LBB853_17: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #10013
cmp w19, w8
b.eq .LBB853_23
b .LBB853_3
.LBB853_18: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #-7007
add w8, w19, w8
cmp w8, #2 // =2
b.lo .LBB853_23
// BB#19: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #5002
cmp w19, w8
b.eq .LBB853_23
// BB#20: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #10011
cmp w19, w8
b.eq .LBB853_23
b .LBB853_3
.LBB853_21: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #14013
cmp w19, w8
b.eq .LBB853_23
// BB#22: // %lor.lhs.false2
mov w8, #15000
cmp w19, w8
b.ne .LBB853_3
```
However, the inline cost model estimates the cost to be linear with the number
of distinct targets and the cost of the above switch is just 2 InstrCosts.
The function containing this switch is then inlined about 900 times.
This change use the general way of switch lowering for the inline heuristic. It
etimate the number of case clusters with the suitability check for a jump table
or bit test. Considering the binary search tree built for the clusters, this
change modifies the model to be linear with the size of the balanced binary
tree. The model is off by default for now :
-inline-generic-switch-cost=false
This change was originally proposed by Haicheng in D29870.
Reviewers: hans, bmakam, chandlerc, eraman, haicheng, mcrosier
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: joerg, aemerson, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31085
llvm-svn: 301649
This patch replaces the separate APInts for KnownZero/KnownOne with a single KnownBits struct. This is similar to what was done to ValueTracking's version recently.
This is largely a mechanical transformation from KnownZero to Known.Zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32569
llvm-svn: 301620
Currently the operand type for ATOMIC_FENCE assumes value type of a pointer in address space 0.
This is fine for most targets. However for amdgcn target, the size of pointer in address space 0
depends on triple environment. For amdgiz environment, it is 64 bit but for other environment it is
32 bit. On the other hand, amdgcn target expects 32 bit fence operands independent of the target
triple environment. Therefore a hook is need in target lowering for getting the fence operand type.
This patch has no effect on targets other than amdgcn.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32186
llvm-svn: 301215
Recently alloca address space has been added to data layout. Due to this
change, pointer returned by alloca may have different size as pointer in
address space 0.
However, currently the value type of frame index is assumed to be of the
same size as pointer in address space 0.
This patch fixes that.
Most targets assume alloca returning pointer in address space 0, which
is the default alloca address space. Therefore it is NFC for them.
AMDGCN target with amdgiz environment requires this change since it
assumes alloca returning pointer to addr space 5 and its size is 32,
which is different from the size of pointer in addr space 0 which is 64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32021
llvm-svn: 300864
The DWARF specification knows 3 kinds of non-empty simple location
descriptions:
1. Register location descriptions
- describe a variable in a register
- consist of only a DW_OP_reg
2. Memory location descriptions
- describe the address of a variable
3. Implicit location descriptions
- describe the value of a variable
- end with DW_OP_stack_value & friends
The existing DwarfExpression code is pretty much ignorant of these
restrictions. This used to not matter because we only emitted very
short expressions that we happened to get right by accident. This
patch makes DwarfExpression aware of the rules defined by the DWARF
standard and now chooses the right kind of location description for
each expression being emitted.
This would have been an NFC commit (for the existing testsuite) if not
for the way that clang describes captured block variables. Based on
how the previous code in LLVM emitted locations, DW_OP_deref
operations that should have come at the end of the expression are put
at its beginning. Fixing this means changing the semantics of
DIExpression, so this patch bumps the version number of DIExpression
and implements a bitcode upgrade.
There are two major changes in this patch:
I had to fix the semantics of dbg.declare for describing function
arguments. After this patch a dbg.declare always takes the *address*
of a variable as the first argument, even if the argument is not an
alloca.
When lowering a DBG_VALUE, the decision of whether to emit a register
location description or a memory location description depends on the
MachineLocation — register machine locations may get promoted to
memory locations based on their DIExpression. (Future) optimization
passes that want to salvage implicit debug location for variables may
do so by appending a DW_OP_stack_value. For example:
DBG_VALUE, [RBP-8] --> DW_OP_fbreg -8
DBG_VALUE, RAX --> DW_OP_reg0 +0
DBG_VALUE, RAX, DIExpression(DW_OP_deref) --> DW_OP_reg0 +0
All testcases that were modified were regenerated from clang. I also
added source-based testcases for each of these to the debuginfo-tests
repository over the last week to make sure that no synchronized bugs
slip in. The debuginfo-tests compile from source and run the debugger.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32382
<rdar://problem/31205000>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31439
llvm-svn: 300522
This avoids the confusing 'CS.paramHasAttr(ArgNo + 1, Foo)' pattern.
Previously we were testing return value attributes with index 0, so I
introduced hasReturnAttr() for that use case.
llvm-svn: 300367
This reverts commit r299766. This change appears to have broken the MIPS
buildbots. Reverting while I investigate.
Revert "[mips] Remove usage of debug only variable (NFC)"
This reverts commit r299769. Follow up commit.
llvm-svn: 299788
By target hookifying getRegisterType, getNumRegisters, getVectorBreakdown,
backends can request that LLVM to scalarize vector types for calls
and returns.
The MIPS vector ABI requires that vector arguments and returns are passed in
integer registers. With SelectionDAG's new hooks, the MIPS backend can now
handle LLVM-IR with vector types in calls and returns. E.g.
'call @foo(<4 x i32> %4)'.
Previously these cases would be scalarized for the MIPS O32/N32/N64 ABI for
calls and returns if vector types were not legal. If vector types were legal,
a single 128bit vector argument would be assigned to a single 32 bit / 64 bit
integer register.
By teaching the MIPS backend to inspect the original types, it can now
implement the MIPS vector ABI which requires a particular method of
scalarizing vectors.
Previously, the MIPS backend relied on clang to scalarize types such as "call
@foo(<4 x float> %a) into "call @foo(i32 inreg %1, i32 inreg %2, i32 inreg %3,
i32 inreg %4)".
This patch enables the MIPS backend to take either form for vector types.
Reviewers: zoran.jovanovic, jaydeep, vkalintiris, slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27845
llvm-svn: 299766
Properly propagate the FMF from the LLVM IR to this flag.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31165
llvm-svn: 298961