In the review for r230567, it was pointed out we should really test
the lib/Object part of that change. This does so using llvm-readobj.
llvm-svn: 230779
Summary:
Currently fast-isel-abort will only abort for regular instructions,
and just warn for function calls, terminators, function arguments.
There is already fast-isel-abort-args but nothing for calls and
terminators.
This change turns the fast-isel-abort options into an integer option,
so that multiple levels of strictness can be defined.
This will help no being surprised when the "abort" option indeed does
not abort, and enables the possibility to write test that verifies
that no intrinsics are forgotten by fast-isel.
Reviewers: resistor, echristo
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7941
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 230775
This removes a bit of duplicated code and more importantly, remembers the
labels so that they don't need to be looked up by name.
This in turn allows for any name to be used and avoids a crash if the name
we wanted was already taken.
llvm-svn: 230772
Not passing mtriple for one of the tests caused a regression failure
on MIPS buildbot. The issue was introduced by r230651.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7938
llvm-svn: 230756
vectors. This lets us fix the rest of the v16 lowering problems when
pshufb is clearly better.
We might still be able to improve some of the lowerings by enabling the
other combine-based rewriting to fire for non-128-bit vectors, but this
at least should remove any regressions from using the fancy v16i16
lowering strategy.
llvm-svn: 230753
repeated 128-bit lane shuffles of wider vector types and use it to lower
256-bit v16i16 vector shuffles where applicable.
This should let us perfectly lowering the pattern of pshuflw and pshufhw
even for AVX2 256-bit patterns.
I've not added AVX-512 support, but it should be trivial for someone
working on that to wire up.
Note that currently this generates bad, long shuffle chains because we
don't combine 256-bit target shuffles. The subsequent patches will fix
that.
llvm-svn: 230751
by mirroring v8i16 test cases across both 128-bit lanes. This should
highlight problems where we aren't correctly using 128-bit shuffles to
implement things.
llvm-svn: 230750
Summary:
We identify the cases where the operand to an ADDE node is a constant
zero. In such cases, we can avoid generating an extra ADDu instruction
disguised as an identity move alias (ie. addu $r, $r, 0 --> move $r, $r).
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7906
llvm-svn: 230742
Currently, the ASan executables built with -O0 are unnecessarily slow.
The main reason is that ASan instrumentation pass inserts redundant
checks around promotable allocas. These allocas do not get instrumented
under -O1 because they get converted to virtual registered by mem2reg.
With this patch, ASan instrumentation pass will only instrument non
promotable allocas, giving us a speedup of 39% on a collection of
benchmarks with -O0. (There is no measurable speedup at -O1.)
llvm-svn: 230724
Summary:
This change causes us to actually save non-volatile registers in a Win64
ABI function that calls a System V ABI function, and vice-versa.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7919
llvm-svn: 230714
Function pointers were not correctly handled by the dumper, and
they would print as "* name". They now print as
"int (__cdecl *name)(int arg1, int arg2)" as they should.
Also, doubles were being printed as floats. This fixes that bug
as well, and adds tests for all builtin types. as well as a test
for function pointers.
llvm-svn: 230703
blend as legal.
We made the same mistake in two different places. Whenever we are custom
lowering a v32i8 blend we need to check whether we are custom lowering
it only for constant conditions that can be shuffled, or whether we
actually have AVX2 and full dynamic blending support on bytes. Both are
fixed, with comments added to make it clear what is going on and a new
test case.
llvm-svn: 230695
On 32bits x86 Darwin, the register mappings for the eh_frane and
debug_frame sections are different. Thus the same CFI instructions
should result in different registers in the object file. The
problem isn't target specific though, but it requires that the
mappings for EH register numbers be different from the standard
Dwarf one.
The patch looks a bit clumsy. LLVM uses the EH mapping as
canonical for everything frame related. Thus we need to do a
double conversion EH -> LLVM -> Non-EH, when emitting the
debug_frame section.
Fixes PR22363.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7593
llvm-svn: 230670
InstCombine has long had logic to convert aligned Altivec load/store intrinsics
into regular loads and stores. This mirrors that functionality for QPX vector
load/store intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 230660
have the debugger step through each one individually. Turn off the
combine for adjacent stores at -O0 so we get this behavior.
Possibly, DAGCombine shouldn't run at all at -O0, but that's for
another day; see PR22346.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7181
llvm-svn: 230659
There was a problem when passing structures as variable arguments.
The structures smaller than 64 bit were not left justified on MIPS64
big endian. This is now fixed by shifting the value to make it left-
justified when appropriate.
This fixes the bug http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21608
Patch by Aleksandar Beserminji.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7881
llvm-svn: 230657
The gold plugin never calls MaterializeModule, so any old debug info
was not deleted and could cause crashes.
Now that it is being "upgraded", the plugin also has to handle warnings
and create Modules with a nice id (it shows in the warning).
llvm-svn: 230655
In case of "krait" CPU, asm printer doesn't emit any ".cpu" so the
features bits are not computed. This patch lets the asm printer
emit ".cpu cortex-a9" directive for krait and the hwdiv feature is
enabled through ".arch_extension". In short, krait is treated
as "cortex-a9" with hwdiv. We can not emit ".krait" as CPU since
it is not supported bu GNU GAS yet
llvm-svn: 230651
accesses are via different types
Noticed this while generalizing the code for loop distribution.
I confirmed with Arnold that this was indeed a bug and managed to create
a testcase.
llvm-svn: 230647
Turns out that after the past MMX commits, we don't need to rely on this
flag to get better codegen for MMX. Also update the tests to become
triple neutral.
llvm-svn: 230637
InstCombine has logic to convert aligned Altivec load/store intrinsics into
regular loads and stores. Unfortunately, there seems to be no regression test
covering this behavior. Adding one...
llvm-svn: 230632
Add `CHECK-SAME`, which requires that the pattern matches on the *same*
line as the previous `CHECK`/`CHECK-NEXT` -- in other words, no newline
is allowed in the skipped region. This is similar to `CHECK-NEXT`,
which requires exactly 1 newline in the skipped region.
My motivation is to simplify checking the long lines of LLVM assembly
for the new debug info hierarchy. This allows CHECK sequences like the
following:
CHECK: ![[REF]] = !SomeMDNode(
CHECK-SAME: file: ![[FILE:[0-9]+]]
CHECK-SAME: otherField: 93{{[,)]}}
which is equivalent to:
CHECK: ![[REF]] = !SomeMDNode({{.*}}file: ![[FILE:[0-9]+]]{{.*}}otherField: 93{{[,)]}}
While this example just has two fields, many nodes in debug info have
more than that. `CHECK-SAME` will keep the logic easy to follow.
Morever, it enables interleaving `CHECK-NOT`s without allowing newlines.
Consider the following:
CHECK: ![[REF]] = !SomeMDNode(
CHECK-SAME: file: ![[FILE:[0-9]+]]
CHECK-NOT: unexpectedField:
CHECK-SAME: otherField: 93{{[,)]}}
CHECK-NOT: otherUnexpectedField:
CHECK-SAME: )
which doesn't seem to have an equivalent `CHECK` line.
llvm-svn: 230612
Use the IRBuilder helpers for gc.statepoint and gc.result, instead of
coding the construction by hand. Note that the gc.statepoint IRBuilder
handles only CallInst, not InvokeInst; retain that part of hand-coding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7518
llvm-svn: 230591
This symbol exists only to pull in the required pieces of the runtime,
so nothing ever needs to refer to it. Making it hidden avoids the
potential for issues with duplicate symbols when linking profiled
libraries together.
llvm-svn: 230566
This is a follow-on to r227491 which tightens the check for propagating FP
values. If a non-constant value happens to be a zero, we would hit the same
bug as before.
Bug noted and patch suggested by Eli Friedman.
llvm-svn: 230564
Summary: SROA generates code that isn't quite as easy to optimize and contains unusual-sized shuffles, but that code is generally correct. As discussed in D7487 the right place to clean things up is InstCombine, which will pick up the type-punning pattern and transform it into a more obvious bitcast+extractelement, while leaving the other patterns SROA encounters as-is.
Test Plan: make check
Reviewers: jvoung, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 230560
LDtocL, and other loads that roughly correspond to the TOC_ENTRY SDAG node,
represent loads from the TOC, which is invariant. As a result, these loads can
be hoisted out of loops, etc. In order to do this, we need to generate
GOT-style MMOs for TOC_ENTRY, which requires treating it as a legitimate memory
intrinsic node type. Once this is done, the MMO transfer is automatically
handled for TableGen-driven instruction selection, and for nodes generated
directly in PPCISelDAGToDAG, we need to transfer the MMOs manually.
Also, we were not transferring MMOs associated with pre-increment loads, so do
that too.
Lastly, this fixes an exposed bug where R30 was not added as a defined operand of
UpdateGBR.
This problem was highlighted by an example (used to generate the test case)
posted to llvmdev by Francois Pichet.
llvm-svn: 230553
The Win64 epilogue structure is very restrictive, it permits a very
small number of opcodes and none of them are 'mov'.
This means that given:
mov %rbp, %rsp
pop %rbp
The mov isn't the epilogue, only the pop is. This is problematic unless
a frame pointer is present in which case we are free to do whatever we'd
like in the "body" of the function. If a frame pointer is present,
unwinding will undo the prologue operations in reverse order regardless
of the fact that we are at an instruction which is reseting the stack
pointer.
llvm-svn: 230543
This change aligns globals to the next highest power of 2 bytes, up to a
maximum of 128. This makes it more likely that we will be able to compress
bit sets with a greater alignment. In many more cases, we can now take
advantage of a new optimization also introduced in this patch that removes
bit set checks if the bit set is all ones.
The 128 byte maximum was found to provide the best tradeoff between instruction
overhead and data overhead in a recent build of Chromium. It allows us to
remove ~2.4MB of instructions at the cost of ~250KB of data.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7873
llvm-svn: 230540
(The change was landed in r230280 and caused the regression PR22674.
This version contains a fix and a test-case for PR22674).
When emitting the increment operation, SCEVExpander marks the
operation as nuw or nsw based on the flags on the preincrement SCEV.
This is incorrect because, for instance, it is possible that {-6,+,1}
is <nuw> while {-6,+,1}+1 = {-5,+,1} is not.
This change teaches SCEV to mark the increment as nuw/nsw only if it
can explicitly prove that the increment operation won't overflow.
Apart from the attached test case, another (more realistic)
manifestation of the bug can be seen in
Transforms/IndVarSimplify/pr20680.ll.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7778
llvm-svn: 230533
With a diabolically crafted test case, we could recurse
through this code and return true instead of false.
The larger engineering crime is the use of magic numbers.
Added FIXME comments for those.
llvm-svn: 230515
Reapply r230248.
Teach the peephole optimizer to work with MMX instructions by adding
entries into the foldable tables. This covers folding opportunities not
handled during isel.
llvm-svn: 230499
Thumb-1 only allows SP-based LDR and STR to be word-sized, and SP-base LDR,
STR, and ADD only allow offsets that are a multiple of 4. Make some changes
to better make use of these instructions:
* Use word loads for anyext byte and halfword loads from the stack.
* Enforce 4-byte alignment on objects accessed in this way, to ensure that
the offset is valid.
* Do the same for objects whose frame index is used, in order to avoid having
to use more than one ADD to generate the frame index.
* Correct how many bits of offset we think AddrModeT1_s has.
Patch by John Brawn.
llvm-svn: 230496
Summary:
This change fixes the FIXME that you recently added when you committed
(a modified version of) my patch. When `InstCombine` combines a load and
store of an pointer to those of an equivalently-sized integer, it currently
drops any `!nonnull` metadata that might be present. This change replaces
`!nonnull` metadata with `!range !{ 1, -1 }` metadata instead.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7621
llvm-svn: 230462