Commit Graph

529 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Weiming Zhao eed0145dd2 Fix bug 25440: GVN assertion after coercing loads
Summary:
when coercing loads, it inserts some instructions, which have no GV assigned.

https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25440


Reviewers: hfinkel, dberlin

Subscribers: dberlin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14479

llvm-svn: 252919
2015-11-12 18:19:59 +00:00
Tim Northover d4f55c0b1b GVN: don't try to replace instruction with itself.
After some look-ahead PRE was added for GEPs, an instruction could end
up in the table of candidates before it was actually inspected. When
this happened the pass might decide it was the best candidate to
replace itself. This didn't go well.

Should fix PR25291

llvm-svn: 251145
2015-10-23 20:30:02 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 3a9c9e3dcd Scalar: Remove some implicit ilist iterator conversions, NFC
Remove some of the implicit ilist iterator conversions in
LLVMScalarOpts.  More to go.

llvm-svn: 250197
2015-10-13 18:26:00 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski dc9b2cfc50 inariant.group handling in GVN
The most important part required to make clang
devirtualization works ( ͡°͜ʖ ͡°).
The code is able to find non local dependencies, but unfortunatelly
because the caller can only handle local dependencies, I had to add
some restrictions to look for dependencies only in the same BB.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12992

llvm-svn: 249196
2015-10-02 22:12:22 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski a4d43337d4 gvn small fix
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12928

llvm-svn: 247935
2015-09-17 20:34:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7b560d40bd [PM/AA] Rebuild LLVM's alias analysis infrastructure in a way compatible
with the new pass manager, and no longer relying on analysis groups.

This builds essentially a ground-up new AA infrastructure stack for
LLVM. The core ideas are the same that are used throughout the new pass
manager: type erased polymorphism and direct composition. The design is
as follows:

- FunctionAAResults is a type-erasing alias analysis results aggregation
  interface to walk a single query across a range of results from
  different alias analyses. Currently this is function-specific as we
  always assume that aliasing queries are *within* a function.

- AAResultBase is a CRTP utility providing stub implementations of
  various parts of the alias analysis result concept, notably in several
  cases in terms of other more general parts of the interface. This can
  be used to implement only a narrow part of the interface rather than
  the entire interface. This isn't really ideal, this logic should be
  hoisted into FunctionAAResults as currently it will cause
  a significant amount of redundant work, but it faithfully models the
  behavior of the prior infrastructure.

- All the alias analysis passes are ported to be wrapper passes for the
  legacy PM and new-style analysis passes for the new PM with a shared
  result object. In some cases (most notably CFL), this is an extremely
  naive approach that we should revisit when we can specialize for the
  new pass manager.

- BasicAA has been restructured to reflect that it is much more
  fundamentally a function analysis because it uses dominator trees and
  loop info that need to be constructed for each function.

All of the references to getting alias analysis results have been
updated to use the new aggregation interface. All the preservation and
other pass management code has been updated accordingly.

The way the FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass works is to detect the
available alias analyses when run, and add them to the results object.
This means that we should be able to continue to respect when various
passes are added to the pipeline, for example adding CFL or adding TBAA
passes should just cause their results to be available and to get folded
into this. The exception to this rule is BasicAA which really needs to
be a function pass due to using dominator trees and loop info. As
a consequence, the FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass directly depends on
BasicAA and always includes it in the aggregation.

This has significant implications for preserving analyses. Generally,
most passes shouldn't bother preserving FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass
because rebuilding the results just updates the set of known AA passes.
The exception to this rule are LoopPass instances which need to preserve
all the function analyses that the loop pass manager will end up
needing. This means preserving both BasicAAWrapperPass and the
aggregating FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass.

Now, when preserving an alias analysis, you do so by directly preserving
that analysis. This is only necessary for non-immutable-pass-provided
alias analyses though, and there are only three of interest: BasicAA,
GlobalsAA (formerly GlobalsModRef), and SCEVAA. Usually BasicAA is
preserved when needed because it (like DominatorTree and LoopInfo) is
marked as a CFG-only pass. I've expanded GlobalsAA into the preserved
set everywhere we previously were preserving all of AliasAnalysis, and
I've added SCEVAA in the intersection of that with where we preserve
SCEV itself.

One significant challenge to all of this is that the CGSCC passes were
actually using the alias analysis implementations by taking advantage of
a pretty amazing set of loop holes in the old pass manager's analysis
management code which allowed analysis groups to slide through in many
cases. Moving away from analysis groups makes this problem much more
obvious. To fix it, I've leveraged the flexibility the design of the new
PM components provides to just directly construct the relevant alias
analyses for the relevant functions in the IPO passes that need them.
This is a bit hacky, but should go away with the new pass manager, and
is already in many ways cleaner than the prior state.

Another significant challenge is that various facilities of the old
alias analysis infrastructure just don't fit any more. The most
significant of these is the alias analysis 'counter' pass. That pass
relied on the ability to snoop on AA queries at different points in the
analysis group chain. Instead, I'm planning to build printing
functionality directly into the aggregation layer. I've not included
that in this patch merely to keep it smaller.

Note that all of this needs a nearly complete rewrite of the AA
documentation. I'm planning to do that, but I'd like to make sure the
new design settles, and to flesh out a bit more of what it looks like in
the new pass manager first.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12080

llvm-svn: 247167
2015-09-09 17:55:00 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 0c7d8fc1f6 assuem(X) handling in GVN bugfix
There was infinite loop because it was trying to change assume(true) into
assume(true)
Also added handling when assume(false) appear

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12516

llvm-svn: 246697
2015-09-02 20:00:03 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 28ffcbe1cc Constant propagation after hitting assume(cmp) bugfix
Last time code run into assertion `BBE.isSingleEdge()` in
lib/IR/Dominators.cpp:200.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12170

llvm-svn: 246696
2015-09-02 19:59:59 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 14e815c22b Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume
After hitting @llvm.assume(X) we can:
- propagate equality that X == true
- if X is icmp/fcmp (with eq operation), and one of operand
  is constant we can change all variables with constants in the same BasicBlock

http://reviews.llvm.org/D11918

llvm-svn: 246695
2015-09-02 19:59:53 +00:00
Steven Wu 61db34d12e Revert r246244 and r246243
These two commits cause clang/llvm bootstrap to hang.

llvm-svn: 246279
2015-08-28 06:52:00 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 3f81ec1e38 Constant propagation after hitting assume(cmp) bugfix
Last time code run into assertion `BBE.isSingleEdge()` in
lib/IR/Dominators.cpp:200.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D12170

llvm-svn: 246244
2015-08-28 01:02:00 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 63cc5d4627 Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume
After hitting @llvm.assume(X) we can:
- propagate equality that X == true
- if X is icmp/fcmp (with eq operation), and one of operand
  is constant we can change all variables with constants in the same BasicBlock

http://reviews.llvm.org/D11918

llvm-svn: 246243
2015-08-28 01:01:57 +00:00
Adrian Prantl cbdfdb74d3 Rename Instruction::dropUnknownMetadata() to dropUnknownNonDebugMetadata()
and make it always preserve debug locations, since all callers wanted this
behavior anyway.

This is addressing a post-commit review feedback for r245589.

NFC (inside the LLVM tree).

llvm-svn: 245622
2015-08-20 22:00:30 +00:00
Adrian Prantl baf90fc265 Fix a bug that caused SimplifyCFG to drop DebugLocs.
Instruction::dropUnknownMetadata(KnownSet) is supposed to preserve all
metadata in KnownSet, but the condition for DebugLocs was inverted.

Most users of dropUnknownMetadata() actually worked around this by not
adding LLVMContext::MD_dbg to their list of KnowIDs.
This is now made explicit.

llvm-svn: 245589
2015-08-20 18:24:02 +00:00
Adrian Prantl a317cd2583 Fix a debug location handling bug in GVN.
Caught by the famous "DebugLoc describes the currect SubProgram" assertion.

When GVN is removing a nonlocal load it updates the debug location of the
SSA value it replaced the load with with the one of the load. In the
testcase this actually overwrites a valid debug location with an empty one.

In reality GVN has to make an arbitrary choice between two equally valid
debug locations. This patch changes to behavior to only update the
location if the value doesn't already have a debug location.

llvm-svn: 245588
2015-08-20 18:23:56 +00:00
Justin Bogner 9f00ebaeda Revert "Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume"
This was also failing bootstrap:

http://lab.llvm.org:8080/green/job/clang-stage2-configure-Rlto_build

This reverts r245265.

llvm-svn: 245269
2015-08-18 07:00:34 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 94ca3783b8 Constant propagation after hiting llvm.assume
After hitting @llvm.assume(X) we can:
- propagate equality that X == true
- if X is icmp/fcmp (with eq operation), and one of operand
  is constant we can change all variables with constants in the same BasicBlock

http://reviews.llvm.org/D11918

llvm-svn: 245265
2015-08-18 03:55:30 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer df005cbe19 Fix some comment typos.
llvm-svn: 244402
2015-08-08 18:27:36 +00:00
David Majnemer eb518bd5d8 Drive-by fixes for LandingPad -> EHPad
This change was done as an audit and is by inspection.  The new EH
system is still very much a work in progress.  NFC for the landingpad
case.

llvm-svn: 243965
2015-08-04 08:21:40 +00:00
Nick Lewycky c3890d2969 Fix typo "fuction" noticed in comments in AssumptionCache.h, and also all the other files that have the same typo. All comments, no functionality change! (Merely a "fuctionality" change.)
Bonus change to remove emacs major mode marker from SystemZMachineFunctionInfo.cpp because emacs already knows it's C++ from the extension. Also fix typo "appeary" in AMDGPUMCAsmInfo.h.

llvm-svn: 243585
2015-07-29 22:32:47 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 96ada25bf3 [PM/AA] Remove all of the dead AliasAnalysis pointers being threaded
through APIs that are no longer necessary now that the update API has
been removed.

This will make changes to the AA interfaces significantly less
disruptive (I hope). Either way, it seems like a really nice cleanup.

llvm-svn: 242882
2015-07-22 09:52:54 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9f2bf1aff5 [PM/AA] Remove the addEscapingUse update API that won't be easy to
directly model in the new PM.

This also was an incredibly brittle and expensive update API that was
never fully utilized by all the passes that claimed to preserve AA, nor
could it reasonably have been extended to all of them. Any number of
places add uses of values. If we ever wanted to reliably instrument
this, we would want a callback hook much like we have with ValueHandles,
but doing this for every use addition seems *extremely* expensive in
terms of compile time.

The only user of this update mechanism is GlobalsModRef. The idea of
using this to keep it up to date doesn't really work anyways as its
analysis requires a symmetric analysis of two different memory
locations. It would be very hard to make updates be sufficiently
rigorous to *guarantee* symmetric analysis in this way, and it pretty
certainly isn't true today.

However, folks have been using GMR with this update for a long time and
seem to not be hitting the issues. The reported issue that the update
hook fixes isn't even a problem any more as other changes to
GetUnderlyingObject worked around it, and that issue stemmed from *many*
years ago. As a consequence, a prior patch provided a flag to control
the unsafe behavior of GMR, and this patch removes the update mechanism
that has questionable compile-time tradeoffs and is causing problems
with moving to the new pass manager. Note the lack of test updates --
not one test in tree actually requires this update, even for a contrived
case.

All of this was extensively discussed on the dev list, this patch will
just enact what that discussion decides on. I'm sending it for review in
part to show what I'm planning, and in part to show the *amazing* amount
of work this avoids. Every call to the AA here is something like three
to six indirect function calls, which in the non-LTO pipeline never do
any work! =[

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11214

llvm-svn: 242605
2015-07-18 03:26:46 +00:00
Tim Northover 586b741959 GVN: use a static array instead of regenerating it each time. NFC.
llvm-svn: 242202
2015-07-14 21:14:58 +00:00
Tim Northover d5fdef016d GVN: tolerate an instruction being replaced without existing in the leaderboard
Sometimes an incidentally created instruction can duplicate a Value used
elsewhere. It then often doesn't end up in the leader table. If it's later
removed, we attempt to remove it from the leader table and segfault.

Instead we should just ignore the removal request, which won't cause any
problems. The reverse situation, where the original instruction is replaced by
the new one (which you might think could leave the leader table empty) cannot
occur, because the incidental instruction will never be found in the first
place.

llvm-svn: 242199
2015-07-14 21:03:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 00ebdbcc47 [PM/AA] Completely remove the AliasAnalysis::copyValue interface.
No in-tree alias analysis used this facility, and it was not called in
any particularly rigorous way, so it seems unlikely to be correct.

Note that one of the only stateful AA implementations in-tree,
GlobalsModRef is completely broken currently (and any AA passes like it
are equally broken) because Module AA passes are not effectively
invalidated when a function pass that fails to update the AA stack runs.

Ultimately, it doesn't seem like we know how we want to build stateful
AA, and until then trying to support and maintain correctness for an
untested API is essentially impossible. To that end, I'm planning to rip
out all of the update API. It can return if and when we need it and know
how to build it on top of the new pass manager and as part of *tested*
stateful AA implementations in the tree.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10889

llvm-svn: 241975
2015-07-11 04:39:00 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 2a3443c7c5 GVN: If a branch has two identical successors, we cannot declare either dead.
This previously caused miscompilations as a result of phi nodes receiving
undef incoming values from blocks dominated by such successors.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10726

llvm-svn: 240670
2015-06-25 18:32:02 +00:00
David Majnemer 63d606bdcb [GVN] Intersect the IR flags when CSE'ing two instructions
We performed a simple, but incomplete, intersection when it came time to
CSE instructions.  It didn't handle, for example, the 'exact' flag.

This fixes PR23922.

llvm-svn: 240595
2015-06-24 21:52:25 +00:00
Alexander Kornienko f00654e31b Revert r240137 (Fixed/added namespace ending comments using clang-tidy. NFC)
Apparently, the style needs to be agreed upon first.

llvm-svn: 240390
2015-06-23 09:49:53 +00:00
Alexander Kornienko 70bc5f1398 Fixed/added namespace ending comments using clang-tidy. NFC
The patch is generated using this command:

tools/clang/tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
  -checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
  llvm/lib/


Thanks to Eugene Kosov for the original patch!

llvm-svn: 240137
2015-06-19 15:57:42 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov 9947e48cd1 [GVN] Use a simpler form of IRBuilder constructor.
Summary:
A side effect of this change is that it IRBuilder now automatically
created debug info locations for new instructions, which is the
same as debug location of insertion point. This is fine for the
functions in questions (GetStoreValueForLoad and
GetMemInstValueForLoad), as they are used in two situations:
  * GVN::processLoad, which tries to eliminate a load. In this case
    new instructions would have the same debug location as the load they
    eventually replace;
  * MaterializeAdjustedValue, which adds new instructions to the end
    of the basic blocks, which could later be used to replace the load
    definition. In this case we don't yet know the way the load would
    be eventually replaced (either by assembling the precomputed values
    via PHI, or by using them directly), so just using the basic block
    strategy seems to be reasonable. There is also a special case
    in the code that *would* adjust the location of the last
    instruction replacing the load definition to the location of the
    load.

Test Plan: regression test suite

Reviewers: echristo, dberlin, dblaikie

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10405

llvm-svn: 239585
2015-06-12 01:39:48 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov ff449802c2 [GVN] Use IRBuilder more actively instead of creating instructions manually.
llvm-svn: 239584
2015-06-12 01:39:45 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov 89645dfa4d [GVN] Set proper debug locations for some instructions created by GVN.
Determining proper debug locations for instructions created in
PHITransAddr is tricky. We use a simple approach here and simply copy
debug locations from instructions computing load address to
"corresponding" instructions re-creating the address computation
in predecessor basic blocks.

This may not always be correct, given all the rearrangement and
simplification going on, and debug locations may jump around a lot,
as the basic blocks we copy locations between may be very far from
each other.

Still, this would work good in most simple cases (e.g. when chain
of address computing instruction is short, or our mapping turns out
to be 1-to-1), and we desire to have *some* reasonable debug locations
associated with newly inserted instructions.

See http://reviews.llvm.org/D10351 review thread for more details.

Test Plan: regression test suite

Reviewers: spatel, dblaikie

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10351

llvm-svn: 239479
2015-06-10 17:37:38 +00:00
Philip Reames 7c78ef7dd9 Extend EarlyCSE to handle basic cases from JumpThreading and CVP
This patch extends EarlyCSE to take advantage of the information that a controlling branch gives us about the value of a Value within this and dominated basic blocks. If the current block has a single predecessor with a controlling branch, we can infer what the branch condition must have been to execute this block. The actual change to support this is downright simple because EarlyCSE's existing scoped hash table logic deals with most of the complexity around merging.

The patch actually implements two optimizations.
1) The first is analogous to JumpThreading in that it enables EarlyCSE's CSE handling to fold branches which are exactly redundant due to a previous branch to branches on constants. (It doesn't actually replace the branch or change the CFG.) This is pretty clearly a win since it enables substantial CFG simplification before we start trying to inline.
2) The second is analogous to CVP in that it exploits the knowledge gained to replace dominated *uses* of the original value. EarlyCSE does not otherwise reason about specific uses, so this is the more arguable one. It does enable further simplication and constant folding within the rest of the visit by EarlyCSE.

In both cases, the added code only handles the easy dominance based case of each optimization. The general case is deferred to the existing passes.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9763

llvm-svn: 238071
2015-05-22 23:53:24 +00:00
David Blaikie 4a2e73b066 [opaque pointer type] API migration for GEP constant factories
Require the pointee type to be passed explicitly and assert that it is
correct. For now it's possible to pass nullptr here (and I've done so in
a few places in this patch) but eventually that will be disallowed once
all clients have been updated or removed. It'll be a long road to get
all the way there... but if you have the cahnce to update your callers
to pass the type explicitly without depending on a pointer's element
type, that would be a good thing to do soon and a necessary thing to do
eventually.

llvm-svn: 233938
2015-04-02 18:55:32 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 799003bf8c Re-sort includes with sort-includes.py and insert raw_ostream.h where it's used.
llvm-svn: 232998
2015-03-23 19:32:43 +00:00
Mehdi Amini a28d91d81b DataLayout is mandatory, update the API to reflect it with references.
Summary:
Now that the DataLayout is a mandatory part of the module, let's start
cleaning the codebase. This patch is a first attempt at doing that.

This patch is not exactly NFC as for instance some places were passing
a nullptr instead of the DataLayout, possibly just because there was a
default value on the DataLayout argument to many functions in the API.
Even though it is not purely NFC, there is no change in the
validation.

I turned as many pointer to DataLayout to references, this helped
figuring out all the places where a nullptr could come up.

I had initially a local version of this patch broken into over 30
independant, commits but some later commit were cleaning the API and
touching part of the code modified in the previous commits, so it
seemed cleaner without the intermediate state.

Test Plan:

Reviewers: echristo

Subscribers: llvm-commits

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231740
2015-03-10 02:37:25 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 46a43556db Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module
Summary:
DataLayout keeps the string used for its creation.

As a side effect it is no longer needed in the Module.
This is "almost" NFC, the string is no longer
canonicalized, you can't rely on two "equals" DataLayout
having the same string returned by getStringRepresentation().

Get rid of DataLayoutPass: the DataLayout is in the Module

The DataLayout is "per-module", let's enforce this by not
duplicating it more than necessary.
One more step toward non-optionality of the DataLayout in the
module.

Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module

Module->getDataLayout() will never returns nullptr anymore.

Reviewers: echristo

Subscribers: resistor, llvm-commits, jholewinski

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7992

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231270
2015-03-04 18:43:29 +00:00
Sanjay Patel cc29f4f2cb only propagate equality comparisons of FP values that we are certain are non-zero
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
2015-02-25 22:46:08 +00:00
Sanjay Patel cee38616c8 remove function names from comments; NFC
llvm-svn: 230391
2015-02-24 22:43:06 +00:00
Daniel Berlin 487aed0d77 Allow PRE to insert no-cost phi nodes
llvm-svn: 228024
2015-02-03 20:37:08 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 4f07a56958 [GVN] don't propagate equality comparisons of FP zero (PR22376)
In http://reviews.llvm.org/D6911, we allowed GVN to propagate FP equalities
to allow some simple value range optimizations. But that introduced a bug
when comparing to -0.0 or 0.0: these compare equal even though they are not
bitwise identical.

This patch disallows propagating zero constants in equality comparisons. 
Fixes: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22376

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7257

llvm-svn: 227491
2015-01-29 20:51:49 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 37df2cfbf8 [PM] Remove the Pass argument from all of the critical edge splitting
APIs and replace it and numerous booleans with an option struct.

The critical edge splitting API has a really large surface of flags and
so it seems worth burning a small option struct / builder. This struct
can be constructed with the various preserved analyses and then flags
can be flipped in a builder style.

The various users are now responsible for directly passing along their
analysis information. This should be enough for the critical edge
splitting to work cleanly with the new pass manager as well.

This API is still pretty crufty and could be cleaned up a lot, but I've
focused on this change just threading an option struct rather than
a pass through the API.

llvm-svn: 226456
2015-01-19 12:09:11 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b5c115357c [PM] Replace another Pass argument with specific analyses that are
optionally updated by MergeBlockIntoPredecessors.

No functionality changed, just refactoring to clear the way for the new
pass manager.

llvm-svn: 226392
2015-01-18 02:11:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b98f63dbdb [PM] Separate the TargetLibraryInfo object from the immutable pass.
The pass is really just a means of accessing a cached instance of the
TargetLibraryInfo object, and this way we can re-use that object for the
new pass manager as its result.

Lots of delta, but nothing interesting happening here. This is the
common pattern that is developing to allow analyses to live in both the
old and new pass manager -- a wrapper pass in the old pass manager
emulates the separation intrinsic to the new pass manager between the
result and pass for analyses.

llvm-svn: 226157
2015-01-15 10:41:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 62d4215baa [PM] Move TargetLibraryInfo into the Analysis library.
While the term "Target" is in the name, it doesn't really have to do
with the LLVM Target library -- this isn't an abstraction which LLVM
targets generally need to implement or extend. It has much more to do
with modeling the various runtime libraries on different OSes and with
different runtime environments. The "target" in this sense is the more
general sense of a target of cross compilation.

This is in preparation for porting this analysis to the new pass
manager.

No functionality changed, and updates inbound for Clang and Polly.

llvm-svn: 226078
2015-01-15 02:16:27 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 06d5589a84 80-cols; NFC
llvm-svn: 225700
2015-01-12 21:21:28 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 5f1d9eaad3 GVN: propagate equalities for floating point compares
Allow optimizations based on FP comparison values in the same way
as integers. 

This resolves PR17713:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17713

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6911

llvm-svn: 225660
2015-01-12 19:29:48 +00:00
Tim Northover eb16112e97 Re-reapply r221924: "[GVN] Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before
doing Load PRE"

It's not really expected to stick around, last time it provoked a weird LTO
build failure that I can't reproduce now, and the bot logs are long gone. I'll
re-revert it if the failures recur.

Original description: Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before
doing Load PRE.

llvm-svn: 225536
2015-01-09 19:19:56 +00:00
Philip Reames 567feb98f0 [Refactor] Have getNonLocalPointerDependency take the query instruction
Previously, MemoryDependenceAnalysis::getNonLocalPointerDependency was taking a list of properties about the instruction being queried. Since I'm about to need one more property to be passed down through the infrastructure - I need to know a query instruction is non-volatile in an inner helper - fix the interface once and for all.

I also added some assertions and behaviour clarifications around volatile and ordered field accesses. At the moment, this is mostly to document expected behaviour. The only non-standard instructions which can currently reach this are atomic, but unordered, loads and stores. Neither ordered or volatile accesses can reach here.

The call in GVN is protected by an isSimple check when it first considers the load. The calls in MemDepPrinter are protected by isUnordered checks. Both utilities also check isVolatile for loads and stores.

llvm-svn: 225481
2015-01-09 00:04:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 66b3130cda [PM] Split the AssumptionTracker immutable pass into two separate APIs:
a cache of assumptions for a single function, and an immutable pass that
manages those caches.

The motivation for this change is two fold. Immutable analyses are
really hacks around the current pass manager design and don't exist in
the new design. This is usually OK, but it requires that the core logic
of an immutable pass be reasonably partitioned off from the pass logic.
This change does precisely that. As a consequence it also paves the way
for the *many* utility functions that deal in the assumptions to live in
both pass manager worlds by creating an separate non-pass object with
its own independent API that they all rely on. Now, the only bits of the
system that deal with the actual pass mechanics are those that actually
need to deal with the pass mechanics.

Once this separation is made, several simplifications become pretty
obvious in the assumption cache itself. Rather than using a set and
callback value handles, it can just be a vector of weak value handles.
The callers can easily skip the handles that are null, and eventually we
can wrap all of this up behind a filter iterator.

For now, this adds boiler plate to the various passes, but this kind of
boiler plate will end up making it possible to port these passes to the
new pass manager, and so it will end up factored away pretty reasonably.

llvm-svn: 225131
2015-01-04 12:03:27 +00:00