clang will generate IR like this for input using packed bitfields;
very simple semantically, but it's a bit tricky to actually
generate good code.
llvm-svn: 296080
Splitting critical edges when one of the source edges is an indirectbr
is hard in general (because it requires changing the memory the indirectbr
reads). But if a block only has a single indirectbr predecessor (which is
the common case), we can simulate splitting that edge by splitting
the destination block, and retargeting the *direct* branches.
This is motivated by the use of computed gotos in python 2.7: PyEval_EvalFrame()
ends up using an indirect branch with ~100 successors, and passing a constant to
each of those. Since MachineSink can't break indirect critical edges on demand
(and doing this in MIR doesn't look feasible), this causes us to emit about ~100
defs of registers containing constants, which we in the predecessor block, where
only one of those constants is used in each successor. So, at each computed goto,
we needlessly spill about a 100 constants to stack. The end result is that a
clang-compiled python interpreter can be about ~2.5x slower on a simple python
reduction loop than a gcc-compiled interpreter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29916
llvm-svn: 296060
FastISel wasn't checking the isFPOnlySP subtarget feature before emitting
double-precision operations, so it got completely invalid CodeGen for doubles
on Cortex-M4F.
The normal ISel testing wasn't spectacular either so I added a second RUN line
to improve that while I was in the area.
llvm-svn: 296031
Introduce a common ValueHandler for call returns and formal arguments, and
inherit two different versions for handling the differences (at the moment the
only difference is the way physical registers are marked as used).
llvm-svn: 295973
Add support for lowering calls with parameters than can fit into regs. Use the
same ValueHandler that we used for function returns, but rename it to match its
new, extended purpose.
llvm-svn: 295971
The ARMConstantIslandPass didn't have support for handling accesses to
constant island objects through ARM::t2LDRBpci instructions. This adds
support for that.
This fixes PR31997.
llvm-svn: 295964
This patch adds missing sched classes for Thumb2 instructions.
This has been missing so far, and as a consequence, machine
scheduler models for individual sub-targets have tended to
be larger than they needed to be. These patches should help
write schedulers better and faster in the future
for ARM sub-targets.
Reviewer: Diana Picus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29953
llvm-svn: 295811
Summary:
This file was missed in the commit for Cortex-M23 and Cortex-M33
support. See https://reviews.llvm.org/D29073?id=85814 .
Reviewers: rengolin, javed.absar, samparker
Reviewed By: samparker
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30162
llvm-svn: 295655
Start using the Subtarget to make decisions about what's legal. In particular,
we only mark floating point operations as legal if we have VFP2, which is
something we should've done from the very start.
llvm-svn: 295439
Resubmit -r295314 with PowerPC and AMDGPU tests updated.
Support {a|s}ext, {a|z|s}ext load nodes as a part of load combine patters.
Reviewed By: filcab
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29591
llvm-svn: 295336
Support {a|s}ext, {a|z|s}ext load nodes as a part of load combine patters.
Reviewed By: filcab
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29591
llvm-svn: 295314
Since they're only used for passing around double precision floating point
values into the general purpose registers, we'll lower them to VMOVDRR and
VMOVRRD.
llvm-svn: 295310
For now we just mark them as legal all the time and let the other passes bail
out if they can't handle it. In the future, we'll want to move more of the
brains into the legalizer.
llvm-svn: 295300
For the hard float calling convention, we just use the D registers.
For the soft-fp calling convention, we use the R registers and move values
to/from the D registers by means of G_SEQUENCE/G_EXTRACT. While doing so, we
make sure to honor the endianness of the target, since the CCAssignFn doesn't do
that for us.
For pure soft float targets, we still bail out because we don't support the
libcalls yet.
llvm-svn: 295295
Lay out trellis-shaped CFGs optimally.
A trellis of the shape below:
A B
|\ /|
| \ / |
| X |
| / \ |
|/ \|
C D
would be laid out A; B->C ; D by the current layout algorithm. Now we identify
trellises and lay them out either A->C; B->D or A->D; B->C. This scales with an
increasing number of predecessors. A trellis is a a group of 2 or more
predecessor blocks that all have the same successors.
because of this we can tail duplicate to extend existing trellises.
As an example consider the following CFG:
B D F H
/ \ / \ / \ / \
A---C---E---G---Ret
Where A,C,E,G are all small (Currently 2 instructions).
The CFG preserving layout is then A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H,Ret.
The current code will copy C into B, E into D and G into F and yield the layout
A,C,B(C),E,D(E),F(G),G,H,ret
define void @straight_test(i32 %tag) {
entry:
br label %test1
test1: ; A
%tagbit1 = and i32 %tag, 1
%tagbit1eq0 = icmp eq i32 %tagbit1, 0
br i1 %tagbit1eq0, label %test2, label %optional1
optional1: ; B
call void @a()
br label %test2
test2: ; C
%tagbit2 = and i32 %tag, 2
%tagbit2eq0 = icmp eq i32 %tagbit2, 0
br i1 %tagbit2eq0, label %test3, label %optional2
optional2: ; D
call void @b()
br label %test3
test3: ; E
%tagbit3 = and i32 %tag, 4
%tagbit3eq0 = icmp eq i32 %tagbit3, 0
br i1 %tagbit3eq0, label %test4, label %optional3
optional3: ; F
call void @c()
br label %test4
test4: ; G
%tagbit4 = and i32 %tag, 8
%tagbit4eq0 = icmp eq i32 %tagbit4, 0
br i1 %tagbit4eq0, label %exit, label %optional4
optional4: ; H
call void @d()
br label %exit
exit:
ret void
}
here is the layout after D27742:
straight_test: # @straight_test
; ... Prologue elided
; BB#0: # %entry ; A (merged with test1)
; ... More prologue elided
mr 30, 3
andi. 3, 30, 1
bc 12, 1, .LBB0_2
; BB#1: # %test2 ; C
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 30, 30
beq 0, .LBB0_3
b .LBB0_4
.LBB0_2: # %optional1 ; B (copy of C)
bl a
nop
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 30, 30
bne 0, .LBB0_4
.LBB0_3: # %test3 ; E
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 29, 29
beq 0, .LBB0_5
b .LBB0_6
.LBB0_4: # %optional2 ; D (copy of E)
bl b
nop
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 29, 29
bne 0, .LBB0_6
.LBB0_5: # %test4 ; G
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 28, 28
beq 0, .LBB0_8
b .LBB0_7
.LBB0_6: # %optional3 ; F (copy of G)
bl c
nop
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 28, 28
beq 0, .LBB0_8
.LBB0_7: # %optional4 ; H
bl d
nop
.LBB0_8: # %exit ; Ret
ld 30, 96(1) # 8-byte Folded Reload
addi 1, 1, 112
ld 0, 16(1)
mtlr 0
blr
The tail-duplication has produced some benefit, but it has also produced a
trellis which is not laid out optimally. With this patch, we improve the layouts
of such trellises, and decrease the cost calculation for tail-duplication
accordingly.
This patch produces the layout A,C,E,G,B,D,F,H,Ret. This layout does have
back edges, which is a negative, but it has a bigger compensating
positive, which is that it handles the case where there are long strings
of skipped blocks much better than the original layout. Both layouts
handle runs of executed blocks equally well. Branch prediction also
improves if there is any correlation between subsequent optional blocks.
Here is the resulting concrete layout:
straight_test: # @straight_test
; BB#0: # %entry ; A (merged with test1)
mr 30, 3
andi. 3, 30, 1
bc 12, 1, .LBB0_4
; BB#1: # %test2 ; C
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 30, 30
bne 0, .LBB0_5
.LBB0_2: # %test3 ; E
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 29, 29
bne 0, .LBB0_6
.LBB0_3: # %test4 ; G
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 28, 28
bne 0, .LBB0_7
b .LBB0_8
.LBB0_4: # %optional1 ; B (Copy of C)
bl a
nop
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 30, 30
beq 0, .LBB0_2
.LBB0_5: # %optional2 ; D (Copy of E)
bl b
nop
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 29, 29
beq 0, .LBB0_3
.LBB0_6: # %optional3 ; F (Copy of G)
bl c
nop
rlwinm. 3, 30, 0, 28, 28
beq 0, .LBB0_8
.LBB0_7: # %optional4 ; H
bl d
nop
.LBB0_8: # %exit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28522
llvm-svn: 295223
Summary:
Blocks ending in unreachable are typically cold because they end the
program or throw an exception, so merging them with other identical
blocks is usually profitable because it reduces the size of cold code.
MachineBlockPlacement generally does not arrange to fall through to such
blocks, so commoning these blocks will not introduce additional
unconditional branches.
Reviewers: hans, iteratee, haicheng
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29153
llvm-svn: 295105
Backends don't support this yet. They would have to move to the swifterror
register before the tail call to make sure it is live-in to the call.
rdar://30495920
llvm-svn: 294982
Summary:
The attached test case fails with "fatal error: error in backend:
misaligned pc-relative fixup value" as the jump table is misaligned.
The EmitAlignment existed already for ARM and Thumb-1 code, but was
missing for Thumb-2.
The test checks that the fatal error disappears when generating an obj
file, as well as checking the align directive is there when producing an
asm file.
Reviewers: rengolin, grosbach, t.p.northover, jmolloy, SjoerdMeijer, samparker
Reviewed By: samparker
Subscribers: samparker, aemerson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29650
llvm-svn: 294950
When generating a floating point comparison we currently unconditionally
generate VCMPE. This has the sideeffect of setting the cumulative Invalid
bit in FPSCR if any of the operands are QNaN.
It is expected that use of a relational predicate on a QNaN value should
raise Invalid. Quoting from the C standard:
The relational and equality operators support the usual mathematical
relationships between numeric values. For any ordered pair of numeric
values exactly one of relationships the less, greater, equal and is true.
Relational operators may raise the floating-point exception when argument
values are NaNs.
The standard doesn't explicitly state the expectation for equality operators,
but the implication and obvious expectation is that equality operators
should not raise Invalid on a QNaN input, as those predicates are wholly
defined on unordered inputs (to return not equal).
Therefore, add a new operand to ARMISD::FPCMP and FPCMPZ indicating if
QNaN should raise Invalid, and pipe that through to TableGen.
llvm-svn: 294945
In the encoding of system registers in the M-class MSR instruction the mask bits
should be 2 for registers that don't take a _<bits> qualifier (the instruction
is unpredictable otherwise), and should also be 2 if the register takes a
_<bits> qualifier but it's not present as no _<bits> is an alias for _nzcvq.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29828
llvm-svn: 294762
Gcc supports target armv7ve which is armv7-a with virtualization
extensions. This change adds support for this in llvm for gcc
compatibility.
Also remove redundant FeatureHWDiv, FeatureHWDivARM for a few models as
this is specified automatically by FeatureVirtualization.
Patch by Manoj Gupta.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29472
llvm-svn: 294661
If some of the trailing or leading bytes of a load combine pattern are zeroes we can combine the pattern to a load + zext and shift. Currently we don't support it, so the tests check the current codegen without load combine. This change will make the patch to support this kind of combine a bit more clear.
llvm-svn: 294591
Functions that have a dynamic alloca require a base register which is defined to
be X19 on AArch64 and r6 on ARM. We have defined the swifterror register to be
the same register. Use a different callee save register for swifterror instead:
X21 on AArch64
R8 on ARM
rdar://30433803
llvm-svn: 294551
We mark X0 as preserved by a call that passes the returned parameter.
x0 = ...
fun(x0) // no implicit def of x0
This no longer is valid if we pass the parameter in a different register then
the returned value as is the case with a swiftself parameter (passed in x20).
x20 = ...
fun(x20) // there should be an implict def of x8
rdar://30425845
llvm-svn: 294527
I forgot to remove the neonfp target feature from the test, which means we'd
have trouble selecting VADDS on targets that have neonfp enabled by default.
llvm-svn: 294451
Add a register bank for floating point values and select simple instructions
using them (add, copies from GPR).
This assumes that the hardware can cope with a single precision add (VADDS)
instruction, so the legalizer will treat G_FADD as legal and the instruction
selector will refuse to select if the hardware doesn't support it. In the future
we'll want to be more careful about this, and legalize to libcalls if we have to
use soft float.
llvm-svn: 294442
Currently we don't support these nodes, so the tests check the current codegen without load combine. This change makes the review of the change to support these nodes more clear.
Separated from https://reviews.llvm.org/D29591 review.
llvm-svn: 294305
When constructing global address literals while targeting the RWPI
relocation model. LLVM currently only uses literal pools. If MOVW/MOVT
instructions are available we can use these instead. Beside being more
efficient it allows -arm-execute-only to work with
-relocation-model=RWPI as well.
When we generate MOVW/MOVT for global addresses when targeting the RWPI
relocation model, we need to use base relative relocations. This patch
does the needed plumbing in MC to generate these for MOVW/MOVT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29487
Change-Id: I446786e43a6f5aa9b6a5bb2cd216d60d41c7755d
llvm-svn: 294298
Summary:
The tail call optimisation is performed before register allocation, so
at that point we don't know if LR is being spilt or not. If LR was spilt
to the stack, then we cannot do a tail call optimisation. That would
involve popping back into LR which is not possible in Thumb1 code.
Reviewers: rengolin, jmolloy, rovka, olista01
Reviewed By: olista01
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29020
llvm-svn: 294000
Summary:
llc would hit a fatal error for errors in inline assembly. The
diagnostics message is now printed.
Reviewers: rengolin, MatzeB, javed.absar, anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: jyknight, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29408
llvm-svn: 293999
This is the second in the series of patches to enable adding
of machine sched-models for ARM processors easier and compact.
This patch focuses on integer instructions and adds missing
sched definitions.
Reviewers: rovka, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29127
llvm-svn: 293935
Recommiting after fixing X86 inc/dec chain bug.
* Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search and chain alias analysis which only
checks for parallel stores through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner
as the separation of non-interfering loads/stores from the
store-merging logic.
When merging stores search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited.
This improves the quality of the output SelectionDAG and the output
Codegen (save perhaps for some ARM cases where we correctly constructs
wider loads, but then promotes them to float operations which appear
but requires more expensive constant generation).
Some minor peephole optimizations to deal with improved SubDAG shapes (listed below)
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the chain aggregation in the merged stores across code
paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seems sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
5. Remove Chain dependencies of Memory operations on CopyfromReg
nodes as these are captured by data dependence
6. Forward loads-store values through tokenfactors containing
{CopyToReg,CopyFromReg} Values.
7. Peephole to convert buildvector of extract_vector_elt to
extract_subvector if possible (see
CodeGen/AArch64/store-merge.ll)
8. Store merging for the ARM target is restricted to 32-bit as
some in some contexts invalid 64-bit operations are being
generated. This can be removed once appropriate checks are
added.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable, improving load-store forwarding. One test in
particular is worth noting:
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll - Improved load-store
forwarding converts a load-store pair into a parallel store and
a memory-realized bitcast of the same value. However, because we
lose the sharing of the explicit and implicit store values we
must create another local store. A similar transformation
happens before SelectionDAG as well.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight, nhaehnle
llvm-svn: 293893
It is important to change the ArgInfo's type from pointer to integer, otherwise
the CC assign function won't know what to do. Instead of hacking it up, we use
ComputeValueVTs and introduce some of the helpers that we will need later on for
lowering more complex types.
llvm-svn: 293889
Add both cores to the target parser and TableGen. Test that eabi
attributes are set correctly for both cores. Additionally, test the
absence and presence of MOVT in Cortex-M23 and Cortex-M33, respectively.
Committed on behalf of Sanne Wouda.
Reviewers : rengolin, olista01.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29073
llvm-svn: 293761
When choosing the best successor for a block, ordinarily we would have preferred
a block that preserves the CFG unless there is a strong probability the other
direction. For small blocks that can be duplicated we now skip that requirement
as well, subject to some simple frequency calculations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28583
llvm-svn: 293716
The Requires class overrides the target requirements of an instruction,
rather than adding to them, so all ARM instructions need to include the
IsARM predicate when they have overwitten requirements.
This caused the swp and swpb instructions to be allowed in thumb mode
assembly, and the ARM encoding of CDP to be selected in codegen (which
is different for conditional instructions).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29283
llvm-svn: 293634
Support lowering AEABI TLS access (__aeabi_read_tp) with long calls.
This requires adjusting the call sequence to use an indirect call to get
full addressability.
Resolves PR31769!
llvm-svn: 293433
The interleaved access pass is an IR-to-IR transformation that runs before code
generation. It matches interleaved memory operations to target-specific
intrinsics (that are later lowered to load and store multiple instructions on
ARM/AArch64). We place tests for similar passes (e.g., GlobalMergePass) under
test/Transforms. This patch moves the InterleavedAccessPass tests out of
test/CodeGen and into target-specific directories under
test/Transforms/InterleavedAccess.
Although the pass is an IR pass, many of the existing tests were llc tests
rather opt tests. For example, the tests would check for ldN/stN instructions
generated by llc rather than the intrinsic calls the pass actually inserts.
Thus, this patch updates all tests to be opt tests that check for the inserted
intrinsics. We already have separate CodeGen tests that ensure we lower the
interleaved access intrinsics to their corresponding ldN/stN instructions. In
addition to migrating the tests to opt, this patch also performs some minor
clean-up (to ensure consistent naming, etc.).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29184
llvm-svn: 293309
The Windows on ARM target uses custom division for normal division as
the backend needs to insert division-by-zero checks. However, it is
designed to only handle non-vectorized division. ARM has custom
lowering for vectorized division as that can avoid loading registers
with the values and invoke a division routine for each one, preferring
to lower using NEON instructions. Fall back to the custom lowering for
the NEON instructions if we encounter a vectorized division.
Resolves PR31778!
llvm-svn: 293259
* Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search and chain alias analysis which only
checks for parallel stores through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner
as the separation of non-interfering loads/stores from the
store-merging logic.
When merging stores search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited.
This improves the quality of the output SelectionDAG and the output
Codegen (save perhaps for some ARM cases where we correctly constructs
wider loads, but then promotes them to float operations which appear
but requires more expensive constant generation).
Some minor peephole optimizations to deal with improved SubDAG shapes (listed below)
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the chain aggregation in the merged stores across code
paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seems sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
5. Remove Chain dependencies of Memory operations on CopyfromReg
nodes as these are captured by data dependence
6. Forward loads-store values through tokenfactors containing
{CopyToReg,CopyFromReg} Values.
7. Peephole to convert buildvector of extract_vector_elt to
extract_subvector if possible (see
CodeGen/AArch64/store-merge.ll)
8. Store merging for the ARM target is restricted to 32-bit as
some in some contexts invalid 64-bit operations are being
generated. This can be removed once appropriate checks are
added.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable, improving load-store forwarding. One test in
particular is worth noting:
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll - Improved load-store
forwarding converts a load-store pair into a parallel store and
a memory-realized bitcast of the same value. However, because we
lose the sharing of the explicit and implicit store values we
must create another local store. A similar transformation
happens before SelectionDAG as well.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight, nhaehnle
llvm-svn: 293184
Add support for loading i1, i8 and i16 arguments from the stack, with or without
the ABI extension flags.
When the ABI extension flags are present, we load a 4-byte value, otherwise we
preserve the size of the load and let the instruction selector replace it with a
LDRB/LDRH. This generates the same thing as DAGISel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27803
llvm-svn: 293163
Later code expects the vector loads produced to be directly
concatenable, which means we shouldn't pad anything except the last load
produced with UNDEF.
llvm-svn: 293088
The previous patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/rL289538) got reverted because of a bug. Chandler also requested some changes to the algorithm.
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20161212/413479.html
This is an updated patch. The key difference is that collectBitProviders (renamed to calculateByteProvider) now collects the origin of one byte, not the whole value. It simplifies the implementation and allows to stop the traversal earlier if we know that the result won't be used.
From the original commit:
Match a pattern where a wide type scalar value is loaded by several narrow loads and combined by shifts and ors. Fold it into a single load or a load and a bswap if the targets supports it.
Assuming little endian target:
i8 *a = ...
i32 val = a[0] | (a[1] << 8) | (a[2] << 16) | (a[3] << 24)
=>
i32 val = *((i32)a)
i8 *a = ...
i32 val = (a[0] << 24) | (a[1] << 16) | (a[2] << 8) | a[3]
=>
i32 val = BSWAP(*((i32)a))
This optimization was discussed on llvm-dev some time ago in "Load combine pass" thread. We came to the conclusion that we want to do this transformation late in the pipeline because in presence of atomic loads load widening is irreversible transformation and it might hinder other optimizations.
Eventually we'd like to support folding patterns like this where the offset has a variable and a constant part:
i32 val = a[i] | (a[i + 1] << 8) | (a[i + 2] << 16) | (a[i + 3] << 24)
Matching the pattern above is easier at SelectionDAG level since address reassociation has already happened and the fact that the loads are adjacent is clear. Understanding that these loads are adjacent at IR level would have involved looking through geps/zexts/adds while looking at the addresses.
The general scheme is to match OR expressions by recursively calculating the origin of individual bytes which constitute the resulting OR value. If all the OR bytes come from memory verify that they are adjacent and match with little or big endian encoding of a wider value. If so and the load of the wider type (and bswap if needed) is allowed by the target generate a load and a bswap if needed.
Reviewed By: RKSimon, filcab, chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27861
llvm-svn: 293036
Add support for:
* i1 add
* i1 function arguments, if passed through registers
* i1 returns, with ABI signext/zeroext
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27706
llvm-svn: 293035
At the moment, this means supporting the signext/zeroext attribute on the return
type of the function. For function arguments, signext/zeroext should be handled
by the caller, so there's nothing for us to do until we start lowering calls.
Note that this does not include support for other extensions (i8 to i16), those
will be added later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27705
llvm-svn: 293034
This is a series of patches to enable adding of machine sched
models for ARM processors easier and compact. They define new
sched-readwrites for groups of ARM instructions. This has been
missing so far, and as a consequence, machine scheduler models
for individual sub-targets have tended to be larger than they
needed to be.
The current patch focuses on floating-point instructions.
Reviewers: Diana Picus (rovka), Renato Golin (rengolin)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28194
llvm-svn: 292825
We also want to optimise tests like this: return a*b == 0. The MULS
instruction is flag setting, so we don't need the CMP instruction but can
instead branch on the result of the MULS. The generated instructions sequence
for this example was: MULS, MOVS, MOVS, CMP. The MOVS instruction load the
boolean values resulting from the select instruction, but these MOVS
instructions are flag setting and were thus preventing this optimisation. Now
we first reorder and move the MULS to before the CMP and generate sequence
MOVS, MOVS, MULS, CMP so that the optimisation could trigger. Reordering of the
MULS and MOVS is safe to do because the subsequent MOVS instructions just set
the CPSR register and don't use it, i.e. the CPSR is dead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27990
llvm-svn: 292608
Summary:
Emission of XRay table was occasionally disabled for Arm32, but this bug was not then detected because earlier (also by mistake) testing of XRay was occasionally disabled on 32-bit Arm targets. This patch should fix that problem and detect such problems in the future.
This patch is one of a series, see also
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D28623
Reviewers: rengolin, dberris
Reviewed By: dberris
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson, rengolin, dberris, iid_iunknown
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28624
llvm-svn: 292516
This reverts commit r292210, as it broke the Thumb buldbot with:
clang-5.0: error: the clang compiler does not support '-fxray-instrument
on thumbv7-unknown-linux-gnueabihf'.
llvm-svn: 292357
Summary:
Emission of XRay table was occasionally disabled for Arm32, but this bug was not then detected because earlier (also by mistake) testing of XRay was occasionally disabled on 32-bit Arm targets. This patch should fix that problem and detect such problems in the future.
This patch is one of a series, see also
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D28623
Reviewers: rengolin, dberris
Reviewed By: dberris
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson, rengolin, dberris, iid_iunknown
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28624
llvm-svn: 292210
This reverts commit ada6595a526d71df04988eb0a4b4fe84df398ded.
This needs a simple probability check because there are some cases where it is
not profitable.
llvm-svn: 291695
The new matchers work after legalization to make them simpler, and to avoid
blocking other optimizations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27779
llvm-svn: 291693
Commit rL290616 (https://reviews.llvm.org/rL290616) changed a checking command
for the triple arm-apple-darwin in LLVM::CodeGen/ARM/fpcmp_ueq.ll. As a result
of the changes the test could fail for the valid generated code.
These changes fixes the test to check only instructions we would expect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28159
llvm-svn: 291678
When choosing the best successor for a block, ordinarily we would have preferred
a block that preserves the CFG unless there is a strong probability the other
direction. For small blocks that can be duplicated we now skip that requirement
as well.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27742
llvm-svn: 291609
If a vector index is out of bounds, the result is supposed to be
undefined but is not undefined behavior. Change the legalization
for indexing the vector on the stack so that an out of bounds
index does not create an out of bounds memory access.
llvm-svn: 291604
GNU as rejects input where .cfi_sections is used after .cfi_startproc,
if the new section differs from the old. Adjust our output to always
emit .cfi_sections before the first .cfi_startproc to minimize necessary
code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28011
llvm-svn: 290817
Replace the use of grep with FileCheck. Tidy up some of the tests. A
few of the tests have been left as weak as previously, though some have
been made more stringent.
llvm-svn: 290616
1.Fix pessimized case in FIXME.
2.Add tests for it.
3.The canonicalisation on shifts results in different sequence for
tests of machine-licm.Correct some check lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27916
llvm-svn: 290410
This patch renumbers the metadata nodes in debug info testcases after
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769. This is a separate patch because it
causes so much churn. This was implemented with a python script that
pipes the testcases through llvm-as - | llvm-dis - and then goes
through the original and new output side-by side to insert all
comments at a close-enough location.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27765
llvm-svn: 290292
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D6678 for the history of
isExtractSubvectorCheap. Essentially the same considerations apply
to ARM.
This temporarily breaks the formation of vpadd/vpaddl in certain cases;
AddCombineToVPADDL essentially assumes that we won't form VUZP shuffles.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D27779 for followup fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27774
llvm-svn: 290198
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades and a change
to the Bitcode record for DIGlobalVariable, that makes upgrading the
old format unambiguous also for variables without DIExpressions.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 290153
Just the minimal support to get it working at the moment.
Includes checks for test/CodeGen/ARM/vzip.ll as an example.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27829
llvm-svn: 290144
This allows lowering i8 and i16 arguments if they can fit in the registers. Note
that the lowering is incomplete - ABI extensions are handled in a subsequent
patch.
(Last part of)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27704
llvm-svn: 290106
Teach the instruction selector and legalizer that it's ok to have adds with 8 or
16-bit integers.
This is the second part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D27704
llvm-svn: 290105
Teach the instruction selector that it's ok to copy small values from physical
registers.
First part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D27704
llvm-svn: 290104
This adds support for lowering more than 4 arguments (although still i32 only).
It uses the handleAssignments / ValueHandler infrastructure extracted from
the AArch64 backend in r288658.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27195
llvm-svn: 290098
Add support for selecting simple G_LOAD and G_FRAME_INDEX instructions (32-bit
scalars only). This will be useful for functions that need to pass arguments on
the stack.
First part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D27195.
llvm-svn: 290096
This reverts commit 289920 (again).
I forgot to implement a Bitcode upgrade for the case where a DIGlobalVariable
has not DIExpression. Unfortunately it is not possible to safely upgrade
these variables without adding a flag to the bitcode record indicating which
version they are.
My plan of record is to roll the planned follow-up patch that adds a
unit: field to DIGlobalVariable into this patch before recomitting.
This way we only need one Bitcode upgrade for both changes (with a
version flag in the bitcode record to safely distinguish the record
formats).
Sorry for the churn!
llvm-svn: 289982
Currently, there are substantial problems forming vld1_dup even if the
VDUP survives legalization. The lack of an actual node
leads to terrible results: not only can we not form post-increment vld1_dup
instructions, but we form scalar pre-increment and post-increment
loads which force the loaded value into a GPR. This patch fixes that
by combining the vdup+load into an ARMISD node before DAGCombine
messes it up.
Also includes a crash fix for vld2_dup (see testcase @vld2dupi8_postinc_variable).
Recommiting with fix to avoid forming vld1dup if the type of the load
doesn't match the type of the vdup (see
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31404).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27694
llvm-svn: 289972
Add the minimal support necessary to select a function that returns the sum of
two i32 values.
This includes some support for argument/return lowering of i32 values through
registers, as well as the handling of copy and add instructions throughout the
GlobalISel pipeline.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26677
llvm-svn: 289940
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289920
idiom.
r289538: Match load by bytes idiom and fold it into a single load
r289540: Fix a buildbot failure introduced by r289538
r289545: Use more detailed assertion messages in the code ...
r289646: Add a couple of assertions to the load combine code ...
This DAG combine has a bad crash in it that is quite hard to trigger
sadly -- it relies on sneaking code with UB through the SDAG build and
into this particular combine. I've responded to the original commit with
a test case that reproduces it.
However, the code also has other problems that will require substantial
changes to address and so I'm going ahead and reverting it for now. This
should unblock us and perhaps others that are hitting the crash in the
wild and will let a fresh patch with updated approach come in cleanly
afterward.
Sorry for any trouble or disruption!
llvm-svn: 289916
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289902
This is essentially a recommit of r285893, but with a correctness fix. The
problem of the original commit was that this:
bic r5, r7, #31
cbz r5, .LBB2_10
got rewritten into:
lsrs r5, r7, #5
beq .LBB2_10
The result in destination register r5 is not the same and this is incorrect
when r5 is not dead. So this fix includes checking the uses of the AND
destination register. And also, compared to the original commit, some regression
tests didn't need changing anymore because of this extra check.
For completeness, this was the original commit message:
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more
efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of
set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and
set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and
set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit
into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to
MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and
branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower
zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two
16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a
complex immediate, so is also a win.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27761
llvm-svn: 289794
This implements execute-only support for ARM code generation, which
prevents the compiler from generating data accesses to code sections.
The following changes are involved:
* Add the CodeGen option "-arm-execute-only" to the ARM code generator.
* Add the clang flag "-mexecute-only" as well as the GCC-compatible
alias "-mpure-code" to enable this option.
* When enabled, literal pools are replaced with MOVW/MOVT instructions,
with VMOV used in addition for floating-point literals. As the MOVT
instruction is required, execute-only support is only available in
Thumb mode for targets supporting ARMv8-M baseline or Thumb2.
* Jump tables are placed in data sections when in execute-only mode.
* The execute-only text section is assigned section ID 0, and is
marked as unreadable with the SHF_ARM_PURECODE flag with symbol 'y'.
This also overrides selection of ELF sections for globals.
llvm-svn: 289784
Given that INSERT_VECTOR_ELT operates on D registers anyway, combining
64-bit vectors into a 128-bit vector is basically free. Therefore, try
to split BUILD_VECTOR nodes before giving up and lowering them to a series
of INSERT_VECTOR_ELT instructions. Sometimes this allows dramatically
better lowerings; see testcases for examples. Inspired by similar code
in the x86 backend for AVX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27624
llvm-svn: 289706
Currently, there are substantial problems forming vld1_dup even if the
VDUP survives legalization. The lack of an actual node
leads to terrible results: not only can we not form post-increment vld1_dup
instructions, but we form scalar pre-increment and post-increment
loads which force the loaded value into a GPR. This patch fixes that
by combining the vdup+load into an ARMISD node before DAGCombine
messes it up.
Also includes a crash fix for vld2_dup (see testcase @vld2dupi8_postinc_variable).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27694
llvm-svn: 289703
Retrying after fixing after removing load-store factoring through
token factors in favor of improved token factor operand pruning
Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search which only checks for parallel stores
through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner as the separation of
non-interfering loads/stores from the store-merging logic.
Whem merging stores, search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited. This improves the quality of the
output SelectionDAG and generally the output CodeGen (with some
exceptions).
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the the chain aggregation in the merged stores across
code paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seemed sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable. Some tests relying on the order were changed to use
volatile memory operations
Noteworthy tests:
CodeGen/AArch64/argument-blocks.ll -
It's not entirely clear what the test_varargs_stackalign test is
supposed to be asserting, but the new code looks right.
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-memset-inline.lli -
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-stur.ll -
CodeGen/ARM/memset-inline.ll -
The backend now generates *worse* code due to store merging
succeeding, as we do do a 16-byte constant-zero store efficiently.
CodeGen/AArch64/merge-store.ll -
Improved, but there still seems to be an extraneous vector insert
from an element to itself?
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll -
Worse code emitted in this case, due to the improved store->load
forwarding.
CodeGen/X86/dag-merge-fast-accesses.ll -
CodeGen/X86/MergeConsecutiveStores.ll -
CodeGen/X86/stores-merging.ll -
CodeGen/Mips/load-store-left-right.ll -
Restored correct merging of non-aligned stores
CodeGen/AMDGPU/promote-alloca-stored-pointer-value.ll -
Improved. Correctly merges buffer_store_dword calls
CodeGen/AMDGPU/si-triv-disjoint-mem-access.ll -
Improved. Sidesteps loading a stored value and
merges two stores
CodeGen/X86/pr18023.ll -
This test has been removed, as it was asserting incorrect
behavior. Non-volatile stores *CAN* be moved past volatile loads,
and now are.
CodeGen/X86/vector-idiv.ll -
CodeGen/X86/vector-lzcnt-128.ll -
It's basically impossible to tell what these tests are actually
testing. But, looks like the code got better due to the memory
operations being recognized as non-aliasing.
CodeGen/X86/win32-eh.ll -
Both loads of the securitycookie are now merged.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight, nhaehnle
Subscribers: wdng, nhaehnle, nemanjai, arsenm, weimingz, niravd, RKSimon, aemerson, qcolombet, dsanders, resistor, tstellarAMD, t.p.northover, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14834
llvm-svn: 289659
Summary:
This patch aims to generalize matching of the strided store accesses to more general masks.
The more general rule is to have consecutive accesses based on the stride:
[x, y, ... z, x+1, y+1, ...z+1, x+2, y+2, ...z+2, ...]
All elements in the masks need not form a contiguous space, there may be gaps.
As before, undefs are allowed and filled in with adjacent element loads.
Reviewers: HaoLiu, mssimpso
Subscribers: mkuper, delena, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23646
llvm-svn: 289573
Match a pattern where a wide type scalar value is loaded by several narrow loads and combined by shifts and ors. Fold it into a single load or a load and a bswap if the targets supports it.
Assuming little endian target:
i8 *a = ...
i32 val = a[0] | (a[1] << 8) | (a[2] << 16) | (a[3] << 24)
=>
i32 val = *((i32)a)
i8 *a = ...
i32 val = (a[0] << 24) | (a[1] << 16) | (a[2] << 8) | a[3]
=>
i32 val = BSWAP(*((i32)a))
This optimization was discussed on llvm-dev some time ago in "Load combine pass" thread. We came to the conclusion that we want to do this transformation late in the pipeline because in presence of atomic loads load widening is irreversible transformation and it might hinder other optimizations.
Eventually we'd like to support folding patterns like this where the offset has a variable and a constant part:
i32 val = a[i] | (a[i + 1] << 8) | (a[i + 2] << 16) | (a[i + 3] << 24)
Matching the pattern above is easier at SelectionDAG level since address reassociation has already happened and the fact that the loads are adjacent is clear. Understanding that these loads are adjacent at IR level would have involved looking through geps/zexts/adds while looking at the addresses.
The general scheme is to match OR expressions by recursively calculating the origin of individual bits which constitute the resulting OR value. If all the OR bits come from memory verify that they are adjacent and match with little or big endian encoding of a wider value. If so and the load of the wider type (and bswap if needed) is allowed by the target generate a load and a bswap if needed.
Reviewed By: hfinkel, RKSimon, filcab
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26149
llvm-svn: 289538
Summary:
This change adds some verification in the IR verifier around struct path
TBAA metadata.
Other than some basic sanity checks (e.g. we get constant integers where
we expect constant integers), this checks:
- That by the time an struct access tuple `(base-type, offset)` is
"reduced" to a scalar base type, the offset is `0`. For instance, in
C++ you can't start from, say `("struct-a", 16)`, and end up with
`("int", 4)` -- by the time the base type is `"int"`, the offset
better be zero. In particular, a variant of this invariant is needed
for `llvm::getMostGenericTBAA` to be correct.
- That there are no cycles in a struct path.
- That struct type nodes have their offsets listed in an ascending
order.
- That when generating the struct access path, you eventually reach the
access type listed in the tbaa tag node.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, chandlerc, reames, mehdi_amini, manmanren
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26438
llvm-svn: 289402
test/CodeGen/MIR should contain tests that intent to test the MIR
printing or parsing. Tests that test something else should be in
test/CodeGen/TargetName even when they are written in .mir.
As a rule of thumb, only tests using "llc -run-pass none" should be in
test/CodeGen/MIR.
llvm-svn: 289254
Retrying after fixing overly aggressive load-store forwarding optimization.
Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search which only checks for parallel stores
through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner as the separation of
non-interfering loads/stores from the store-merging logic.
Whem merging stores, search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited. This improves the quality of the
output SelectionDAG and generally the output CodeGen (with some
exceptions).
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the the chain aggregation in the merged stores across
code paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seemed sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable. Some tests relying on the order were changed to use
volatile memory operations
Noteworthy tests:
CodeGen/AArch64/argument-blocks.ll -
It's not entirely clear what the test_varargs_stackalign test is
supposed to be asserting, but the new code looks right.
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-memset-inline.lli -
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-stur.ll -
CodeGen/ARM/memset-inline.ll -
The backend now generates *worse* code due to store merging
succeeding, as we do do a 16-byte constant-zero store efficiently.
CodeGen/AArch64/merge-store.ll -
Improved, but there still seems to be an extraneous vector insert
from an element to itself?
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll -
Worse code emitted in this case, due to the improved store->load
forwarding.
CodeGen/X86/dag-merge-fast-accesses.ll -
CodeGen/X86/MergeConsecutiveStores.ll -
CodeGen/X86/stores-merging.ll -
CodeGen/Mips/load-store-left-right.ll -
Restored correct merging of non-aligned stores
CodeGen/AMDGPU/promote-alloca-stored-pointer-value.ll -
Improved. Correctly merges buffer_store_dword calls
CodeGen/AMDGPU/si-triv-disjoint-mem-access.ll -
Improved. Sidesteps loading a stored value and
merges two stores
CodeGen/X86/pr18023.ll -
This test has been removed, as it was asserting incorrect
behavior. Non-volatile stores *CAN* be moved past volatile loads,
and now are.
CodeGen/X86/vector-idiv.ll -
CodeGen/X86/vector-lzcnt-128.ll -
It's basically impossible to tell what these tests are actually
testing. But, looks like the code got better due to the memory
operations being recognized as non-aliasing.
CodeGen/X86/win32-eh.ll -
Both loads of the securitycookie are now merged.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight, nhaehnle
Subscribers: wdng, nhaehnle, nemanjai, arsenm, weimingz, niravd, RKSimon, aemerson, qcolombet, dsanders, resistor, tstellarAMD, t.p.northover, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14834
llvm-svn: 289221
clang -target arm deprecated-asm.s -c
deprecated-asm.s:30:9: warning: use of SP or PC in the list is deprecated
stmia r4!, {r12-r14}
We have to have an option what can disable it.
Patched by Yin Ma!
Reviewers: joey, echristo, weimingz
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27219
llvm-svn: 288734
This prevents erratic stepping behavior as well as incorrect source attribution
for sample profiling.
Reviewers: dblakie
Subscribers: llvm-commit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27290
llvm-svn: 288442
Summary:
This patch fixes comparison of 64-bit atomic with its expected value in CMP_SWAP_64 expansion.
Currently, the low words are compared with CMP, while the high words are compared with SBC. SBC expects the carry flag to be set if CMP detects a difference. CMP might leave the carry unset for unequal arguments though if the first one is >= than the second. This might cause the comparison logic to detect false equality.
Example of the broken C++ code:
```
std::atomic<long long> at(2);
long long ll = 1;
std::atomic_compare_exchange_strong(&at, &ll, 3);
```
Even though the atomic `at` and the expected value `ll` are not equal and `atomic_compare_exchange_strong` returns `false`, `at` is changed to 3.
The patch replaces SBC with CMPEQ.
Reviewers: t.p.northover
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits, asl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27315
llvm-svn: 288433
Summary:
Variadic functions can be treated in the same way as normal functions
with respect to the number and types of parameters.
Reviewers: grosbach, olista01, t.p.northover, rengolin
Subscribers: javed.absar, aemerson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26748
llvm-svn: 287219
One half of the shifts obviously needed conditional selection based on whether
the shift amount is more than 32-bits, but leaving the other half as the
natural shift isn't acceptable either: it's undefined behaviour to shift a
32-bit value by more than 31.
llvm-svn: 287149
This patch adds the Sched Machine Model for Cortex-R52.
Details of the pipeline and descriptions are in comments
in file ARMScheduleR52.td included in this patch.
Reviewers: rengolin, jmolloy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26500
llvm-svn: 286949
For example we were producing
push {r8, r10, r11, r4, r5, r7, lr}
This is misleading (r4, r5 and r7 are actually pushed before the rest), and
other components (stack folding recently) often forget to deal with the extra
complexity coming from the different order, leading to miscompiles. Finally, we
warn about our own code in -no-integrated-as mode without this, which is really
not a good idea.
Fixed usage of std::sort so that we (hopefully) use instantiations that
actually exist in GCC 4.8.
llvm-svn: 286881
For example we were producing
push {r8, r10, r11, r4, r5, r7, lr}
This is misleading (r4, r5 and r7 are actually pushed before the rest), and
other components (stack folding recently) often forget to deal with the extra
complexity coming from the different order, leading to miscompiles. Finally, we
warn about our own code in -no-integrated-as mode without this, which is really
not a good idea.
llvm-svn: 286866
This is a partial revert of r244615 (http://reviews.llvm.org/D11942),
which caused a major regression in debug info quality.
Turning the artificial __MergedGlobal symbols into private symbols
(l__MergedGlobal) means that the linker will not include them in the
symbol table of the final executable. Without a symbol table entry
dsymutil is not be able to process the debug info for any of the
merged globals and thus drops the debug info for all of them.
This patch is enabling the old behavior for all MachO targets while
leaving all other targets unaffected.
rdar://problem/29160481
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26531
llvm-svn: 286607
addSchedBarrierDeps() is supposed to add use operands to the ExitSU
node. The current implementation adds uses for calls/barrier instruction
and the MBB live-outs in all other cases. The use
operands of conditional jump instructions were missed.
Also added code to macrofusion to set the latencies between nodes to
zero to avoid problems with the fusing nodes lingering around in the
pending list now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25140
llvm-svn: 286544
When the base register (register pointing to the jump table) is the PC, we expect the jump table to directly follow the jump sequence with no intervening padding.
If there is intervening padding, the calculated offsets will not be correct. One solution would be to account for any padding in the emitted LDRB instruction, but at the moment we don't support emitting MCExprs for the load offset.
In the meantime, it's correct and only a slight amount worse to just move the padding up, from just before the jump table to just before the jump instruction sequence. We can do that by emitting code alignment before the jump sequence, as we know the number of instructions in the sequence is always 4.
llvm-svn: 286107
This handles the last case of the builtin function calls that we would
generate code which differed from Microsoft's ABI. Rather than
generating a call to `__pow{d,s}i2` we now promote the parameter to a
float or double and invoke `powf` or `pow` instead.
Addresses PR30825!
llvm-svn: 286082
Summary: ARMv6m supports dmb etc fench instructions but not ldrex/strex etc. So for some atomic load/store, LLVM should inline instructions instead of lowering to __sync_ calls.
Reviewers: rengolin, efriedma, t.p.northover, jmolloy
Subscribers: efriedma, aemerson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26120
llvm-svn: 285969
This recommits r281323, which was backed out for two reasons. One, a selfhost failure, and two, it apparently caused Chromium failures. Actually, the latter was a red herring. The log has expired from the former, but I suspect that was a red herring too (actually caused by another problematic patch of mine). Therefore reapplying, and will watch the bots like a hawk.
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.
llvm-svn: 285893
[Reapplying r284580 and r285917 with fix and testing to ensure emitted jump tables for Thumb-1 have 4-byte alignment]
The TBB and TBH instructions in Thumb-2 allow jump tables to be compressed into sequences of bytes or shorts respectively. These instructions do not exist in Thumb-1, however it is possible to synthesize them out of a sequence of other instructions.
It turns out this sequence is so short that it's almost never a lose for performance and is ALWAYS a significant win for code size.
TBB example:
Before: lsls r0, r0, #2 After: add r0, pc
adr r1, .LJTI0_0 ldrb r0, [r0, #6]
ldr r0, [r0, r1] lsls r0, r0, #1
mov pc, r0 add pc, r0
=> No change in prologue code size or dynamic instruction count. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 4.
The only case that can increase dynamic instruction count is the TBH case:
Before: lsls r0, r4, #2 After: lsls r4, r4, #1
adr r1, .LJTI0_0 add r4, pc
ldr r0, [r0, r1] ldrh r4, [r4, #6]
mov pc, r0 lsls r4, r4, #1
add pc, r4
=> 1 more instruction in prologue. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 2.
So there is an argument that this should be disabled when optimizing for performance (and a TBH needs to be generated). I'm not so sure about that in practice, because on small cores with Thumb-1 performance is often tied to code size. But I'm willing to turn it off when optimizing for performance if people want (also note that TBHs are fairly rare in practice!)
llvm-svn: 285690
Generate the slowest possible codepath for noopt CodeGen. Even trying to be
clever with the negated jump can cause out-of-range jumps. Use a wide branch
instead. Although the code is modelled simplistically, the later optimizations
would recombine the branching into `cbz` if possible. This re-enables the
previous optimization as well as hopefully gives us working code in all cases.
Addresses PR30356!
llvm-svn: 285649
The Windows ARM target expects the compiler to emit a division-by-zero check.
The check would use the form of:
cmp r?, #0
cbz .Ltrap
b .Lbody
.Lbody:
...
.Ltrap:
udf #249 @ __brkdiv0
This works great most of the time. However, if the body of the function is
greater than 127 bytes, the branch target limitation of cbz becomes an issue.
This occurs in the unoptimized code generation cases sometimes (like in
compiler-rt).
Since this is a matter of correctness, possibly pay a small penalty instead. We
now form this slightly differently:
cbnz .Lbody
udf #249 @ __brkdiv0
.Lbody:
...
The positive case is through the branch instead of being the next instruction.
However, because of the basic block layout, the negated branch is going to be
a short distance always (2 bytes away, after the inserted __brkdiv0).
The new t__brkdiv0 instruction is required to explicitly mark the instruction as
a terminator as the generic UDF instruction is not a terminator.
Addresses PR30532!
llvm-svn: 285312
UMAAL is a DSP instruction and it is not available on thumbv7m
(Cortex-M3) and thumbv6m (Cortex-M0+1) targets. Also fix wrong
CHECK prefix in longMAC.ll test.
Patch by Vadzim Dambrouski.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25890
llvm-svn: 285278
It would be a very nice invariant to rely on, but unfortunately it doesn't
necessarily hold (and the causes of mis-sorted reglists appear to be quite
varied) so to be robust the frame lowering code can't assume that the first
register in the list is also the first one that actually gets pushed.
Should fix an issue where we were turning something like:
push {r8, r4, r7, lr}
sub sp, #24
into nonsense like:
push {r2, r3, r4, r5, r6, r7, r8, r4, r7, lr}
llvm-svn: 285232
Summary:
The original heuristic to break critical edge during machine sink is relatively conservertive: when there is only one instruction sinkable to the critical edge, it is likely that the machine sink pass will not break the critical edge. This leads to many speculative instructions executed at runtime. However, with profile info, we could model the splitting benefits: if the critical edge has 50% taken rate, it would always be beneficial to split the critical edge to avoid the speculated runtime instructions. This patch uses profile to guide critical edge splitting in machine sink pass.
The performance impact on speccpu2006 on Intel sandybridge machines:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 25.3 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 45.96 -0.10%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 41.97 +1.49%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 36.83 -0.96%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 23.81 +0.32%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.17 +0.34%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 48.13 +0.69%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.45 +3.25%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 21.35 -2.06%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 36.02 -2.39%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.7 -0.17%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 22.9 +0.52%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.42 -0.54%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 39.59 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.98 -0.00%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.52 -0.18%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 28.26 +0.02%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 55.44 +3.74%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.67 -0.39%
geometric mean +0.20%
Manually checked 473 and 471 to verify the diff is in the noise range.
Reviewers: rengolin, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24818
llvm-svn: 284757
This code crashed on funclet-style EH instructions such as catchpad,
catchswitch, and cleanuppad. Just treat all EH pad instructions
equivalently and avoid merging the globals they reference through any
use.
llvm-svn: 284633
Use mask and negate for legalization of i1 source type with SIGN_EXTEND_INREG.
With the mask, this should be no worse than 2 shifts. The mask can be eliminated
in some cases, so that should be better than 2 shifts.
This change exposed some missing folds related to negation:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284239https://reviews.llvm.org/rL284395
There may be others, so please let me know if you see any regressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25485
llvm-svn: 284611
The TBB and TBH instructions in Thumb-2 allow jump tables to be compressed into sequences of bytes or shorts respectively. These instructions do not exist in Thumb-1, however it is possible to synthesize them out of a sequence of other instructions.
It turns out this sequence is so short that it's almost never a lose for performance and is ALWAYS a significant win for code size.
TBB example:
Before: lsls r0, r0, #2 After: add r0, pc
adr r1, .LJTI0_0 ldrb r0, [r0, #6]
ldr r0, [r0, r1] lsls r0, r0, #1
mov pc, r0 add pc, r0
=> No change in prologue code size or dynamic instruction count. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 4.
The only case that can increase dynamic instruction count is the TBH case:
Before: lsls r0, r4, #2 After: lsls r4, r4, #1
adr r1, .LJTI0_0 add r4, pc
ldr r0, [r0, r1] ldrh r4, [r4, #6]
mov pc, r0 lsls r4, r4, #1
add pc, r4
=> 1 more instruction in prologue. Jump table shrunk by a factor of 2.
So there is an argument that this should be disabled when optimizing for performance (and a TBH needs to be generated). I'm not so sure about that in practice, because on small cores with Thumb-1 performance is often tied to code size. But I'm willing to turn it off when optimizing for performance if people want (also note that TBHs are fairly rare in practice!)
llvm-svn: 284580
This renames the function for checking FP function attribute values and also
adds more build attribute tests (which are in separate files because build
attributes are set per file).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25625
llvm-svn: 284571
Summary:
The original heuristic to break critical edge during machine sink is relatively conservertive: when there is only one instruction sinkable to the critical edge, it is likely that the machine sink pass will not break the critical edge. This leads to many speculative instructions executed at runtime. However, with profile info, we could model the splitting benefits: if the critical edge has 50% taken rate, it would always be beneficial to split the critical edge to avoid the speculated runtime instructions. This patch uses profile to guide critical edge splitting in machine sink pass.
The performance impact on speccpu2006 on Intel sandybridge machines:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 25.3 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 45.96 -0.10%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 41.97 +1.49%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 36.83 -0.96%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 23.81 +0.32%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.17 +0.34%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 48.13 +0.69%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.45 +3.25%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 21.35 -2.06%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 36.02 -2.39%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.7 -0.17%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 22.9 +0.52%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.42 -0.54%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 39.59 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.98 -0.00%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.52 -0.18%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 28.26 +0.02%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 55.44 +3.74%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.67 -0.39%
geometric mean +0.20%
Manually checked 473 and 471 to verify the diff is in the noise range.
Reviewers: rengolin, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24818
llvm-svn: 284545
Summary:
The original heuristic to break critical edge during machine sink is relatively conservertive: when there is only one instruction sinkable to the critical edge, it is likely that the machine sink pass will not break the critical edge. This leads to many speculative instructions executed at runtime. However, with profile info, we could model the splitting benefits: if the critical edge has 50% taken rate, it would always be beneficial to split the critical edge to avoid the speculated runtime instructions. This patch uses profile to guide critical edge splitting in machine sink pass.
The performance impact on speccpu2006 on Intel sandybridge machines:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 25.3 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 45.96 -0.10%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 41.97 +1.49%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 36.83 -0.96%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 23.81 +0.32%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.17 +0.34%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 48.13 +0.69%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.45 +3.25%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 21.35 -2.06%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 36.02 -2.39%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.7 -0.17%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 22.9 +0.52%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.42 -0.54%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 39.59 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.98 -0.00%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.52 -0.18%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 28.26 +0.02%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 55.44 +3.74%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.67 -0.39%
geometric mean +0.20%
Manually checked 473 and 471 to verify the diff is in the noise range.
Reviewers: rengolin, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24818
llvm-svn: 284541
The custom lowering is pretty straightforward: basically, just AND
together the two halves of a <4 x i32> compare.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25713
llvm-svn: 284536
This patch assigns cost of the scaling used in addressing for Cortex-R52.
On Cortex-R52 a negated register offset takes longer than a non-negated
register offset, in a register-offset addressing mode.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D25670
Reviewer: jmolloy
llvm-svn: 284460
This patch adds simplified support for tail calls on ARM with XRay instrumentation.
Known issue: compiled with generic flags: `-O3 -g -fxray-instrument -Wall
-std=c++14 -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections` (this list doesn't include my
specific flags like --target=armv7-linux-gnueabihf etc.), the following program
#include <cstdio>
#include <cassert>
#include <xray/xray_interface.h>
[[clang::xray_always_instrument]] void __attribute__ ((noinline)) fC() {
std::printf("In fC()\n");
}
[[clang::xray_always_instrument]] void __attribute__ ((noinline)) fB() {
std::printf("In fB()\n");
fC();
}
[[clang::xray_always_instrument]] void __attribute__ ((noinline)) fA() {
std::printf("In fA()\n");
fB();
}
// Avoid infinite recursion in case the logging function is instrumented (so calls logging
// function again).
[[clang::xray_never_instrument]] void simplyPrint(int32_t functionId, XRayEntryType xret)
{
printf("XRay: functionId=%d type=%d.\n", int(functionId), int(xret));
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
__xray_set_handler(simplyPrint);
printf("Patching...\n");
__xray_patch();
fA();
printf("Unpatching...\n");
__xray_unpatch();
fA();
return 0;
}
gives the following output:
Patching...
XRay: functionId=3 type=0.
In fA()
XRay: functionId=3 type=1.
XRay: functionId=2 type=0.
In fB()
XRay: functionId=2 type=1.
XRay: functionId=1 type=0.
XRay: functionId=1 type=1.
In fC()
Unpatching...
In fA()
In fB()
In fC()
So for function fC() the exit sled seems to be called too much before function
exit: before printing In fC().
Debugging shows that the above happens because printf from fC is also called as
a tail call. So first the exit sled of fC is executed, and only then printf is
jumped into. So it seems we can't do anything about this with the current
approach (i.e. within the simplification described in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23988 ).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25030
llvm-svn: 284456
SelectionDAG::getConstantPool will automatically determine an appropriate alignment if one is not specified. It does this by querying the type's preferred alignment. This can end up creating quite a lot of padding when the preferred alignment for vectors is 128.
In optimize-for-size mode, it makes sense to instead query the ABI type alignment which is often smaller and causes less padding.
llvm-svn: 284381
Retrying after upstream changes.
Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search which only checks for parallel stores
through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner as the separation of
non-interfering loads/stores from the store-merging logic.
Whem merging stores, search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited. This improves the quality of the
output SelectionDAG and generally the output CodeGen (with some
exceptions).
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the the chain aggregation in the merged stores across
code paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seemed sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable. Some tests relying on the order were changed to use
volatile memory operations
Noteworthy tests:
CodeGen/AArch64/argument-blocks.ll -
It's not entirely clear what the test_varargs_stackalign test is
supposed to be asserting, but the new code looks right.
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-memset-inline.lli -
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-stur.ll -
CodeGen/ARM/memset-inline.ll -
The backend now generates *worse* code due to store merging
succeeding, as we do do a 16-byte constant-zero store efficiently.
CodeGen/AArch64/merge-store.ll -
Improved, but there still seems to be an extraneous vector insert
from an element to itself?
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll -
Worse code emitted in this case, due to the improved store->load
forwarding.
CodeGen/X86/dag-merge-fast-accesses.ll -
CodeGen/X86/MergeConsecutiveStores.ll -
CodeGen/X86/stores-merging.ll -
CodeGen/Mips/load-store-left-right.ll -
Restored correct merging of non-aligned stores
CodeGen/AMDGPU/promote-alloca-stored-pointer-value.ll -
Improved. Correctly merges buffer_store_dword calls
CodeGen/AMDGPU/si-triv-disjoint-mem-access.ll -
Improved. Sidesteps loading a stored value and
merges two stores
CodeGen/X86/pr18023.ll -
This test has been removed, as it was asserting incorrect
behavior. Non-volatile stores *CAN* be moved past volatile loads,
and now are.
CodeGen/X86/vector-idiv.ll -
CodeGen/X86/vector-lzcnt-128.ll -
It's basically impossible to tell what these tests are actually
testing. But, looks like the code got better due to the memory
operations being recognized as non-aliasing.
CodeGen/X86/win32-eh.ll -
Both loads of the securitycookie are now merged.
CodeGen/AMDGPU/vgpr-spill-emergency-stack-slot-compute.ll -
This test appears to work but no longer exhibits the spill behavior.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight, nhaehnle
Subscribers: wdng, nhaehnle, nemanjai, arsenm, weimingz, niravd, RKSimon, aemerson, qcolombet, dsanders, resistor, tstellarAMD, t.p.northover, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14834
llvm-svn: 284151
This patch assigns cost of the scaling used in addressing.
On many ARM cores, a negated register offset takes longer than a
non-negated register offset, in a register-offset addressing mode.
For instance:
LDR R0, [R1, R2 LSL #2]
LDR R0, [R1, -R2 LSL #2]
Above, (1) takes less cycles than (2).
By assigning appropriate scaling factor cost, we enable the LLVM
to make the right trade-offs in the optimization and code-selection phase.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24857
Reviewers: jmolloy, rengolin
llvm-svn: 284127
- Use storage class C_STAT for 'PrivateLinkage' The storage class for
PrivateLinkage should equal to the Internal Linkage.
- Set 'PrivateGlobalPrefix' from "L" to ".L" for MM_WinCOFF (includes
x86_64) MM_WinCOFF has empty GlobalPrefix '\0' so PrivateGlobalPrefix
"L" may conflict to the normal symbol name starting with 'L'.
Based on a patch by Han Sangjin! Manually updated test cases.
llvm-svn: 284096
This combiner breaks debug experience and should not be run when optimizations are disabled.
For example:
int main() {
int j = 0;
j += 2;
if (j == 2)
return 0;
return 5;
}
When debugging this code compiled in /O0, it should be valid to break at line "j+=2;" and edit the value of j. It should change the return value of the function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19268
llvm-svn: 284014
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well. Issue was worklist/scheduling/taildup issue in layout.
Issue from 2nd rollback fixed, with 2 additional tests. Issue was
tail merging/loop info/tail-duplication causing issue with loops that share
a header block.
Issue with early tail-duplication of blocks that branch to a fallthrough
predecessor fixed with test case: tail-dup-branch-to-fallthrough.ll
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283934
Currently, the Int_eh_sjlj_dispatchsetup intrinsic is marked as
clobbering all registers, including floating-point registers that may
not be present on the target. This is technically true, as we could get
linked against code that does use the FP registers, but that will not
actually work, as the soft-float code cannot save and restore the FP
registers. SjLj exception handling can only work correctly if either all
or none of the code is built for a target with FP registers. Therefore,
we can assume that, when Int_eh_sjlj_dispatchsetup is compiled for a
soft-float target, it is only going to be linked against other
soft-float code, and so only clobbers the general-purpose registers.
This allows us to check that no non-savable registers are clobbered when
generating the prologue/epilogue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25180
llvm-svn: 283866
This reverts commit r283842.
test/CodeGen/X86/tail-dup-repeat.ll causes and llc crash with our
internal testing. I'll share a link with you.
llvm-svn: 283857
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well. Issue was worklist/scheduling/taildup issue in layout.
Issue from 2nd rollback fixed, with 2 additional tests. Issue was
tail merging/loop info/tail-duplication causing issue with loops that share
a header block.
Issue with early tail-duplication of blocks that branch to a fallthrough
predecessor fixed with test case: tail-dup-branch-to-fallthrough.ll
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283842
The instructions VLDM/VSTM can only access word-aligned memory
locations and produce alignment fault if the condition is not met.
The compiler currently generates VLDM/VSTM for v2f64 load/store
regardless the alignment of the memory access. Instead, if a v2f64
load/store is not word-aligned, the compiler should generate
VLD1/VST1. For each non double-word-aligned VLD1/VST1, a VREV
instruction should be generated when targeting Big Endian.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25281
llvm-svn: 283763
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well. Issue was worklist/scheduling/taildup issue in layout.
Issue from 2nd rollback fixed, with 2 additional tests. Issue was
tail merging/loop info/tail-duplication causing issue with loops that share
a header block.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283619
The code used llvm basic block predecessors to decided where to insert phi
nodes. Instruction selection can and will liberally insert new machine basic
block predecessors. There is not a guaranteed one-to-one mapping from pred.
llvm basic blocks and machine basic blocks.
Therefore the current approach does not work as it assumes we can mark
predecessor machine basic block as needing a copy, and needs to know the set of
all predecessor machine basic blocks to decide when to insert phis.
Instead of computing the swifterror vregs as we select instructions, propagate
them at the end of instruction selection when the MBB CFG is complete.
When an instruction needs a swifterror vreg and we don't know the value yet,
generate a new vreg and remember this "upward exposed" use, and reconcile this
at the end of instruction selection.
This will only happen if the target supports promoting swifterror parameters to
registers and the swifterror attribute is used.
rdar://28300923
llvm-svn: 283617
Reapplying r283383 after revert in r283442. The additional fix
is a getting rid of a stray space in a function name, in the
refactoring part of the commit.
This avoids falling back to calling out to the GCC rem functions
(__moddi3, __umoddi3) when targeting Windows.
The __rt_div functions have flipped the two arguments compared
to the __aeabi_divmod functions. To match MSVC, we emit a
check for division by zero before actually calling the library
function (even if the library function itself also might do
the same check).
Not all calls to __rt_div functions for division are currently
merged with calls to the same function with the same parameters
for the remainder. This is more wasteful than a div + mls as before,
but avoids calls to __moddi3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25332
llvm-svn: 283550
This reverts commit r283383 because it broke some of the bots:
undefined reference to ` __aeabi_uldivmod'
It affected (at least) clang-cmake-armv7-a15-selfhost,
clang-cmake-armv7-a15-selfhost and clang-native-arm-lnt.
llvm-svn: 283442
Global variables are GlobalValues, so they have explicit alignment. Querying
DataLayout for the alignment was incorrect.
Testcase added.
llvm-svn: 283423
We can work around a shortcoming of FileCheck by using {{\[}} to match a square
bracket before a [[ sequence.
Thanks to Eli Friedman for the heads up!
llvm-svn: 283422
This avoids falling back to calling out to the GCC rem functions
(__moddi3, __umoddi3) when targeting Windows.
The __rt_div functions have flipped the two arguments compared
to the __aeabi_divmod functions. To match MSVC, we emit a
check for division by zero before actually calling the library
function (even if the library function itself also might do
the same check).
Not all calls to __rt_div functions for division are currently
merged with calls to the same function with the same parameters
for the remainder. This is more wasteful than a div + mls as before,
but avoids calls to __moddi3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24076
llvm-svn: 283383
This is not a valid encoding - these instructions cannot do PC-relative addressing.
The underlying problem here is of whitelist in ARMISelDAGToDAG that unwraps ARMISD::Wrappers during addressing-mode selection. This didn't realise TargetConstantPool was actually possible, so didn't handle it.
llvm-svn: 283323
This reverts commit 062ace9764953e9769142c1099281a345f9b6bdc.
Issue with loop info and block removal revealed by polly.
I have a fix for this issue already in another patch, I'll re-roll this
together with that fix, and a test case.
llvm-svn: 283292
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
Issue from previous rollback fixed, and a new test was added for that
case as well.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18226
llvm-svn: 283274
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
llvm-svn: 283164
library call to __aeabi_uidivmod. This is an improved implementation of
r280808, see also D24133, that got reverted because isel was stuck in a loop.
That was caused by the optimisation incorrectly triggering on i64 ints, which
shouldn't happen because there is no 64bit hwdiv support; that put isel's type
legalization and this optimisation in a loop. A native ARM compiler and testing
now shows that this is fixed.
Patch mostly by Pablo Barrio.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25077
llvm-svn: 283098
This addresses PR26055 LiveDebugValues is very slow.
Contrary to the old LiveDebugVariables pass LiveDebugValues currently
doesn't look at the lexical scopes before inserting a DBG_VALUE
intrinsic. This means that we often propagate DBG_VALUEs much further
down than necessary. This is especially noticeable in large C++
functions with many inlined method calls that all use the same
"this"-pointer.
For example, in the following code it makes no sense to propagate the
inlined variable a from the first inlined call to f() into any of the
subsequent basic blocks, because the variable will always be out of
scope:
void sink(int a);
void __attribute((always_inline)) f(int a) { sink(a); }
void foo(int i) {
f(i);
if (i)
f(i);
f(i);
}
This patch reuses the LexicalScopes infrastructure we have for
LiveDebugVariables to take this into account.
The effect on compile time and memory consumption is quite noticeable:
I tested a benchmark that is a large C++ source with an enormous
amount of inlined "this"-pointers that would previously eat >24GiB
(most of them for DBG_VALUE intrinsics) and whose compile time was
dominated by LiveDebugValues. With this patch applied the memory
consumption is 1GiB and 1.7% of the time is spent in LiveDebugValues.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24994
Thanks to Daniel Berlin and Keith Walker for reviewing!
llvm-svn: 282611
Simplify Consecutive Merge Store Candidate Search
Now that address aliasing is much less conservative, push through
simplified store merging search which only checks for parallel stores
through the chain subgraph. This is cleaner as the separation of
non-interfering loads/stores from the store-merging logic.
Whem merging stores, search up the chain through a single load, and
finds all possible stores by looking down from through a load and a
TokenFactor to all stores visited. This improves the quality of the
output SelectionDAG and generally the output CodeGen (with some
exceptions).
Additional Minor Changes:
1. Finishes removing unused AliasLoad code
2. Unifies the the chain aggregation in the merged stores across
code paths
3. Re-add the Store node to the worklist after calling
SimplifyDemandedBits.
4. Increase GatherAllAliasesMaxDepth from 6 to 18. That number is
arbitrary, but seemed sufficient to not cause regressions in
tests.
This finishes the change Matt Arsenault started in r246307 and
jyknight's original patch.
Many tests required some changes as memory operations are now
reorderable. Some tests relying on the order were changed to use
volatile memory operations
Noteworthy tests:
CodeGen/AArch64/argument-blocks.ll -
It's not entirely clear what the test_varargs_stackalign test is
supposed to be asserting, but the new code looks right.
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-memset-inline.lli -
CodeGen/AArch64/arm64-stur.ll -
CodeGen/ARM/memset-inline.ll -
The backend now generates *worse* code due to store merging
succeeding, as we do do a 16-byte constant-zero store efficiently.
CodeGen/AArch64/merge-store.ll -
Improved, but there still seems to be an extraneous vector insert
from an element to itself?
CodeGen/PowerPC/ppc64-align-long-double.ll -
Worse code emitted in this case, due to the improved store->load
forwarding.
CodeGen/X86/dag-merge-fast-accesses.ll -
CodeGen/X86/MergeConsecutiveStores.ll -
CodeGen/X86/stores-merging.ll -
CodeGen/Mips/load-store-left-right.ll -
Restored correct merging of non-aligned stores
CodeGen/AMDGPU/promote-alloca-stored-pointer-value.ll -
Improved. Correctly merges buffer_store_dword calls
CodeGen/AMDGPU/si-triv-disjoint-mem-access.ll -
Improved. Sidesteps loading a stored value and merges two stores
CodeGen/X86/pr18023.ll -
This test has been removed, as it was asserting incorrect
behavior. Non-volatile stores *CAN* be moved past volatile loads,
and now are.
CodeGen/X86/vector-idiv.ll -
CodeGen/X86/vector-lzcnt-128.ll -
It's basically impossible to tell what these tests are actually
testing. But, looks like the code got better due to the memory
operations being recognized as non-aliasing.
CodeGen/X86/win32-eh.ll -
Both loads of the securitycookie are now merged.
CodeGen/AMDGPU/vgpr-spill-emergency-stack-slot-compute.ll -
This test appears to work but no longer exhibits the spill
behavior.
Reviewers: arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, nhaehnle, jyknight
Subscribers: wdng, nhaehnle, nemanjai, arsenm, weimingz, niravd, RKSimon, aemerson, qcolombet, resistor, tstellarAMD, t.p.northover, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14834
llvm-svn: 282600
Variables are sometimes missing their debug location information in
blocks in which the variables should be available. This would occur
when one or more predecessor blocks had not yet been visited by the
routine which propagated the information from predecessor blocks.
This is addressed by only considering predecessor blocks which have
already been visited.
The solution to this problem was suggested by Daniel Berlin on the
LLVM developer mailing list.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24927
llvm-svn: 282506
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
This recommit contains fixes for a nasty bug related to fast-isel fallback - because
fast-isel doesn't know about this optimization, if it runs and emits references to
a string that we inline (because fast-isel fell back to SDAG) we will end up
with an inlined string and also an out-of-line string, and we won't emit the
out-of-line string, causing backend failures.
It also contains fixes for emitting .text relocations which made the sanitizer
bots unhappy.
llvm-svn: 282387
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
This recommit contains fixes for a nasty bug related to fast-isel fallback - because
fast-isel doesn't know about this optimization, if it runs and emits references to
a string that we inline (because fast-isel fell back to SDAG) we will end up
with an inlined string and also an out-of-line string, and we won't emit the
out-of-line string, causing backend failures.
It also contains fixes for emitting .text relocations which made the sanitizer
bots unhappy.
llvm-svn: 282241
ldm and stm instructions always require 4-byte alignment on the pointer, but we
weren't checking this before trying to reduce code-size by replacing a
post-indexed load/store with them. Unfortunately, we were also dropping this
incormation in DAG ISel too, but that's easy enough to fix.
llvm-svn: 281893
This is a port of XRay to ARM 32-bit, without Thumb support yet. The XRay instrumentation support is moving up to AsmPrinter.
This is one of 3 commits to different repositories of XRay ARM port. The other 2 are:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23932 (Clang test)
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23933 (compiler-rt)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23931
llvm-svn: 281878
(and the same for SREM)
This was causing buildbot failures earlier (time outs in the LNT suite).
However, we haven't been able to reproduce this and are suspecting this
was caused by another (reverted) patch.
llvm-svn: 281719
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
This recommit contains fixes for a nasty bug related to fast-isel fallback - because
fast-isel doesn't know about this optimization, if it runs and emits references to
a string that we inline (because fast-isel fell back to SDAG) we will end up
with an inlined string and also an out-of-line string, and we won't emit the
out-of-line string, causing backend failures.
It also contains fixes for emitting .text relocations which made the sanitizer
bots unhappy.
llvm-svn: 281715
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
This recommit contains fixes for a nasty bug related to fast-isel fallback - because
fast-isel doesn't know about this optimization, if it runs and emits references to
a string that we inline (because fast-isel fell back to SDAG) we will end up
with an inlined string and also an out-of-line string, and we won't emit the
out-of-line string, causing backend failures.
llvm-svn: 281604
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
llvm-svn: 281484
Before, only Thumb functions were marked as ".code 16". These
".code x" directives are effective until the next directive of its
kind is encountered. Therefore, in code with interleaved ARM and
Thumb functions, it was possible to declare a function as ARM and
end up with a Thumb function after assembly. A test has been added.
An existing test has also been fixed to take this change into
account.
Reviewers: aschwaighofer, t.p.northover, jmolloy, rengolin
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24337
llvm-svn: 281324
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.
llvm-svn: 281323
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
llvm-svn: 281314
This patch reverses the edge from DIGlobalVariable to GlobalVariable.
This will allow us to more easily preserve debug info metadata when
manipulating global variables.
Fixes PR30362. A program for upgrading test cases is attached to that
bug.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20147
llvm-svn: 281284
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.
llvm-svn: 281215
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
llvm-svn: 281213
Summary:
This test was not testing the intrinsics. A function like this:
define %v4f32 @test_v4f32.floor(%v4f32 %a){
...
%1 = call %v4f32 @llvm.floor.v4f32(%v4f32 %a)
...
}
is transformed into the following assembly:
_test_v4f32.floor: @ @test_v4f32.floor
...
bl _floorf
...
In each function tested, there are two CHECK: one that checked
for the label and another one for the intrinsic that should be used
inside the function (in our case, "floor"). However, although the
first CHECK was matching the label, the second was not matching the
intrinsic, but the second "floor" in the same line as the label.
This is fixed by making the first CHECK match the entire line.
Reviewers: jmolloy, rengolin
Subscribers: rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24398
llvm-svn: 281211
The CMPZ #0 disappears during peepholing, leaving just a tADDi3, tADDi8 or t2ADDri. This avoids having to materialize the expensive negative constant in Thumb-1, and allows a shrinking from a 32-bit CMN to a 16-bit ADDS in Thumb-2.
llvm-svn: 281040
And associated commits, as they broke the Thumb bots.
This reverts commit r280935.
This reverts commit r280891.
This reverts commit r280888.
llvm-svn: 280967
Materializing something like "-3" can be done as 2 instructions:
MOV r0, #3
MVN r0, r0
This has a cost of 2, not 3. It looks like we were already trying to detect this pattern in TII::getIntImmCost(), but were taking the complement of the zero-extended value instead of the sign-extended value which is unlikely to ever produce a number < 256.
There were no tests failing after changing this... :/
llvm-svn: 280928
This reverts commit r280808.
It is possible that this change results in an infinite loop. This
is causing timeouts in some tests on ARM, and a Chromebook bot is
failing.
llvm-svn: 280918
This is a port of XRay to ARM 32-bit, without Thumb support yet. The XRay instrumentation support is moving up to AsmPrinter.
This is one of 3 commits to different repositories of XRay ARM port. The other 2 are:
1. https://reviews.llvm.org/D23932 (Clang test)
2. https://reviews.llvm.org/D23933 (compiler-rt)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23931
llvm-svn: 280888
Summary:
This saves a library call to __aeabi_uidivmod. However, the
processor must feature hardware division in order to benefit from
the transformation.
Reviewers: scott-0, jmolloy, compnerd, rengolin
Subscribers: t.p.northover, compnerd, aemerson, rengolin, samparker, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24133
llvm-svn: 280808
This is a Windows ARM specific issue. If the code path in the if conversion
ends up using a relocation which will form a IMAGE_REL_ARM_MOV32T, we end up
with a bundle to ensure that the mov.w/mov.t pair is not split up. This is
normally fine, however, if the branch is also predicated, then we end up trying
to predicate the bundle.
For now, report a bundle as being unpredicatable. Although this is false, this
would trigger a failure case previously anyways, so this is no worse. That is,
there should not be any code which would previously have been if converted and
predicated which would not be now.
Under certain circumstances, it may be possible to "predicate the bundle". This
would require scanning all bundle instructions, and ensure that the bundle
contains only predicatable instructions, and converting the bundle into an IT
block sequence. If the bundle is larger than the maximal IT block length (4
instructions), it would require materializing multiple IT blocks from the single
bundle.
llvm-svn: 280689
All of the builtins are designed to be invoked with ARM AAPCS CC even on ARM
AAPCS VFP CC hosts. Tweak the default initialisation to ARM AAPCS CC rather
than C CC for ARM/thumb targets.
The changes to the tests are necessary to ensure that the calling convention for
the lowered library calls are honoured. Furthermore, these adjustments cause
certain branch invocations to change to branch-and-link since the returned value
needs to be moved across registers (d0 -> r0, r1).
llvm-svn: 280683
types. This is the LLVM counterpart and it adds options that map onto FP
exceptions and denormal build attributes allowing better fp math library
selections.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24070
llvm-svn: 280246
Summary:
In fuctions that contained debug info but were empty otherwise,
the ARM load/store optimizer could abort. This was because
function MergeReturnIntoLDM handled the special case where a
Machine Basic BLock is empty by calling MBB.empty(). However, this
returns false in presence of debug info, although the function
should be considered empty in the eyes of the load/store optimizer.
This has been fixed by handling the case where searching through the
block finds only debug instructions.
Reviewers: rengolin, dexonsmith, llvm-commits, jmolloy
Subscribers: t.p.northover, aemerson, rengolin, samparker
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23847
llvm-svn: 279820
Rename AllVRegsAllocated to NoVRegs. This avoids the connotation of
running after register and simply describes that no vregs are used in
a machine function. With that we can simply compute the property and do
not need to dump/parse it in .mir files.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23850
llvm-svn: 279698
tracksSubRegLiveness only depends on the Subtarget and a cl::opt, there
is not need to change it or save/parse it in a .mir file.
Make the field const and move the initialization LiveIntervalAnalysis to the
MachineRegisterInfo constructor. Also cleanup some code and fix some
instances which better use MachineRegisterInfo::subRegLivenessEnabled() instead
of TargetSubtargetInfo::enableSubRegLiveness().
llvm-svn: 279676
The cost of predicating a diamond is only the instructions that are not shared
between the two branches. Additionally If a predicate clobbering instruction
occurs in the shared portion of the branches (e.g. a cond move), it may still
be possible to if convert the sub-cfg. This change handles these two facts by
rescanning the non-shared portion of a diamond sub-cfg to recalculate both the
predication cost and whether both blocks are pred-clobbering.
Fixed 2 bugs before recommitting. Branch instructions must be compared and found
identical before diamond conversion. Also, predicate-clobbering instructions in
the shared prefix disqualifies a potential diamond conversion. Includes tests
for both.
llvm-svn: 279670