Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Hans Wennborg ca69fc1cb7 Revert r304824 "Fix PR23384 (part 3 of 3)"
This seems to be interacting badly with ASan somehow, causing false reports of
heap-buffer overflows: PR33514.

> Summary:
> The patch makes instruction count the highest priority for
> LSR solution for X86 (previously registers had highest priority).
>
> Reviewers: qcolombet
>
> Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D30562
>
> From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>

llvm-svn: 305720
2017-06-19 17:57:15 +00:00
Evgeny Stupachenko 3b88291581 Fix PR23384 (part 3 of 3)
Summary:
The patch makes instruction count the highest priority for
 LSR solution for X86 (previously registers had highest priority).

Reviewers: qcolombet

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D30562

From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 304824
2017-06-06 20:04:16 +00:00
Wei Mi db68c9adbd Remove a stale comment from the test, NFC.
llvm-svn: 278821
2016-08-16 16:57:15 +00:00
Wei Mi 9a16d655c7 Recommit r265547, and r265610,r265639,r265657 on top of it, plus
two fixes with one about error verify-regalloc reported, and
another about live range update of phi after rematerialization.

r265547:
Replace analyzeSiblingValues with new algorithm to fix its compile
time issue. The patch is to solve PR17409 and its duplicates.

analyzeSiblingValues is a N x N complexity algorithm where N is
the number of siblings generated by reg splitting. Although it
causes siginificant compile time issue when N is large, it is also
important for performance since it removes redundent spills and
enables rematerialization.

To solve the compile time issue, the patch removes analyzeSiblingValues
and replaces it with lower cost alternatives containing two parts. The
first part creates a new spill hoisting method in postOptimization of
register allocation. It does spill hoisting at once after all the spills
are generated instead of inside every instance of selectOrSplit. The
second part queries the define expr of the original register for
rematerializaiton and keep it always available during register allocation
even if it is already dead. It deletes those dead instructions only in
postOptimization. With the two parts in the patch, it can remove
analyzeSiblingValues without sacrificing performance.

Patches on top of r265547:
r265610 "Fix the compare-clang diff error introduced by r265547."
r265639 "Fix the sanitizer bootstrap error in r265547."
r265657 "InlineSpiller.cpp: Escap \@ in r265547. [-Wdocumentation]"

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15302
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18934
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18935
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18936

llvm-svn: 266162
2016-04-13 03:08:27 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 5a7723c7a2 Revert r265547 "Recommit r265309 after fixed an invalid memory reference bug happened"
It caused PR27275: "ARM: Bad machine code: Using an undefined physical register"

Also reverting the following commits that were landed on top:
r265610 "Fix the compare-clang diff error introduced by r265547."
r265639 "Fix the sanitizer bootstrap error in r265547."
r265657 "InlineSpiller.cpp: Escap \@ in r265547. [-Wdocumentation]"

llvm-svn: 265790
2016-04-08 15:17:43 +00:00
Wei Mi 18293bef4e Recommit r265309 after fixed an invalid memory reference bug happened
when DenseMap growed and moved memory. I verified it fixed the bootstrap
problem on x86_64-linux-gnu but I cannot verify whether it fixes
the bootstrap error on clang-ppc64be-linux. I will watch the build-bot
result closely.

Replace analyzeSiblingValues with new algorithm to fix its compile
time issue. The patch is to solve PR17409 and its duplicates.

analyzeSiblingValues is a N x N complexity algorithm where N is
the number of siblings generated by reg splitting. Although it
causes siginificant compile time issue when N is large, it is also
important for performance since it removes redundent spills and
enables rematerialization.

To solve the compile time issue, the patch removes analyzeSiblingValues
and replaces it with lower cost alternatives containing two parts. The
first part creates a new spill hoisting method in postOptimization of
register allocation. It does spill hoisting at once after all the spills
are generated instead of inside every instance of selectOrSplit. The
second part queries the define expr of the original register for
rematerializaiton and keep it always available during register allocation
even if it is already dead. It deletes those dead instructions only in
postOptimization. With the two parts in the patch, it can remove
analyzeSiblingValues without sacrificing performance.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15302

llvm-svn: 265547
2016-04-06 15:41:07 +00:00
Wei Mi fb5252cac1 Revert r265309 and r265312 because they caused some errors I need to investigate.
llvm-svn: 265317
2016-04-04 17:45:03 +00:00
Wei Mi ffbc9c7f3b Replace analyzeSiblingValues with new algorithm to fix its compile
time issue. The patch is to solve PR17409 and its duplicates.

analyzeSiblingValues is a N x N complexity algorithm where N is
the number of siblings generated by reg splitting. Although it
causes siginificant compile time issue when N is large, it is also
important for performance since it removes redundent spills and
enables rematerialization.

To solve the compile time issue, the patch removes analyzeSiblingValues
and replaces it with lower cost alternatives containing two parts. The
first part creates a new spill hoisting method in postOptimization of
register allocation. It does spill hoisting at once after all the spills
are generated instead of inside every instance of selectOrSplit. The
second part queries the define expr of the original register for
rematerializaiton and keep it always available during register allocation
even if it is already dead. It deletes those dead instructions only in
postOptimization. With the two parts in the patch, it can remove
analyzeSiblingValues without sacrificing performance.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15302

llvm-svn: 265309
2016-04-04 16:42:40 +00:00