The code this patch removes was there to make sure the text sections went
before the dwarf sections. That is necessary because MachO uses offsets
relative to the start of the file, so adding a section can change relaxations.
The dwarf sections were being printed at the start just to produce symbols
pointing at the start of those sections.
The underlying issue was fixed in r231898. The dwarf sections are now printed
when they are about to be used, which is after we printed the text sections.
To make sure we don't regress, the patch makes the MachO streamer assert
if CodeGen puts anything unexpected after the DWARF sections.
llvm-svn: 232842
LocalStackSlotPass assumes that isFrameOffsetLegal doesn't change its
answer when the base register changes. Unfortunately this isn't true
in thumb1, where SP-based loads allow a larger offset than
non-SP-based loads, and this causes the base register reuse code to
generate instructions that are unencodable, causing an assertion
failure.
Solve this by adding a BaseReg parameter to isFrameOffsetLegal, which
ARMBaseRegisterInfo can then make use of to give the correct answer.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8419
llvm-svn: 232825
There are two main advantages to doing this
* Targets that only need to handle one of the formats specially don't have
to worry about the others. For example, x86 now only registers a
constructor for the COFF streamer.
* Changes to the arguments passed to one format constructor will not impact
the other formats.
llvm-svn: 232699
as we don't necessarily need to do this yet - though we could move
the base class to the TargetMachine as it isn't subtarget dependent.
This reverts commit r232103.
llvm-svn: 232665
Summary: Building FP16 constant vectors caused the FP16 data to be bitcast to i64. This patch creates a BITCAST node with the correct value, and adds a test to verify correct handling.
Reviewers: mcrosier
Reviewed By: mcrosier
Subscribers: mcrosier, jmolloy, ab, srhines, llvm-commits, rengolin, aemerson
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8369
llvm-svn: 232562
Before this patch code wanting to create temporary labels for a given entity
(function, cu, exception range, etc) had to keep its own counter to have stable
symbol names.
createTempSymbol would still add a suffix to make sure a new symbol was always
returned, but it kept a single counter. Because of that, if we were to use
just createTempSymbol("cu_begin"), the label could change from cu_begin42 to
cu_begin43 because some other code started using temporary labels.
Simplify this by just keeping one counter per prefix and removing the various
specialized counters.
llvm-svn: 232535
Optimize concat_vectors of truncated vectors, where the intermediate
type is illegal, to avoid said illegality, e.g.,
(v4i16 (concat_vectors (v2i16 (truncate (v2i64))),
(v2i16 (truncate (v2i64)))))
->
(v4i16 (truncate (v4i32 (concat_vectors (v2i32 (truncate (v2i64))),
(v2i32 (truncate (v2i64)))))))
This isn't really target-specific, and, as such, would best go in the
DAGCombiner. However, ISD::TRUNCATE legality isn't keyed on both input
and result type, so we might generate worse code when we don't know
better. On AArch64 we know it's fine for v2i64->v4i16 and v4i32->v8i8.
rdar://20022387
llvm-svn: 232459
Summary:
This is instead of doing this in target independent code and is the last
non-functional change before targets begin to distinguish between
different memory constraints when selecting code for the ISD::INLINEASM
node.
Next, each target will individually move away from the idea that all
memory constraints behave like 'm'.
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8173
llvm-svn: 232373
The operand flag word for ISD::INLINEASM nodes now contains a 15-bit
memory constraint ID when the operand kind is Kind_Mem. This constraint
ID is a numeric equivalent to the constraint code string and is converted
with a target specific hook in TargetLowering.
This patch maps all memory constraints to InlineAsm::Constraint_m so there
is no functional change at this point. It just proves that using these
previously unused bits in the encoding of the flag word doesn't break
anything.
The next patch will make each target preserve the current mapping of
everything to Constraint_m for itself while changing the target independent
implementation of the hook to return Constraint_Unknown appropriately. Each
target will then be adapted in separate patches to use appropriate
Constraint_* values.
PR22883 was caused the matching operands copying the whole of the operand flags
for the matched operand. This included the constraint id which needed to be
replaced with the operand number. This has been fixed with a conversion
function. Following on from this, matching operands also used the operand
number as the constraint id. This has been fixed by looking up the matched
operand and taking it from there.
llvm-svn: 232165
This (r232027) has caused PR22883; so it seems those bits might be used by
something else after all. Reverting until we can figure out what else to do.
Original commit message:
The operand flag word for ISD::INLINEASM nodes now contains a 15-bit
memory constraint ID when the operand kind is Kind_Mem. This constraint
ID is a numeric equivalent to the constraint code string and is converted
with a target specific hook in TargetLowering.
This patch maps all memory constraints to InlineAsm::Constraint_m so there
is no functional change at this point. It just proves that using these
previously unused bits in the encoding of the flag word doesn't break anything.
The next patch will make each target preserve the current mapping of
everything to Constraint_m for itself while changing the target independent
implementation of the hook to return Constraint_Unknown appropriately. Each
target will then be adapted in separate patches to use appropriate Constraint_*
values.
llvm-svn: 232093
Summary:
The operand flag word for ISD::INLINEASM nodes now contains a 15-bit
memory constraint ID when the operand kind is Kind_Mem. This constraint
ID is a numeric equivalent to the constraint code string and is converted
with a target specific hook in TargetLowering.
This patch maps all memory constraints to InlineAsm::Constraint_m so there
is no functional change at this point. It just proves that using these
previously unused bits in the encoding of the flag word doesn't break anything.
The next patch will make each target preserve the current mapping of
everything to Constraint_m for itself while changing the target independent
implementation of the hook to return Constraint_Unknown appropriately. Each
target will then be adapted in separate patches to use appropriate Constraint_*
values.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8171
llvm-svn: 232027
Summary:
I don't know why every singled backend had to redeclare its own DataLayout.
There was a virtual getDataLayout() on the common base TargetMachine, the
default implementation returned nullptr. It was not clear from this that
we could assume at call site that a DataLayout will be available with
each Target.
Now getDataLayout() is no longer virtual and return a pointer to the
DataLayout member of the common base TargetMachine. I plan to turn it into
a reference in a future patch.
The only backend that didn't have a DataLayout previsouly was the CPPBackend.
It now initializes the default DataLayout. This commit is NFC for all the
other backends.
Test Plan: clang+llvm ninja check-all
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jfb, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8243
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231987
time. The target independent code was passing in one all the
time and targets weren't checking validity before using. Update
a few calls to pass in a MachineFunction where necessary.
llvm-svn: 231970
This adds new node types for each intrinsic.
For instance, for addv, we have AArch64ISD::UADDV, such that:
(v4i32 (uaddv ...))
is the same as
(v4i32 (scalar_to_vector (i32 (int_aarch64_neon_uaddv ...))))
that is,
(v4i32 (INSERT_SUBREG (v4i32 (IMPLICIT_DEF)),
(i32 (int_aarch64_neon_uaddv ...)), ssub)
In a combine, we transform all such across-vector-lanes intrinsics to:
(i32 (extract_vector_elt (uaddv ...), 0))
This has one big advantage: by making the extract_element explicit, we
enable the existing patterns for lane-aware instructions to fire.
This lets us avoid needlessly going through the GPRs. Consider:
uint32x4_t test_mul(uint32x4_t a, uint32x4_t b) {
return vmulq_n_u32(a, vaddvq_u32(b));
}
We now generate:
addv.4s s1, v1
mul.4s v0, v0, v1[0]
instead of the previous:
addv.4s s1, v1
fmov w8, s1
dup.4s v1, w8
mul.4s v0, v1, v0
rdar://20044838
llvm-svn: 231840
Most are redundant, and they never seem to fire.
The V128 integer patterns already exist in the INS multiclass.
The duplicates only fire when the vector index type isn't i64,
because they accept "imm" instead of an explicit "i64", as the
instruction definition patterns do.
TLI::getVectorIdxTy is i64 on AArch64, so this should never happen.
Also, one of them had a typo: for i64, INSvi32lane was used.
I noticed because I mistakenly used an explicit i32 as the idx type,
and got ins.s for an i64 vector_insert.
The V64 patterns also don't seem to ever fire, as V64 vector
extract/insert are legalized to V128.
The equivalent float patterns are unique and useful, so keep them.
No functional change intended; none exhibited on the LIT and LNT tests.
llvm-svn: 231838
For inner one of nested loops, it is more likely to be a hot loop,
and the runtime check can be promoted out from patch 0001, so the
overhead is less, we can try a doubled threshold to unroll more loops.
llvm-svn: 231632
In theory this allows the compiler to skip materializing the array on
the stack. In practice clang often fails to do that, but that's a
different story. NFC.
llvm-svn: 231571
Teach the load store optimizer how to sign extend a result of a load pair when
it helps creating more pairs.
The rational is that loads are more expensive than sign extensions, so if we
gather some in one instruction this is better!
<rdar://problem/20072968>
llvm-svn: 231527
Add MachO 32-bit (i.e. arm and x86) support for replacing global GOT equivalent
symbol accesses. Unlike 64-bit targets, there's no GOTPCREL relocation, and
access through a non_lazy_symbol_pointers section is used instead.
-- before
_extgotequiv:
.long _extfoo
_delta:
.long _extgotequiv-_delta
-- after
_delta:
.long L_extfoo$non_lazy_ptr-_delta
.section __IMPORT,__pointers,non_lazy_symbol_pointers
L_extfoo$non_lazy_ptr:
.indirect_symbol _extfoo
.long 0
llvm-svn: 231475
Follow up r230264 and add ARM64 support for replacing global GOT
equivalent symbol accesses by references to the GOT entry for the final
symbol instead, example:
-- before
.globl _foo
_foo:
.long 42
.globl _gotequivalent
_gotequivalent:
.quad _foo
.globl _delta
_delta:
.long _gotequivalent-_delta
-- after
.globl _foo
_foo:
.long 42
.globl _delta
Ltmp3:
.long _foo@GOT-Ltmp3
llvm-svn: 231474
Summary:
In PNaCl, most atomic instructions have their own @llvm.nacl.atomic.* function, each one, with a few exceptions, represents a consistent behaviour across all NaCl-supported targets. Unfortunately, the atomic RMW operations nand, [u]min, and [u]max aren't directly represented by any such @llvm.nacl.atomic.* function. This patch refines shouldExpandAtomicRMWInIR in TargetLowering so that a future `Le32TargetLowering` class can selectively inform the caller how the target desires the atomic RMW instruction to be expanded (ie via load-linked/store-conditional for ARM/AArch64, via cmpxchg for X86/others?, or not at all for Mips) if at all.
This does not represent a behavioural change and as such no tests were added.
Patch by: Richard Diamond.
Reviewers: jfb
Reviewed By: jfb
Subscribers: jfb, aemerson, t.p.northover, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7713
llvm-svn: 231250
As is described at http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22408, the GNU linkers
ld.bfd and ld.gold currently only support a subset of the whole range of AArch64
ELF TLS relocations. Furthermore, they assume that some of the code sequences to
access thread-local variables are produced in a very specific sequence.
When the sequence is not as the linker expects, it can silently mis-relaxe/mis-optimize
the instructions.
Even if that wouldn't be the case, it's good to produce the exact sequence,
as that ensures that linkers can perform optimizing relaxations.
This patch:
* implements support for 16MiB TLS area size instead of 4GiB TLS area size. Ideally clang
would grow an -mtls-size option to allow support for both, but that's not part of this patch.
* by default doesn't produce local dynamic access patterns, as even modern ld.bfd and ld.gold
linkers do not support the associated relocations. An option (-aarch64-elf-ldtls-generation)
is added to enable generation of local dynamic code sequence, but is off by default.
* makes sure that the exact expected code sequence for local dynamic and general dynamic
accesses is produced, by making use of a new pseudo instruction. The patch also removes
two (AArch64ISD::TLSDESC_BLR, AArch64ISD::TLSDESC_CALL) pre-existing AArch64-specific pseudo
SDNode instructions that are superseded by the new one (TLSDESC_CALLSEQ).
llvm-svn: 231227
Accidentally committed a few more of these cleanup changes than
intended. Still breaking these out & tidying them up.
This reverts commit r231135.
llvm-svn: 231136
There doesn't seem to be any need to assert that iterator assignment is
between iterators over the same node - if you want to reuse an iterator
variable to iterate another node, that's perfectly acceptable. Just
don't mix comparisons between iterators into disjoint sequences, as
usual.
llvm-svn: 231135