When rewriting statepoints to make relocations explicit, we need to have a conservative but consistent notion of where a particular pointer is live at a particular site. The old code just used dominance, which is correct, but decidedly more conservative then it needed to be. This patch implements a simple dataflow algorithm that's run one per function (well, twice counting fixup after base pointer insertion). There's still lots of room to make this faster, but it's fast enough for all practical purposes today.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8674
llvm-svn: 234657
Two related small changes:
Various dominance based queries about liveness can get confused if we're talking about unreachable blocks. To avoid reasoning about such cases, just remove them before rewriting statepoints.
Remove single entry phis (likely left behind by LCSSA) to reduce the number of live values.
Both of these are motivated by http://reviews.llvm.org/D8674 which will be submitted shortly.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8675
llvm-svn: 234651
This patch adds limited support for inserting explicit relocations when there's a vector of pointers live over the statepoint. This doesn't handle the case where the vector contains a mix of base and non-base pointers; that's future work.
The current implementation just scalarizes the vector over the gc.statepoint before doing the explicit rewrite. An alternate approach would be to plumb the vector all the way though the backend lowering, but doing that appears challenging. In particular, the size of the indirect spill slot is currently assumed to be sizeof(pointer) throughout the backend.
In practice, this is enough to allow running the SLP and Loop vectorizers before RewriteStatepointsForGC.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8671
llvm-svn: 234647
Summary:
This change moves creating calls to `llvm.uadd.with.overflow` from
InstCombine to CodeGenPrep. Combining overflow check patterns into
calls to the said intrinsic in InstCombine inhibits optimization because
it introduces an intrinsic call that not all other transforms and
analyses understand.
Depends on D8888.
Reviewers: majnemer, atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8889
llvm-svn: 234638
InstCombine didn't realize that it needs to use DataLayout to determine
how wide pointers are. This lead to assertion failures.
This fixes PR23113.
llvm-svn: 234046
Check that the `MDLocalVariable::getInlinedAt()` in a debug info
intrinsic's variable always matches the `MDLocation::getInlinedAt()` of
its `!dbg` attachment.
The goal here is to get rid of `MDLocalVariable::getInlinedAt()`
entirely (PR22778), since it's expensive and unnecessary, but I'll let
this verifier check bake for a while (a week maybe?) first. I've
updated the testcases that had the wrong value for `inlinedAt:`.
This checks that things are sane in the IR, but currently things go out
of whack in a few places in the backend. I'll follow shortly with
assertions in the backend (with code fixes).
If you have out-of-tree testcases that just started failing, here's how
I updated these ones:
1. The verifier check gives you the basic block, function, instruction,
and relevant metadata arguments (metadata numbering doesn't
necessarily match the source file, unfortunately).
2. Look at the `@llvm.dbg.*()` instruction, and compare the
`inlinedAt:` fields of the variable argument (second `metadata`
argument) and the `!dbg` attachment.
3. Figure out based on the variable `scope:` chain and the functions in
the file whether the variable has been inlined (and into what), so
you can determine which `inlinedAt:` is actually correct. In all of
the in-tree testcases, the `!MDLocation()` was correct and the
`!MDLocalVariable()` was wrong, but YMMV.
4. Duplicate the metadata that you're going to change, and add/drop the
`inlinedAt:` field from one of them. Be careful that the other
references to the same metadata node point at the correct one.
llvm-svn: 234021
Summary:
The old requirement on GEP candidates being in bounds is unnecessary.
For off-bound GEPs, we still have
&B[i * S] = B + (i * S) * e = B + (i * e) * S
Test Plan: slsr_offbound_gep in slsr-gep.ll
Reviewers: meheff
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8809
llvm-svn: 233949
We used to do this before refactorings around r225640.
Some clang users checked for _chk libcall availability using:
__has_builtin(__builtin___memcpy_chk)
When compiling with -fno-builtin, this is always true.
When passing -ffreestanding/-mkernel, which both imply -fno-builtin, we
end up with fortified libcalls, which isn't acceptable in a freestanding
environment which only provides their non-fortified counterparts.
Until we change clang and/or teach external users to check for availability
differently, disregard the "nobuiltin" attribute and TLI::has.
Workaround for PR23093.
llvm-svn: 233776
PPC_FP128 is really the sum of two consecutive doubles, where the first double
is always stored first in memory, regardless of the target endianness. The
memory layout of i128, however, depends on the target endianness, and so we
can't fold this without target endianness information. As a result, we must not
do this folding in lib/IR/ConstantFold.cpp (it could be done instead in
Analysis/ConstantFolding.cpp, but that's not done now).
Fixes PR23026.
llvm-svn: 233481
Fix testcases that don't pass the verifier after a WIP patch to check
`MDSubprogram` operands more effectively. I found the following issues:
- When `isDefinition: false`, the `variables:` field might point at
`!{i32 786468}`, or at a tuple that pointed at an empty tuple with
the comment "previously: invalid DW_TAG_base_type" (I vaguely recall
adding those comments during an upgrade script). In these cases, I
just dropped the array.
- The `variables:` field might point at something like `!{!{!8}}`,
where `!8` was an `MDLocation`. I removed the extra layer of
indirection.
- Invalid `type:` (not an `MDSubroutineType`).
llvm-svn: 233466
Change `llc` and `opt` to run `verifyModule()`. This ensures that we
check the full module before `FunctionPass::doInitialization()` ever
gets called (I was getting crashes in `DwarfDebug` instead of verifier
failures when testing a WIP patch that checks operands of compile
units). In `opt`, also move up debug-info-stripping so that it still
runs before verification.
There was a fair bit of broken code that was sitting in tree.
Interestingly, some were cases of a `select` that referred to itself in
`-instcombine` tests (apparently an intermediate result). I split them
off to `*-noverify.ll` tests with RUN lines like this:
opt < %s -S -disable-verify -instcombine | opt -S | FileCheck %s
This avoids verifying the input file (so we can get the broken code into
`-instcombine), but still verifies the output with a second call to
`opt` (to verify that `-instcombine` will clean it up like it should).
llvm-svn: 233432
Fix debug info in these tests, which started failing with a WIP patch to
verify compile units and types. The problems look like they were all
caused by bitrot. They fell into these categories:
- Using `!{i32 0}` instead of `!{}`.
- Using `!{null}` instead of `!{}`.
- Using `!MDExpression()` instead of `!{}`.
- Using `!8` instead of `!{!8}`.
- `file:` references that pointed at `MDCompileUnit`s instead of the
same `MDFile` as the compile unit.
- `file:` references that were numerically off-by-one or (off-by-ten).
llvm-svn: 233415
This re-adds float2int to the tree, after fixing PR23038. It turns
out the argument to APSInt() is true-if-unsigned, rather than
true-if-signed :(. Added testcase and explanatory comment.
llvm-svn: 233370
This was discussed a while back and I left it optional for migration. Since it's been far more than the 'week or two' that was discussed, time to actually make this manditory.
llvm-svn: 233357
Fix testcases whose variables are invalid. I'm working on a patch that
adds `Verifier` checks for `MDLocalVariable` (and `MDGlobalVariable`),
and these failed because:
- `scope:` fields need to point at `MDLocalScope` and can't be null.
- `file:` fields need to point at `MDFile`.
- `inlinedAt:` fields need to point at `MDLocation`.
llvm-svn: 233349
Summary:
This patch enhances SLSR to handle another candidate form &B[i * S]. If
we found two candidates
S1: X = &B[i * S]
S2: Y = &B[i' * S]
and S1 dominates S2, we can replace S2 with
Y = &X[(i' - i) * S]
Test Plan:
slsr-gep.ll
X86/no-slsr.ll: verify that we do not run SLSR on GEPs that already fit into
an addressing mode
Reviewers: eliben, atrick, meheff, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7459
llvm-svn: 233286
A load from an invariant location is assumed to not alias any otherwise potentially aliasing stores. Our implementation only applied this rule to store instructions themselves whereas they it should apply for any memory accessing instruction. This results in both FRE and PRE becoming more effective at eliminating invariant loads.
Note that as a follow on change I will likely move this into AliasAnalysis itself. That's where the TBAA constant flag is handled and the semantics are essentially the same. I'd like to separate the semantic change from the refactoring and thus have extended the hack that's already in MemoryDependenceAnalysis for this change.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8591
llvm-svn: 233140
This patch tries to merge duplicate landing pads when they branch to a common shared target.
Given IR that looks like this:
lpad1:
%exn = landingpad {i8*, i32} personality i32 (...)* @__gxx_personality_v0
cleanup
br label %shared_resume
lpad2:
%exn2 = landingpad {i8*, i32} personality i32 (...)* @__gxx_personality_v0
cleanup
br label %shared_resume
shared_resume:
call void @fn()
ret void
}
We can rewrite the users of both landing pad blocks to use one of them. This will generally allow the shared_resume block to be merged with the common landing pad as well.
Without this change, tail duplication would likely kick in - creating N (2 in this case) copies of the shared_resume basic block.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8297
llvm-svn: 233125
Assert that this doesn't fire - I'll remove all of this later, but just
leaving it in for a while in case this is firing & we just don't have
test coverage.
llvm-svn: 233116
This is the IR optimizer follow-on patch for D8563: the x86 backend patch
that converts this kind of shuffle back into a vperm2.
This is also a continuation of the transform that started in D8486.
In that patch, Andrea suggested that we could convert vperm2 intrinsics that
use zero masks into a single shuffle.
This is an implementation of that suggestion.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8567
llvm-svn: 233110
This caused PR23008, compiles failing with: "Use still stuck around after Def is
destroyed: %.sroa.speculated"
Also reverting follow-up r233064.
llvm-svn: 233105
It is possible to have code that converts from integer to float, performs operations then converts back, and the result is provably the same as if integers were used.
This can come from different sources, but the most obvious is a helper function that uses floats but the arguments given at an inlined callsites are integers.
This pass considers all integers requiring a bitwidth less than or equal to the bitwidth of the mantissa of a floating point type (23 for floats, 52 for doubles) as exactly representable in floating point.
To reduce the risk of harming efficient code, the pass only attempts to perform complete removal of inttofp/fptoint operations, not just move them around.
llvm-svn: 233062
Continue to simplify the `DIDescriptor` subclasses, so that they behave
more like raw pointers. Remove `getRaw()`, replace it with an
overloaded `get()`, and overload the arrow and cast operators. Two
testcases started to crash on the arrow operators with this change
because of `scope:` references that weren't real scopes. I fixed them.
Soon I'll add verifier checks for them too.
This also adds explicit dereference operators. Previously, the builtin
dereference against `operator MDNode *()` would have worked, but now the
builtins are ambiguous.
llvm-svn: 233030
strchr("123!", C) != nullptr is a common pattern to check if C is one
of 1, 2, 3 or !. If the largest element of the string is smaller than
the target's register size we can easily create a bitfield and just
do a simple test for set membership.
int foo(char C) { return strchr("123!", C) != nullptr; } now becomes
cmpl $64, %edi ## range check
sbbb %al, %al
movabsq $0xE000200000001, %rcx
btq %rdi, %rcx ## bit test
sbbb %cl, %cl
andb %al, %cl ## and the two conditions
andb $1, %cl
movzbl %cl, %eax ## returning an int
ret
(imho the backend should expand this into a series of branches, but
that's a different story)
The code is currently limited to bit fields that fit in a register, so
usually 64 or 32 bits. Sadly, this misses anything using alpha chars
or {}. This could be fixed by just emitting a i128 bit field, but that
can generate really ugly code so we have to find a better way. To some
degree this is also recreating switch lowering logic, but we can't
simply emit a switch instruction and thus change the CFG within
instcombine.
llvm-svn: 232902
r216771 introduced a change to MemoryDependenceAnalysis that allowed it
to reason about acquire/release operations. However, this change does
not ensure that the acquire/release operations pair. Unfortunately,
this leads to miscompiles as we won't see an acquire load as properly
memory effecting. This largely reverts r216771.
This fixes PR22708.
llvm-svn: 232889
vperm2* intrinsics are just shuffles.
In a few special cases, they're not even shuffles.
Optimizing intrinsics in InstCombine is better than
handling this in the front-end for at least two reasons:
1. Optimizing custom-written SSE intrinsic code at -O0 makes vector coders
really angry (and so I have regrets about some patches from last week).
2. Doing mask conversion logic in header files is hard to write and
subsequently read.
There are a couple of TODOs in this patch to complete this optimization.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8486
llvm-svn: 232852
When estimating SROA savings, we want to see if an address is derived
off an alloca in the caller. For store instructions, operand 1 is the
address operand, but the current code uses operand 0. Use
getPointerOperand for loads and stores to fix this.
Patch by Easwaran Raman.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8425
llvm-svn: 232827
Each use of the byte array uses a different alias. This makes the
backend less likely to reuse previously computed byte array addresses,
improving the security of the CFI mechanism based on this pass.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8455
llvm-svn: 232770
Also, add several entries to vectorizable functions table, and
corresponding tests. The table isn't complete, it'll be populated later.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8131
llvm-svn: 232531
Re-commit the test cases added in r232444. These now use
-irce-print-changed-loops and -irce-print-range-checks so they run
correctly on a without asserts build of llvm.
llvm-svn: 232452
I accidentally checked in two tests that used -debug-only -- these fail
on a release LLVM build. Temporarily delete these from the repo to keep
the bots green while I fix this locally.
llvm-svn: 232446
This change to IRCE gets it to recognize "half" range checks. Half
range checks are range checks that only either check if the index is
`slt` some positive integer ("length") or if the index is `sge` `0`.
The range solver does not try to be clever / aggressive about solving
half-range checks -- it transforms "I < L" to "0 <= I < L" and "0 <= I"
to "0 <= I < INT_SMAX". This is safe, but not always optimal.
llvm-svn: 232444
By default we want our gcov emission to stay 4.2 compatible, which
means we need to continue emit the exit block last by default. We add
an option to emit it before the body for users that need it.
llvm-svn: 232438
As part of PR22777, fix testcases that fail the debug info verifier.
The changes fall into the following categories:
- Empty `filename:` fields in `MDFile`s. Compile units and some types
require non-empty filenames. A number of testcases have empty
filenames, probably due to hand-reduction of testcases.
- Not-quite empty arrays: `!{i32 0}`. This used to be equivalent in
the debug info schema to `!{}`. They cause problems for
`!MDSubroutineType`'s `types:` array, since it requires all operands
to be valid types. (Note that `!{null}` is the correct type array
for functions that take no arguments and return `void`.)
- Significantly bitrotted testcases. Nodes got left behind a few
upgrades ago because of missing or invalid tags.
llvm-svn: 232415
The problem here is the infamous one direction known safe. I was
hesitant to turn it off before b/c of the potential for regressions
without an actual bug from users hitting the problem. This is that bug ;
).
The main performance impact of having known safe in both directions is
that often times it is very difficult to find two releases without a use
in-between them since we are so conservative with determining potential
uses. The one direction known safe gets around that problem by taking
advantage of many situations where we have two retains in a row,
allowing us to avoid that problem. That being said, the one direction
known safe is unsafe. Consider the following situation:
retain(x)
retain(x)
call(x)
call(x)
release(x)
Then we know the following about the reference count of x:
// rc(x) == N (for some N).
retain(x)
// rc(x) == N+1
retain(x)
// rc(x) == N+2
call A(x)
call B(x)
// rc(x) >= 1 (since we can not release a deallocated pointer).
release(x)
// rc(x) >= 0
That is all the information that we can know statically. That means that
we know that A(x), B(x) together can release (x) at most N+1 times. Lets
say that we remove the inner retain, release pair.
// rc(x) == N (for some N).
retain(x)
// rc(x) == N+1
call A(x)
call B(x)
// rc(x) >= 1
release(x)
// rc(x) >= 0
We knew before that A(x), B(x) could release x up to N+1 times meaning
that rc(x) may be zero at the release(x). That is not safe. On the other
hand, consider the following situation where we have a must use of
release(x) that x must be kept alive for after the release(x)**. Then we
know that:
// rc(x) == N (for some N).
retain(x)
// rc(x) == N+1
retain(x)
// rc(x) == N+2
call A(x)
call B(x)
// rc(x) >= 2 (since we know that we are going to release x and that that release can not be the last use of x).
release(x)
// rc(x) >= 1 (since we can not deallocate the pointer since we have a must use after x).
…
// rc(x) >= 1
use(x)
Thus we know that statically the calls to A(x), B(x) can together only
release rc(x) N times. Thus if we remove the inner retain, release pair:
// rc(x) == N (for some N).
retain(x)
// rc(x) == N+1
call A(x)
call B(x)
// rc(x) >= 1
…
// rc(x) >= 1
use(x)
We are still safe unless in the final … there are unbalanced retains,
releases which would have caused the program to blow up anyways even
before optimization occurred. The simplest form of must use is an
additional release that has not been paired up with any retain (if we
had paired the release with a retain and removed it we would not have
the additional use). This fits nicely into the ARC framework since
basically what you do is say that given any nested releases regardless
of what is in between, the inner release is known safe. This enables us to get
back the lost performance.
<rdar://problem/19023795>
llvm-svn: 232351
Verify that debug info intrinsic arguments are valid. (These checks
will not recurse through the full debug info graph, so they don't need
to be cordoned of in `DebugInfoVerifier`.)
With those checks in place, changing the `DbgIntrinsicInst` accessors to
downcast to `MDLocalVariable` and `MDExpression` is natural (added isa
specializations in `Metadata.h` to support this).
Added tests to `test/Verifier` for the new -verify checks, and fixed the
debug info in all the in-tree tests.
If you have out-of-tree testcases that have started to fail to -verify,
hopefully the verify checks are helpful. The most likely problem is
that the expression argument is `!{}` (instead of `!MDExpression()`).
llvm-svn: 232296
Summary: This is a first step toward getting proper support for aggregate loads and stores.
Test Plan: Added unittests
Reviewers: reames, chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: majnemer, joker.eph, chandlerc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7780
Patch by Amaury Sechet
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 232284
The linker on that platform may re-order symbols or strip dead symbols, which
will break bit set checks. Avoid this by hiding the symbols from the linker.
llvm-svn: 232235
This reapplies the patch previously committed at revision 232190. This was
reverted at revision 232196 as it caused test failures in tests that did not
expect operands to be commuted. I have made the tests more resilient to
reassociation in revision 232206.
llvm-svn: 232209
As a follow-up to r232200, add an `-instcombine` to canonicalize scalar
allocations to `i32 1`. Since r232200, `iX 1` (for X != 32) are only
created by RAUWs, so this shouldn't fire too often. Nevertheless, it's
a cheap check and a nice cleanup.
llvm-svn: 232202
Write the `alloca` array size explicitly when it's non-canonical.
Previously, if the array size was `iX 1` (where X is not 32), the type
would mutate to `i32` when round-tripping through assembly.
The testcase I added fails in `verify-uselistorder` (as well as
`FileCheck`), since the use-lists for `i32 1` and `i64 1` change.
(Manman Ren came across this when running `verify-uselistorder` on some
non-trivial, optimized code as part of PR5680.)
The type mutation started with r104911, which allowed array sizes to be
something other than an `i32`. Starting with r204945, we
"canonicalized" to `i64` on 64-bit platforms -- and then on every
round-trip through assembly, mutated back to `i32`.
I bundled a fixup for `-instcombine` to avoid r204945 on scalar
allocations. (There wasn't a clean way to sequence this into two
commits, since the assembly change on its own caused testcase churn, and
the `-instcombine` change can't be tested without the assembly changes.)
An obvious alternative fix -- change `AllocaInst::AllocaInst()`,
`AsmWriter` and `LLParser` to treat `intptr_t` as the canonical type for
scalar allocations -- was rejected out of hand, since this required
teaching them each about the data layout.
A follow-up commit will add an `-instcombine` to canonicalize the scalar
allocation array size to `i32 1` rather than leaving `iX 1` alone.
rdar://problem/20075773
llvm-svn: 232200
This patch adds initial support for vector instructions to the reassociation
pass. It enables most parts of the pass to work with vectors but to keep the
size of the patch small, optimization of Xor trees, canonicalization of
negative constants and converting shifts to muls, etc., have been left out.
This will be handled in later patches.
The patch is based on an initial patch by Chad Rosier.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7566
llvm-svn: 232190
Similar to gep (r230786) and load (r230794) changes.
Similar migration script can be used to update test cases, which
successfully migrated all of LLVM and Polly, but about 4 test cases
needed manually changes in Clang.
(this script will read the contents of stdin and massage it into stdout
- wrap it in the 'apply.sh' script shown in previous commits + xargs to
apply it over a large set of test cases)
import fileinput
import sys
import re
rep = re.compile(r"(getelementptr(?:\s+inbounds)?\s*\()((<\d*\s+x\s+)?([^@]*?)(|\s*addrspace\(\d+\))\s*\*(?(3)>)\s*)(?=$|%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|zeroinitializer|<|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{)", re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL)
def conv(match):
line = match.group(1)
line += match.group(4)
line += ", "
line += match.group(2)
return line
line = sys.stdin.read()
off = 0
for match in re.finditer(rep, line):
sys.stdout.write(line[off:match.start()])
sys.stdout.write(conv(match))
off = match.end()
sys.stdout.write(line[off:])
llvm-svn: 232184
Constant folding for shift IR instructions ignores all bits above 32 of
second argument (shift amount).
Because of that, some undef results are not recognized and APInt can
raise an assert failure if second argument has more than 64 bits.
Patch by Paweł Bylica!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7701
llvm-svn: 232176
It's firstly committed at r231630, and reverted at r231635.
Function pass InstructionSimplifier is inserted as barrier to
make sure loop unroll pass won't affect on LICM pass.
llvm-svn: 232011
The CallGraphNode function "addCalledFunction()" asserts that edges are not to intrinsics.
This patch makes sure that the Inliner does not add such an edge to the callgraph.
Fix for clang crash by assertion: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22857
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8231
llvm-svn: 231927
Given that large parts of inst combine is restricted to instructions which have one use, getting rid of a use on the condition can help the effectiveness of the optimizer. Also, it allows the condition to potentially be deleted by instcombine rather than waiting for another pass.
I noticed this completely by accident in another test case. It's not anything that actually came from a real workload.
p.s. We should probably do the same thing for switch instructions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8220
llvm-svn: 231881
This patch adds limited support in ValueTracking for inferring known bits of a value from conditional expressions which must be true to reach the instruction we're trying to optimize. At this time, the feature is off by default. Once landed, I'm hoping for feedback from others on both profitability and compile time impact.
Forms of conditional value propagation have been tried in LLVM before and have failed due to compile time problems. In an attempt to side step that, this patch only considers conditions where the edge leaving the branch dominates the context instruction. It does not attempt full dataflow. Even with that restriction, it handles many interesting cases:
* Early exits from functions
* Early exits from loops (for context instructions in the loop and after the check)
* Conditions which control entry into loops, including multi-version loops (such as those produced during vectorization, IRCE, loop unswitch, etc..)
Possible applications include optimizing using information provided by constructs such as: preconditions, assumptions, null checks, & range checks.
This patch implements two approaches to the problem that need further benchmarking. Approach 1 is to directly walk the dominator tree looking for interesting conditions. Approach 2 is to inspect other uses of the value being queried for interesting comparisons. From initial benchmarking, it appears that Approach 2 is faster than Approach 1, but this needs to be further validated.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7708
llvm-svn: 231879
ReplaceInstUsesWith needs to return nullptr when the input has no users,
because in that case it does not mutate the program. Otherwise, we can
get stuck in an infinite loop of repeatedly attempting to constant fold
and instruction with no users.
llvm-svn: 231755
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
Runtime unrolling is an expensive optimization which can bring benefit
only if the loop is hot and iteration number is relatively large enough.
For some loops, we know they are not worth to be runtime unrolled.
The scalar loop from vectorization is one of the cases.
llvm-svn: 231631
Runtime unrollng will introduce a runtime check in loop prologue.
If the unrolled loop is a inner loop, then the proglogue will be inside
the outer loop. LICM pass can help to promote the runtime check out if
the checked value is loop invariant.
llvm-svn: 231630
Summary:
See the two test cases.
; Can fold fcmp with undef on one side by choosing NaN for the undef
; Can fold fcmp with undef on both side
; fcmp u_pred undef, undef -> true
; fcmp o_pred undef, undef -> false
; because whatever you choose for the first undef
; you can choose NaN for the other undef
Reviewers: hfinkel, chandlerc, majnemer
Reviewed By: majnemer
Subscribers: majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7617
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231626
This pass interchanges loops to provide a more cache-friendly memory access.
For e.g. given a loop like -
for(int i=0;i<N;i++)
for(int j=0;j<N;j++)
A[j][i] = A[j][i]+B[j][i];
is interchanged to -
for(int j=0;j<N;j++)
for(int i=0;i<N;i++)
A[j][i] = A[j][i]+B[j][i];
This pass is currently disabled by default.
To give a brief introduction it consists of 3 stages-
LoopInterchangeLegality : Checks the legality of loop interchange based on Dependency matrix.
LoopInterchangeProfitability: A very basic heuristic has been added to check for profitibility. This will evolve over time.
LoopInterchangeTransform : Which does the actual transform.
LNT Performance tests shows improvement in Polybench/linear-algebra/kernels/mvt and Polybench/linear-algebra/kernels/gemver becnmarks.
TODO:
1) Add support for reductions and lcssa phi.
2) Improve profitability model.
3) Improve loop selection algorithm to select best loop for interchange. Currently the innermost loop is selected for interchange.
4) Improve compile time regression found in llvm lnt due to this pass.
5) Fix issues in Dependency Analysis module.
A special thanks to Hal for reviewing this code.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7499
llvm-svn: 231458
At this point, we should have decent coverage of the involved code. I've got a few more test cases to cleanup and submit, but what's here is already reasonable.
I've got a collection of liveness tests which will be posted for review along with a decent liveness algorithm in the next few days. Once those are in, the code in this file should be well tested and I can start renaming things without risk of serious breakage.
llvm-svn: 231414
isNormalFp and isFiniteNonZeroFp should not assume vector operands can not be constant expressions.
Patch by Pawel Jurek <pawel.jurek@intel.com>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8053
llvm-svn: 231359
Summary:
DataLayout keeps the string used for its creation.
As a side effect it is no longer needed in the Module.
This is "almost" NFC, the string is no longer
canonicalized, you can't rely on two "equals" DataLayout
having the same string returned by getStringRepresentation().
Get rid of DataLayoutPass: the DataLayout is in the Module
The DataLayout is "per-module", let's enforce this by not
duplicating it more than necessary.
One more step toward non-optionality of the DataLayout in the
module.
Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module
Module->getDataLayout() will never returns nullptr anymore.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: resistor, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7992
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231270
RewriteStatepointsForGC pass emits an alloca for each GC pointer which will be relocated. It then inserts stores after def and all relocations, and inserts loads before each use as well. In the end, mem2reg is used to update IR with relocations in SSA form.
However, there is a problem with inserting stores for values defined by invoke instructions. The code didn't expect a def was a terminator instruction, and inserting instructions after these terminators resulted in malformed IR.
This patch fixes this problem by handling invoke instructions as a special case. If the def is an invoke instruction, the store will be inserted at the beginning of the normal destination block. Since return value from invoke instruction does not dominate the unwind destination block, no action is needed there.
Patch by: Chen Li
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7923
llvm-svn: 231183
Selection conditions may be vectors or scalars. Make sure InstCombine
doesn't indiscriminately assume that a select which is value dependent
on another select have identical select condition types.
This fixes PR22773.
llvm-svn: 231156
Move the specialized metadata nodes for the new debug info hierarchy
into place, finishing off PR22464. I've done bootstraps (and all that)
and I'm confident this commit is NFC as far as DWARF output is
concerned. Let me know if I'm wrong :).
The code changes are fairly mechanical:
- Bumped the "Debug Info Version".
- `DIBuilder` now creates the appropriate subclass of `MDNode`.
- Subclasses of DIDescriptor now expect to hold their "MD"
counterparts (e.g., `DIBasicType` expects `MDBasicType`).
- Deleted a ton of dead code in `AsmWriter.cpp` and `DebugInfo.cpp`
for printing comments.
- Big update to LangRef to describe the nodes in the new hierarchy.
Feel free to make it better.
Testcase changes are enormous. There's an accompanying clang commit on
its way.
If you have out-of-tree debug info testcases, I just broke your build.
- `upgrade-specialized-nodes.sh` is attached to PR22564. I used it to
update all the IR testcases.
- Unfortunately I failed to find way to script the updates to CHECK
lines, so I updated all of these by hand. This was fairly painful,
since the old CHECKs are difficult to reason about. That's one of
the benefits of the new hierarchy.
This work isn't quite finished, BTW. The `DIDescriptor` subclasses are
almost empty wrappers, but not quite: they still have loose casting
checks (see the `RETURN_FROM_RAW()` macro). Once they're completely
gutted, I'll rename the "MD" classes to "DI" and kill the wrappers. I
also expect to make a few schema changes now that it's easier to reason
about everything.
llvm-svn: 231082
By loading from indexed offsets into a byte array and applying a mask, a
program can test bits from the bit set with a relatively short instruction
sequence. For example, suppose we have 15 bit sets to lay out:
A (16 bits), B (15 bits), C (14 bits), D (13 bits), E (12 bits),
F (11 bits), G (10 bits), H (9 bits), I (7 bits), J (6 bits), K (5 bits),
L (4 bits), M (3 bits), N (2 bits), O (1 bit)
These bits can be laid out in a 16-byte array like this:
Byte Offset
0123456789ABCDEF
Bit
7 HHHHHHHHHIIIIIII
6 GGGGGGGGGGJJJJJJ
5 FFFFFFFFFFFKKKKK
4 EEEEEEEEEEEELLLL
3 DDDDDDDDDDDDDMMM
2 CCCCCCCCCCCCCCNN
1 BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBO
0 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
For example, to test bit X of A, we evaluate ((bits[X] & 1) != 0), or to
test bit X of I, we evaluate ((bits[9 + X] & 0x80) != 0). This can be done
in 1-2 machine instructions on x86, or 4-6 instructions on ARM.
This uses the LPT multiprocessor scheduling algorithm to lay out the bits
efficiently.
Saves ~450KB of instructions in a recent build of Chromium.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7954
llvm-svn: 231043
There's really no reason to have them have entries in the symbol table
anymore. Old versions of ld64 had some bugs in this area but those have
been fixed long ago.
llvm-svn: 231041
This re-lands change r230921. r230921 was reverted because it broke a
clang test; a checkin fixing the clang test will be commited shortly.
Summary:
As far as I can tell, the real bug causing the issue was fixed in
r230533. SCEVExpander should mark an increment operation as nuw or nsw
only if it can *prove* that the operation does not overflow. There
shouldn't be any situation where we have to do something different
because of no-wrap flags generated by SCEVExpander.
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Allow LFTR to fire more often"
This reverts commit 1ade0f0faa98877b688e0b9da58e876052c1e04e (SVN: 222213).
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Don't let LFTR compare against a poison value"
This reverts commit c0f2b8b528d8a37b0a1522aae90af649d6357eb5 (SVN: 217102).
Reviewers: majnemer, atrick, spatel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7979
llvm-svn: 231018
Summary:
As far as I can tell, the real bug causing the issue was fixed in
r230533. SCEVExpander should mark an increment operation as nuw or nsw
only if it can *prove* that the operation does not overflow. There
shouldn't be any situation where we have to do something different
because of no-wrap flags generated by SCEVExpander.
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Allow LFTR to fire more often"
This reverts commit 1ade0f0faa98877b688e0b9da58e876052c1e04e (SVN: 222213).
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Don't let LFTR compare against a poison value"
This reverts commit c0f2b8b528d8a37b0a1522aae90af649d6357eb5 (SVN: 217102).
Reviewers: majnemer, atrick, spatel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7979
llvm-svn: 230921
r228631 stopped using `DW_OP_piece` inside `DIExpression`s in the IR,
but it apparently missed updating these testcases. Caught by verifier
checks for `MDExpression` while working on moving the new hierarchy into
place.
llvm-svn: 230882
Leaving empty blocks around just opens up a can of bugs like PR22704. Deleting
them early also slightly simplifies code.
Thanks to Sanjay for the IR test case.
llvm-svn: 230856
It turns out the naming of inserted phis and selects is sensative to the order in which two sets are iterated. We need to nail this down to avoid non-deterministic output and possible test failures.
The modified test is the one I first noticed something odd in. The change is making it more strict to report the error. With the test change, but without the code change, the test fails roughly 1 in 5. With the code change, I've run ~30 runs without error.
Long term, the right fix here is to adjust the naming scheme. I'm checking in this hack to avoid any possible non-determinism in the tests over the weekend. HJust because I only noticed one case doesn't mean it's actually the only case. I hope to get to the right change Monday.
std->llvm data structure changes bugfix change #3
llvm-svn: 230835
These tests cover the 'base object' identification and rewritting portion of RewriteStatepointsForGC. These aren't completely exhaustive, but they've proven to be reasonable effective over time at finding regressions.
In the process of porting these tests over, I found my first "cleanup per llvm code style standards" bug. We were relying on the order of iteration when testing the base pointers found for a derived pointer. When we switched from std::set to DenseSet, this stopped being a safe assumption. I'm suspecting I'm going to find more of those. In particular, I'm now really wondering about the main iteration loop for this algorithm. I need to go take a closer look at the assumptions there.
I'm not really happy with the fact these are testing what is essentially debug output (i.e. enabled via command line flags). Suggestions for how to structure this better are very welcome.
llvm-svn: 230818
Essentially the same as the GEP change in r230786.
A similar migration script can be used to update test cases, though a few more
test case improvements/changes were required this time around: (r229269-r229278)
import fileinput
import sys
import re
pat = re.compile(r"((?:=|:|^)\s*load (?:atomic )?(?:volatile )?(.*?))(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*($| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$)")
for line in sys.stdin:
sys.stdout.write(re.sub(pat, r"\1, \2\3*\4", line))
Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7649
llvm-svn: 230794
One of several parallel first steps to remove the target type of pointers,
replacing them with a single opaque pointer type.
This adds an explicit type parameter to the gep instruction so that when the
first parameter becomes an opaque pointer type, the type to gep through is
still available to the instructions.
* This doesn't modify gep operators, only instructions (operators will be
handled separately)
* Textual IR changes only. Bitcode (including upgrade) and changing the
in-memory representation will be in separate changes.
* geps of vectors are transformed as:
getelementptr <4 x float*> %x, ...
->getelementptr float, <4 x float*> %x, ...
Then, once the opaque pointer type is introduced, this will ultimately look
like:
getelementptr float, <4 x ptr> %x
with the unambiguous interpretation that it is a vector of pointers to float.
* address spaces remain on the pointer, not the type:
getelementptr float addrspace(1)* %x
->getelementptr float, float addrspace(1)* %x
Then, eventually:
getelementptr float, ptr addrspace(1) %x
Importantly, the massive amount of test case churn has been automated by
same crappy python code. I had to manually update a few test cases that
wouldn't fit the script's model (r228970,r229196,r229197,r229198). The
python script just massages stdin and writes the result to stdout, I
then wrapped that in a shell script to handle replacing files, then
using the usual find+xargs to migrate all the files.
update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re
ibrep = re.compile(r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr inbounds )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
normrep = re.compile( r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
def conv(match, line):
if not match:
return line
line = match.groups()[0]
if len(match.groups()[5]) == 0:
line += match.groups()[2]
line += match.groups()[3]
line += ", "
line += match.groups()[1]
line += "\n"
return line
for line in sys.stdin:
if line.find("getelementptr ") == line.find("getelementptr inbounds"):
if line.find("getelementptr inbounds") != line.find("getelementptr inbounds ("):
line = conv(re.match(ibrep, line), line)
elif line.find("getelementptr ") != line.find("getelementptr ("):
line = conv(re.match(normrep, line), line)
sys.stdout.write(line)
apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
rm -f "$name.tmp"
done
The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
After that, check-all (with llvm, clang, clang-tools-extra, lld,
compiler-rt, and polly all checked out).
The extra 'rm' in the apply.sh script is due to a few files in clang's test
suite using interesting unicode stuff that my python script was throwing
exceptions on. None of those files needed to be migrated, so it seemed
sufficient to ignore those cases.
Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7636
llvm-svn: 230786
InstCombine has long had logic to convert aligned Altivec load/store intrinsics
into regular loads and stores. This mirrors that functionality for QPX vector
load/store intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 230660
InstCombine has logic to convert aligned Altivec load/store intrinsics into
regular loads and stores. Unfortunately, there seems to be no regression test
covering this behavior. Adding one...
llvm-svn: 230632
Use the IRBuilder helpers for gc.statepoint and gc.result, instead of
coding the construction by hand. Note that the gc.statepoint IRBuilder
handles only CallInst, not InvokeInst; retain that part of hand-coding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7518
llvm-svn: 230591
This is a follow-on to r227491 which tightens the check for propagating FP
values. If a non-constant value happens to be a zero, we would hit the same
bug as before.
Bug noted and patch suggested by Eli Friedman.
llvm-svn: 230564
Summary: SROA generates code that isn't quite as easy to optimize and contains unusual-sized shuffles, but that code is generally correct. As discussed in D7487 the right place to clean things up is InstCombine, which will pick up the type-punning pattern and transform it into a more obvious bitcast+extractelement, while leaving the other patterns SROA encounters as-is.
Test Plan: make check
Reviewers: jvoung, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 230560
This change aligns globals to the next highest power of 2 bytes, up to a
maximum of 128. This makes it more likely that we will be able to compress
bit sets with a greater alignment. In many more cases, we can now take
advantage of a new optimization also introduced in this patch that removes
bit set checks if the bit set is all ones.
The 128 byte maximum was found to provide the best tradeoff between instruction
overhead and data overhead in a recent build of Chromium. It allows us to
remove ~2.4MB of instructions at the cost of ~250KB of data.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7873
llvm-svn: 230540
(The change was landed in r230280 and caused the regression PR22674.
This version contains a fix and a test-case for PR22674).
When emitting the increment operation, SCEVExpander marks the
operation as nuw or nsw based on the flags on the preincrement SCEV.
This is incorrect because, for instance, it is possible that {-6,+,1}
is <nuw> while {-6,+,1}+1 = {-5,+,1} is not.
This change teaches SCEV to mark the increment as nuw/nsw only if it
can explicitly prove that the increment operation won't overflow.
Apart from the attached test case, another (more realistic)
manifestation of the bug can be seen in
Transforms/IndVarSimplify/pr20680.ll.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7778
llvm-svn: 230533
With a diabolically crafted test case, we could recurse
through this code and return true instead of false.
The larger engineering crime is the use of magic numbers.
Added FIXME comments for those.
llvm-svn: 230515
Summary:
This change fixes the FIXME that you recently added when you committed
(a modified version of) my patch. When `InstCombine` combines a load and
store of an pointer to those of an equivalently-sized integer, it currently
drops any `!nonnull` metadata that might be present. This change replaces
`!nonnull` metadata with `!range !{ 1, -1 }` metadata instead.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7621
llvm-svn: 230462
The builder is based on a layout algorithm that tries to keep members of
small bit sets together. The new layout compresses Chromium's bit sets to
around 15% of their original size.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7796
llvm-svn: 230394
This case is interesting because ScalarEvolutionExpander lowers min(a,
b) as ~max(~a,~b). I think the profitability heuristics can be made
more clever/aggressive, but this is a start.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7821
llvm-svn: 230285
When emitting the increment operation, SCEVExpander marks the
operation as nuw or nsw based on the flags on the preincrement SCEV.
This is incorrect because, for instance, it is possible that {-6,+,1}
is <nuw> while {-6,+,1}+1 = {-5,+,1} is not.
This change teaches SCEV to mark the increment as nuw/nsw only if it
can explicitly prove that the increment operation won't overflow.
Apart from the attached test case, another (more realistic) manifestation
of the bug can be seen in Transforms/IndVarSimplify/pr20680.ll.
NOTE: this change was landed with an incorrect commit message in
rL230275 and was reverted for that reason in rL230279. This commit
message is the correct one.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7778
llvm-svn: 230280
230275 got committed with an incorrect commit message due to a mixup
on my side. Will re-land in a few moments with the correct commit
message.
llvm-svn: 230279
The bug was a result of getPreStartForExtend interpreting nsw/nuw
flags on an add recurrence more strongly than is legal. {S,+,X}<nsw>
implies S+X is nsw only if the backedge of the loop is taken at least
once.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7808
llvm-svn: 230275
This patch adds the isProfitableToHoist API. For AArch64, we want to prevent a
fmul from being hoisted in cases where it is more profitable to form a
fmsub/fmadd.
Phabricator Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7299
Patch by Lawrence Hu <lawrence@codeaurora.org>
llvm-svn: 230241
calculations. Semantically non-functional change.
This gets rid of some of the SCEV -> Value -> SCEV round tripping and
the Construct(SMin|SMax)Of and MaybeSimplify helper routines.
llvm-svn: 230150
Previously, this pass ran over every function in the Module if added to the pass order. With this change, it runs only over those with a GC attribute where the GC explicitly opts in. A GC can also choose which of entry safepoint polls, backedge safepoint polls, and call safepoints it wants. I hope to get these exposed as checks on the GCStrategy at some point, but for now, the checks are manual string comparisons.
llvm-svn: 230097
Yet another chapter in the endless story. While this looks like we leave
the loop in a non-canonical state this replicates the logic in
LoopSimplify so it doesn't diverge from the canonical form in any way.
PR21968
llvm-svn: 230058
This patch introduces a new mechanism that allows IR modules to co-operatively
build pointer sets corresponding to addresses within a given set of
globals. One particular use case for this is to allow a C++ program to
efficiently verify (at each call site) that a vtable pointer is in the set
of valid vtable pointers for the class or its derived classes. One way of
doing this is for a toolchain component to build, for each class, a bit set
that maps to the memory region allocated for the vtables, such that each 1
bit in the bit set maps to a valid vtable for that class, and lay out the
vtables next to each other, to minimize the total size of the bit sets.
The patch introduces a metadata format for representing pointer sets, an
'@llvm.bitset.test' intrinsic and an LTO lowering pass that lays out the globals
and builds the bitsets, and documents the new feature.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7288
llvm-svn: 230054
Before calling Function::getGC to test for enablement, we need to make sure there's actually a GC at all via Function::hasGC. Otherwise, we'd crash on functions without a GC. Thankfully, this only mattered if you manually scheduled the pass, but still, oops. :(
llvm-svn: 230040
This change addresses a deficiency pointed out in PR22629. To copy from the bug
report:
[from the bug report]
Consider this code:
int f(int x) {
int a[] = {12};
return a[x];
}
GCC knows to optimize this to
movl $12, %eax
ret
The code generated by recent Clang at -O3 is:
movslq %edi, %rax
movl .L_ZZ1fiE1a(,%rax,4), %eax
retq
.L_ZZ1fiE1a:
.long 12 # 0xc
[end from the bug report]
This definitely seems worth fixing. I've also seen this kind of code before (as
the base case of generic vector wrapper templates with one element).
The general idea is to look at the GEP feeding a load or a store, which has
some variable as its first non-zero index, and determine if that index must be
zero (or else an out-of-bounds access would occur). We can do this for allocas
and globals with constant initializers where we know the maximum size of the
underlying object. When we find such a GEP, we create a new one for the memory
access with that first variable index replaced with a constant zero.
Even if we can't eliminate the memory access (and sometimes we can't), it is
still useful because it removes unnecessary indexing calculations.
llvm-svn: 229959
When back merging the changes in 229945 I noticed that I forgot to mark the test cases with the appropriate GC. We want the rewriting to be off by default (even when manually added to the pass order), not on-by default. To keep the current test working, mark them as using the statepoint-example GC and whitelist that GC.
Longer term, we need a better selection mechanism here for both actual usage and testing. As I migrate more tests to the in tree version of this pass, I will probably need to update the enable/disable logic as well.
llvm-svn: 229954
This patch consists of a single pass whose only purpose is to visit previous inserted gc.statepoints which do not have gc.relocates inserted yet, and insert them. This can be used either immediately after IR generation to perform 'early safepoint insertion' or late in the pass order to perform 'late insertion'.
This patch is setting the stage for work to continue in tree. In particular, there are known naming and style violations in the current patch. I'll try to get those resolved over the next week or so. As I touch each area to make style changes, I need to make sure we have adequate testing in place. As part of the cleanup, I will be cleaning up a collection of test cases we have out of tree and submitting them upstream. The tests included in this change are very basic and mostly to provide examples of usage.
The pass has several main subproblems it needs to address:
- First, it has identify any live pointers. In the current code, the use of address spaces to distinguish pointers to GC managed objects is hard coded, but this will become parametrizable in the near future. Note that the current change doesn't actually contain a useful liveness analysis. It was seperated into a followup change as the code wasn't ready to be shared. Instead, the current implementation just considers any dominating def of appropriate pointer type to be live.
- Second, it has to identify base pointers for each live pointer. This is a fairly straight forward data flow algorithm.
- Third, the information in the previous steps is used to actually introduce rewrites. Rather than trying to do this by hand, we simply re-purpose the code behind Mem2Reg to do this for us.
llvm-svn: 229945
This re-applies r223862, r224198, r224203, and r224754, which were
reverted in r228129 because they exposed Clang misalignment problems
when self-hosting.
The combine caused the crashes because we turned ISD::LOAD/STORE nodes
to ARMISD::VLD1/VST1_UPD nodes. When selecting addressing modes, we
were very lax for the former, and only emitted the alignment operand
(as in "[r1:128]") when it was larger than the standard alignment of
the memory type.
However, for ARMISD nodes, we just used the MMO alignment, no matter
what. In our case, we turned ISD nodes to ARMISD nodes, and this
caused the alignment operands to start being emitted.
And that's how we exposed alignment problems that were ignored before
(but I believe would have been caught with SCTRL.A==1?).
To fix this, we can just mirror the hack done for ISD nodes: only
take into account the MMO alignment when the access is overaligned.
Original commit message:
We used to only combine intrinsics, and turn them into VLD1_UPD/VST1_UPD
when the base pointer is incremented after the load/store.
We can do the same thing for generic load/stores.
Note that we can only combine the first load/store+adds pair in
a sequence (as might be generated for a v16f32 load for instance),
because other combines turn the base pointer addition chain (each
computing the address of the next load, from the address of the last
load) into independent additions (common base pointer + this load's
offset).
rdar://19717869, rdar://14062261.
llvm-svn: 229932
First, don't combine bit masking into vector shuffles (even ones the
target can handle) once operation legalization has taken place. Custom
legalization of vector shuffles may exist for these patterns (making the
predicate return true) but that custom legalization may in some cases
produce the exact bit math this matches. We only really want to handle
this prior to operation legalization.
However, the x86 backend, in a fit of awesome, relied on this. What it
would do is mark VSELECTs as expand, which would turn them into
arithmetic, which this would then match back into vector shuffles, which
we would then lower properly. Amazing.
Instead, the second change is to teach the x86 backend to directly form
vector shuffles from VSELECT nodes with constant conditions, and to mark
all of the vector types we support lowering blends as shuffles as custom
VSELECT lowering. We still mark the forms which actually support
variable blends as *legal* so that the custom lowering is bypassed, and
the legal lowering can even be used by the vector shuffle legalization
(yes, i know, this is confusing. but that's how the patterns are
written).
This makes the VSELECT lowering much more sensible, and in fact should
fix a bunch of bugs with it. However, as you'll see in the test cases,
right now what it does is point out the *hilarious* deficiency of the
new vector shuffle lowering when it comes to blends. Fortunately, my
very next patch fixes that. I can't submit it yet, because that patch,
somewhat obviously, forms the exact and/or pattern that the DAG combine
is matching here! Without this patch, teaching the vector shuffle
lowering to produce the right code infloops in the DAG combiner. With
this patch alone, we produce terrible code but at least lower through
the right paths. With both patches, all the regressions here should be
fixed, and a bunch of the improvements (like using 2 shufps with no
memory loads instead of 2 andps with memory loads and an orps) will
stay. Win!
There is one other change worth noting here. We had hilariously wrong
vectorization cost estimates for vselect because we fell through to the
code path that assumed all "expand" vector operations are scalarized.
However, the "expand" lowering of VSELECT is vector bit math, most
definitely not scalarized. So now we go back to the correct if horribly
naive cost of "1" for "not scalarized". If anyone wants to add actual
modeling of shuffle costs, that would be cool, but this seems an
improvement on its own. Note the removal of 16 and 32 "costs" for doing
a blend. Even in SSE2 we can blend in fewer than 16 instructions. ;] Of
course, we don't right now because of OMG bad code, but I'm going to fix
that. Next patch. I promise.
llvm-svn: 229835
Don't spend the entire iteration space in the scalar loop prologue if
computing the trip count overflows. This change also gets rid of the
backedge check in the prologue loop and the extra check for
overflowing trip-count.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7715
llvm-svn: 229731
InstCombiner::visitGetElementPtrInst was using getFirstNonPHI to compute the
insertion point, which caused the verifier to complain when a GEP was inserted
before a landingpad instruction. This commit fixes it to use getFirstInsertionPt
instead.
rdar://problem/19394964
llvm-svn: 229619
When visiting the initial list of "root" instructions (those which must always
be alive), for those that are integer-valued (such as invokes returning an
integer), we mark their bits as (initially) all dead (we might, obviously, find
uses of those bits later, but all bits are assumed dead until proven
otherwise). Don't do so, however, if we're already seen a use of those bits by
another root instruction (such as a store).
Fixes a miscompile of the sanitizer unit tests on x86_64.
Also, add a debug line for visiting the root instructions, and remove a debug
line which tried to print instructions being removed (printing dead
instructions is dangerous, and can sometimes crash).
llvm-svn: 229618
The problem was in store-sink barrier check.
Store sink barrier should be checked for ModRef (read-write) mode.
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22613
llvm-svn: 229495
BDCE is a bit-tracking dead code elimination pass. It is based on ADCE (the
"aggressive DCE" pass), with the added capability to track dead bits of integer
valued instructions and remove those instructions when all of the bits are
dead.
Currently, it does not actually do this all-bits-dead removal, but rather
replaces the instruction's uses with a constant zero, and lets instcombine (and
the later run of ADCE) do the rest. Because we essentially get a run of ADCE
"for free" while tracking the dead bits, we also do what ADCE does and removes
actually-dead instructions as well (this includes instructions newly trivially
dead because all bits were dead, but not all such instructions can be removed).
The motivation for this is a case like:
int __attribute__((const)) foo(int i);
int bar(int x) {
x |= (4 & foo(5));
x |= (8 & foo(3));
x |= (16 & foo(2));
x |= (32 & foo(1));
x |= (64 & foo(0));
x |= (128& foo(4));
return x >> 4;
}
As it turns out, if you order the bit-field insertions so that all of the dead
ones come last, then instcombine will remove them. However, if you pick some
other order (such as the one above), the fact that some of the calls to foo()
are useless is not locally obvious, and we don't remove them (without this
pass).
I did a quick compile-time overhead check using sqlite from the test suite
(Release+Asserts). BDCE took ~0.4% of the compilation time (making it about
twice as expensive as ADCE).
I've not looked at why yet, but we eliminate instructions due to having
all-dead bits in:
External/SPEC/CFP2006/447.dealII/447.dealII
External/SPEC/CINT2006/400.perlbench/400.perlbench
External/SPEC/CINT2006/403.gcc/403.gcc
MultiSource/Applications/ClamAV/clamscan
MultiSource/Benchmarks/7zip/7zip-benchmark
llvm-svn: 229462
We won't find a root with index zero in any loop that we are able to reroll.
However, we may find one in a non-rerollable loop, so bail gracefully instead
of failing hard.
llvm-svn: 229406
If a PHI has no users, don't crash; bail gracefully. This shouldn't
happen often, but we can make no guarantees that previous passes didn't leave
dead code around.
llvm-svn: 229405
We didn't properly handle the out-of-bounds case for
ConstantAggregateZero and UndefValue. This would manifest as a crash
when the constant folder was asked to fold a load of a constant global
whose struct type has no operands.
This fixes PR22595.
llvm-svn: 229352
The "dereferenceable" attribute cannot be added via .addAttribute(),
since it also expects a size in bytes. AttrBuilder#addAttribute or
AttributeSet#addAttribute is wrapped by classes Function, InvokeInst,
and CallInst. Add corresponding wrappers to
AttrBuilder#addDereferenceableAttr.
Having done this, propagate the dereferenceable attribute via
gc.relocate, adding a test to exercise it. Note that -datalayout is
required during execution over and above -instcombine, because
InstCombine only optionally requires DataLayoutPass.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7510
llvm-svn: 229265
If we know that the sign bit of a value being sign extended is zero, we can use a zero extension instead. This is motivated by the fact that zero extensions are generally cheaper on x86 (and most other architectures?). We already apply a similar transform in DAGCombine, this just extends that to the IR level.
This comes up when we eagerly canonicalize gep indices to the width of a machine register (i64 on x86_64). To do so, we insert sign extensions (sext) to promote smaller types.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7255
llvm-svn: 229189
This patch fixes a problem I accidentally introduced in an instruction combine
on select instructions added at r227197. That revision taught the instruction
combiner how to fold a cttz/ctlz followed by a icmp plus select into a single
cttz/ctlz with flag 'is_zero_undef' cleared.
However, the new rule added at r227197 would have produced wrong results in the
case where a cttz/ctlz with flag 'is_zero_undef' cleared was follwed by a
zero-extend or truncate. In that case, the folded instruction would have
been inserted in a wrong location thus leaving the CFG in an inconsistent
state.
This patch fixes the problem and add two reproducible test cases to
existing test 'InstCombine/select-cmp-cttz-ctlz.ll'.
llvm-svn: 229124
SimplifyCFG now knows how to speculate calls to intrinsic cttz/ctlz that are
'cheap' for the target. Therefore, some of the logic in CodeGenPrepare
that was originally added at revision 224899 can now be removed.
This patch is basically a no functional change. It removes the duplicated
logic in CodeGenPrepare and converts all the existing target specific tests
for cttz/ctlz into SimplifyCFG tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7608
llvm-svn: 229105
The issues with the new unroll analyzer are more fundamental than code
cleanup, algorithm, or data structure changes. I've sent an email to the
original commit thread with details and a proposal for how to redesign
things. I'm disabling this for now so that we don't spend time
debugging issues with it in its current state.
llvm-svn: 229064
- First, there's a crash when we try to combine that pointers into `icmp`
directly by creating a `bitcast`, which is invalid if that two pointers are
from different address spaces.
- It's not always appropriate to cast one pointer to another if they are from
different address spaces as that is not no-op cast. Instead, we only combine
`icmp` from `ptrtoint` if that two pointers are of the same address space.
llvm-svn: 229063
propagating of metadata.
We were propagating !nonnull metadata even when the newly formed load is
no longer of a pointer type. This is clearly broken and results in LLVM
failing the verifier and aborting. This patch just restricts the
propagation of !nonnull metadata to when we actually have a pointer
type.
This bug report and the initial version of this patch was provided by
Charles Davis! Many thanks for finding this!
We still need to add logic to round-trip the metadata correctly if we
combine from pointer types to integer types and then back by using range
metadata for the integer type loads. But this is the minimal and safe
version of the patch, which is important so we can backport it into 3.6.
llvm-svn: 229029
Summary:
Instances of the AssumptionCache are per function, so we can't re-use
the same AssumptionCache instance when recursing in the CallAnalyzer to
analyze a different function. Instead we have to pass the
AssumptionCacheTracker to the CallAnalyzer so it can get the right
AssumptionCache on demand.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hans
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7533
llvm-svn: 228957
We can't solve the full subgraph isomorphism problem. But we can
allow obvious cases, where for example two instructions of different
types are out of order. Due to them having different types/opcodes,
there is no ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 228931
Now that SimplifyCFG uses TTI for the cost heuristic, we can teach BasicTTIImpl
how to query TLI in order to get a more accurate cost for truncates and
zero-extends.
Before this patch, the basic cost heuristic in TargetTransformInfoImplCRTPBase
would have conservatively returned a 'default' TCC_Basic for all zero-extends,
and TCC_Free for truncates on native types.
This patch improves the heuristic so that we query TLI (if available) to get
more accurate answers. If TLI is available, then methods 'isZExtFree' and
'isTruncateFree' can be used to check if a zext/trunc is free for the target.
Added more test cases to SimplifyCFG/X86/speculate-cttz-ctlz.ll.
With this change, SimplifyCFG is now able to speculate a 'cheap' cttz/ctlz
immediately followed by a free zext/trunc.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7585
llvm-svn: 228923
Apparently some code finally started to tickle this after my
canonicalization changes to instcombine.
The bug stems from trying to form a vector type out of scalars that
aren't compatible at all. In this example, from x86_mmx values. The code
in the vectorizer that checks for reasonable types whas checking for
aggregates or vectors, but there are lots of other types that should
just never reach the vectorizer.
Debugging this was made more confusing by the lie in an assert in
VectorType::get() -- it isn't that the types are *primitive*. The types
must be integer, pointer, or floating point types. No other types are
allowed.
I've improved the assert and added a helper to the vectorizer to handle
the element type validity checks. It now re-uses the VectorType static
function and then further excludes weird target-specific types that we
probably shouldn't be touching here (x86_fp80 and ppc_fp128). Neither of
these are really reachable anyways (neither 80-bit nor 128-bit things
will get vectorized) but it seems better to just eagerly exclude such
nonesense.
I've added a test case, but while it definitely covers two of the paths
through this code there may be more paths that would benefit from test
coverage. I'm not familiar enough with the SLP vectorizer to synthesize
test cases for all of these, but was able to update the code itself by
inspection.
llvm-svn: 228899
I mistakenly thought the liveness of each "RetVal(F, i)" depended only on F. It
actually depends on the index too, which means we need to be careful about how
the results are combined before return. In particular if a single Use returns
Live, that counts for the entire object, at the granularity we're considering.
llvm-svn: 228885
Summary:
When trying to canonicalize negative constants out of
multiplication expressions, we need to check that the
constant is not INT_MIN which cannot be negated.
Reviewers: mcrosier
Reviewed By: mcrosier
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7286
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 228872
This patch is a follow-up of r228826 (see code-review: D7506).
Now that SimplifyCFG uses TargetTransformInfo for cost analysis, we
have to fix the cost heuristic for intrinsic calls to cttz/ctlz.
This patch defines method 'getIntrinsicCost' in BasicTTIImpl: now, BasicTTIImpl
queries TLI to check if a call to cttz/ctlz is cheap for the target.
Added test cases in Transforms/SimplifyCFG/X86 to verify that on x86,
SimplifyCFG only speculates a call to cttz/ctlz if it is cheap.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7554
llvm-svn: 228829
analysis.
We're already using TTI in SimplifyCFG, so remove the hard-baked "cheapness"
heuristic and use TTI directly. Generally NFC intended, but we're using a slightly
different heuristic now so there is a slight test churn.
Test changes:
* combine-comparisons-by-cse.ll: Removed unneeded branch check.
* 2014-08-04-muls-it.ll: Test now doesn't branch but emits muleq.
* coalesce-subregs.ll: Superfluous block check.
* 2008-01-02-hoist-fp-add.ll: fadd is safe to speculate. Change to udiv.
* PhiBlockMerge.ll: Superfluous CFG checking code. Main checks still present.
* select-gep.ll: A variable GEP is not expensive, just TCC_Basic, according to the TTI.
llvm-svn: 228826
A DAGRootSet models an induction variable being used in a rerollable
loop. For example:
x[i*3+0] = y1
x[i*3+1] = y2
x[i*3+2] = y3
Base instruction -> i*3
+---+----+
/ | \
ST[y1] +1 +2 <-- Roots
| |
ST[y2] ST[y3]
There may be multiple DAGRootSets, for example:
x[i*2+0] = ... (1)
x[i*2+1] = ... (1)
x[i*2+4] = ... (2)
x[i*2+5] = ... (2)
x[(i+1234)*2+5678] = ... (3)
x[(i+1234)*2+5679] = ... (3)
This concept is similar to the "Scale" member used previously, but allows
multiple independent sets of roots based off the same induction variable.
llvm-svn: 228821
If the landingpad of the invoke is using a personality function that
catches asynch exceptions, then it can catch a trap.
Also add some landingpads to invalid LLVM IR test cases that lack them.
Over-the-shoulder reviewed by David Majnemer.
llvm-svn: 228782
Unless we meet an insertvalue on a path from some value to a return, that value
will be live if *any* of the return's components are live, so all of those
components must be added to the MaybeLiveUses.
Previously we were deleting arguments if sub-value 0 turned out to be dead.
llvm-svn: 228731
This commit isn't using the correct context, and is transfoming calls
that are operands to loads rather than calls that are operands to an
icmp feeding into an assume. I've replied on the original review thread
with a very reduced test case and some thoughts on how to rework this.
llvm-svn: 228677
These tests the two optimizations for backedge insertion currently implemented and the split backedge flag which is currently off by default.
llvm-svn: 228617
This is just adding really simple tests which should have been part of the original submission. When doing so, I discovered that I'd mistakenly removed required pieces when preparing the patch for upstream submission. I fixed two such bugs in this submission.
llvm-svn: 228610
Some parts of DeadArgElim were only considering the individual fields
of StructTypes separately, but others (where insertvalue &
extractvalue instructions occur) also looked into ArrayTypes.
This one is an actual bug; the mismatch can lead to an argument being
considered used by a return sub-value that isn't being tracked (and
hence is dead by default). It then gets incorrectly eliminated.
llvm-svn: 228559
Previously, a non-extractvalue use of an aggregate return value meant
the entire return was considered live (the algorithm gave up
entirely). This was correct, but conservative. It's better to actually
look at that Use, making the analysis results apply to all sub-values
under consideration.
E.g.
%val = call { i32, i32 } @whatever()
[...]
ret { i32, i32 } %val
The return is using the entire aggregate (sub-values 0 and 1). We can
still simplify @whatever if we can prove that this return is itself
unused.
Also unifies the logic slightly between aggregate and non-aggregate
cases..
llvm-svn: 228558
Make assume (load (call|invoke) != null) set nonNull return attribute
for the call and invoke. Also include tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7107
llvm-svn: 228556
Summary:
The alias.scope metadata represents sets of things an instruction might
alias with. When generically combining the metadata from two
instructions the result must be the union of the original sets, because
the new instruction might alias with anything any of the original
instructions aliased with.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7490
llvm-svn: 228525
Normalize
select(C0, select(C1, a, b), b) -> select((C0 & C1), a, b)
select(C0, a, select(C1, a, b)) -> select((C0 | C1), a, b)
This normal form may enable further combines on the And/Or and shortens
paths for the values. Many targets prefer the other but can go back
easily in CodeGen.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7399
llvm-svn: 228409
Summary: When evaluating floating point instructions in the inliner, ask the TTI whether it is an expensive operation. By default, it's not an expensive operation. This keeps the default behavior the same as before. The ARM TTI has been updated to return back TCC_Expensive for targets which don't have hardware floating point.
Reviewers: chandlerc, echristo
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: t.p.northover, aemerson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6936
llvm-svn: 228263
We were previously doing a post-order traversal and operating on the
list in reverse, however this would occasionaly cause backedges for
loops to be visited before some of the other blocks in the loop.
We know use a reverse post-order traversal, which avoids this issue.
The reverse post-order traversal is not completely ideal, so we need
to manually fixup the list to ensure that inner loop backedges are
visited before outer loop backedges.
llvm-svn: 228186
This reverts patches 223862, 224198, 224203, and 224754, which were all
related to the vector load/store combining and were reverted/reaplied
a few times due to the same alignment problems we're seeing now.
Further tests, mainly self-hosting Clang, will be needed to reapply this
patch in the future.
llvm-svn: 228129
Summary:
Straight-line strength reduction (SLSR) is implemented in GCC but not yet in
LLVM. It has proven to effectively simplify statements derived from an unrolled
loop, and can potentially benefit many other cases too. For example,
LLVM unrolls
#pragma unroll
foo (int i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
sum += foo((b + i) * s);
}
into
sum += foo(b * s);
sum += foo((b + 1) * s);
sum += foo((b + 2) * s);
However, no optimizations yet reduce the internal redundancy of the three
expressions:
b * s
(b + 1) * s
(b + 2) * s
With SLSR, LLVM can optimize these three expressions into:
t1 = b * s
t2 = t1 + s
t3 = t2 + s
This commit is only an initial step towards implementing a series of such
optimizations. I will implement more (see TODO in the file commentary) in the
near future. This optimization is enabled for the NVPTX backend for now.
However, I am more than happy to push it to the standard optimization pipeline
after more thorough performance tests.
Test Plan: test/StraightLineStrengthReduce/slsr.ll
Reviewers: eliben, HaoLiu, meheff, hfinkel, jholewinski, atrick
Reviewed By: jholewinski, atrick
Subscribers: karthikthecool, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7310
llvm-svn: 228016
The commit r225977 uncovered this bug. The problem was that the vectorizer tried to
read the second operand of an already deleted instruction.
The bug didn't show up before r225977 because the freed memory still contained a non-null pointer.
With r225977 deletion of instructions is delayed and the read operand pointer is always null.
llvm-svn: 227800
This should be sufficient to replace the initial (minor) function pass
pipeline in Clang with the new pass manager. I'll probably add an (off
by default) flag to do that just to ensure we can get extra testing.
llvm-svn: 227726
I've added RUN lines both to the basic test for EarlyCSE and the
target-specific test, as this serves as a nice test that the TTI layer
in the new pass manager is in fact working well.
llvm-svn: 227725