If f32 denormals were enabled pre-gfx9, we would still try to
implement this with v_max_f32. Pre-gfx9, these instructions ignored
the denormal mode and did not flush. Switch to the multiply form for
f32 as a workaround which should always work in any case.
This fixes conformance failures when the library implementation of
fmin/fmax were accidentally not inlined, forcing the assumption of no
flushing on targets where denormals are not enabled by default. This
is a workaround, since really we should not be mixing code with
different FP mode expectations, but prefer the lowering that will work
in any mode.
Now this will always use max to implement canonicalize on gfx9+. This
is only really beneficial for f64. For f32/f16 it's a neutral choice
(and worse in terms of code size in 1 case), but possibly worse for
the compiler since it does add an extra register use operand. Leave
this change for later.
This will likely introduce catastrophic performance regressions on
older subtargets, but should be correct. A follow up change will
remove the old fp32-denormals subtarget features, and switch to using
the new denormal-fp-math/denormal-fp-math-f32 attributes. Frontends
should be making sure to add the denormal-fp-math-f32 attribute when
appropriate to avoid performance regressions.
Since this can be set with s_setreg*, it should not be a subtarget
property. Set a default based on the calling convention, and Introduce
a new amdgpu-dx10-clamp attribute to override this if desired.
Also introduce a new amdgpu-ieee attribute to match.
The values need to match to allow inlining. I think it is OK for the
caller's dx10-clamp attribute to override the callee, but there
doesn't appear to be the infrastructure to do this currently without
definining the attribute in the generic Attributes.td.
Eventually the calling convention lowering will need to insert a mode
switch somewhere for these.
llvm-svn: 357302