In the code below on 32-bit targets, x would previously get forwarded to g()
without sign-extension to 32 bits as required by the parameter attribute.
void g(signed short);
void f(unsigned short x) {
g(x);
}
llvm-svn: 262352
Function lto_module_create_in_local_context() would previously
rely on the default LLVMContext being created for it by
LTOModule::makeLTOModule(). This context exits the program on
error and is not arranged to update sLastStringError in
tools/lto/lto.cpp.
Function lto_module_create_in_local_context() now creates an
LLVMContext by itself, sets it up correctly to its needs and then
passes it to LTOModule::createInLocalContext() which takes
ownership of the context and keeps it present for the lifetime of
the returned LTOModule.
Function LTOModule::makeLTOModule() is modified to take a
reference to LLVMContext (instead of a pointer) and no longer
creates a default context when nullptr is passed to it. Method
LTOModule::createInContext() that takes a pointer to LLVMContext
is removed because it allows to pass a nullptr to it. Instead
LTOModule::createFromBuffer() (that takes a reference to
LLVMContext) should be used.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17715
llvm-svn: 262330
Summary:
Rename the section embeds bitcode from ".llvmbc,.llvmbc" to "__LLVM,__bitcode".
The new name matches MachO section naming convention.
Reviewers: rafael, pcc
Subscribers: davide, llvm-commits, joker.eph
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17388
llvm-svn: 262245
in the PassBuilder.
These are really just stubs for now, but they give a nice API surface
that Clang or other tools can start learning about and enabling for
experimentation.
I've also wired up parsing various synthetic module pass names to
generate these set pipelines. This allows the pipelines to be combined
with other passes and have their order controlled, with clear separation
between the *kind* of canned pipeline, and the *level* of optimization
to be used within that canned pipeline.
The most interesting part of this patch is almost certainly the spec for
the different optimization levels. I don't think we can ever have hard
and fast rules that would make it easy to determine whether a particular
optimization makes sense at a particular level -- it will always be in
large part a judgement call. But hopefully this will outline the
expected rationale that should be used, and the direction that the
pipelines should be taken. Much of this was based on a long llvm-dev
discussion I started years ago to try and crystalize the intent behind
these pipelines, and now, at long long last I'm returning to the task of
actually writing it down somewhere that we can cite and try to be
consistent with.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12826
llvm-svn: 262196
Change MachineInstr API to prefer MachineInstr& over MachineInstr*
whenever the parameter is expected to be non-null. Slowly inching
toward being able to fix PR26753.
llvm-svn: 262149
In all but one case, change the DFAPacketizer API to take MachineInstr&
instead of MachineInstr*. In DFAPacketizer::endPacket(), take
MachineBasicBlock::iterator. Besides cleaning up the API, this is in
search of PR26753.
llvm-svn: 262142
Update APIs in MachineInstrBundle.h to take and return MachineInstr&
instead of MachineInstr* when the instruction cannot be null. Besides
being a nice cleanup, this is tacking toward a fix for PR26753.
llvm-svn: 262141
manager proxies and use those rather than repeating their definition
four times.
There are real differences between the two directions: outer AMs are
const and don't need to have invalidation tracked. But every proxy in
a particular direction is identical except for the analysis manager type
and the IR unit they proxy into. This makes them prime candidates for
nice templates.
I've started introducing explicit template instantiation declarations
and definitions as well because we really shouldn't be emitting all this
everywhere. I'm going to go back and add the same for the other
templates like this in a follow-up patch.
I've left the analysis manager as an opaque type rather than using two
IR units and requiring it to be an AnalysisManager template
specialization. I think its important that users retain the ability to
provide their own custom analysis management layer and provided it has
the appropriate API everything should Just Work.
llvm-svn: 262127
This matches the behavior of the HSAIL clock instruction.
s_realmemtime is used if the subtarget supports it, and falls
back to s_memtime if not.
Also introduces new intrinsics for each of s_memtime / s_memrealtime.
llvm-svn: 262119
Avoid another implicit conversion from MachineInstrBundleIterator to
MachineInstr*, this time in MachineInstrBuilder.h (this is in pursuit of
PR26753).
llvm-svn: 262118
Take MachineInstr by reference instead of by pointer in SlotIndexes and
the SlotIndex wrappers in LiveIntervals. The MachineInstrs here are
never null, so this cleans up the API a bit. It also incidentally
removes a few implicit conversions from MachineInstrBundleIterator to
MachineInstr* (see PR26753).
At a couple of call sites it was convenient to convert to a range-based
for loop over MachineBasicBlock::instr_begin/instr_end, so I added
MachineBasicBlock::instrs.
llvm-svn: 262115
This should save a pointer of padding from all MSVC Value subclasses.
Recall that MSVC will not pack the following bitfields together:
unsigned Bits : 29;
unsigned Flag1 : 1;
unsigned Flag2 : 1;
unsigned Flag3 : 1;
Add a static_assert because LLVM developers always trip over this
behavior. This regressed in June.
llvm-svn: 262045
This patch updates cmake build scripts to build on Haiku. It adds Haiku x86_64 to config.guess.
Please consider reviewing.
Pathc by Jérôme Duval.
llvm-svn: 262038
analyses in the new pass manager.
These just handle really basic stuff: turning a type name into a string
statically that is nice to print in logs, and getting a static unique ID
for each analysis.
Sadly, the format of passes in anonymous namespaces makes using their
names in tests really annoying so I've customized the names of the no-op
passes to keep tests sane to read.
This is the first of a few simplifying refactorings for the new pass
manager that should reduce boilerplate and confusion.
llvm-svn: 262004
Summary: Check that we're using SCEV for the same loop we're simulating. Otherwise, we might try to use the iteration number of the current loop in SCEV expressions for inner/outer loops IVs, which is clearly incorrect.
Reviewers: chandlerc, hfinkel
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17632
llvm-svn: 261958
the testing more more explicit.
This will currently fail on platforms without support for getTypeName.
While an assert failure seems too harsh, I'm hoping we're OK with the
regression test failure, and I'd like to find out about what platforms
actually exist in this state if there are any so we can get
implementations in place for them.
But if we just can't fix all the host compilers to have a reasonably
portable variant of getTypeName and are worried about xfailing this test
on those platforms, I can add the horrible regular expression magic to
make the tests support "unknown" here as well.
llvm-svn: 261853
This creates the new-style LoopPassManager and wires it up with dummy
and print passes.
This version doesn't support modifying the loop nest at all. It will
be far easier to discuss and evaluate the approaches to that with this
in place so that the boilerplate is out of the way.
llvm-svn: 261831
(which they emulate). This way we don't use that path when compiled with
ICC on Windows where it mimics MSVC's behavior and supports __FUNCSIG__.
Thanks for David Majnemer again for spotting this better pattern!
llvm-svn: 261827
This extracts the type name from __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ for compilers that
support it (I've opted Clang, GCC, and ICC into this as I've tested that
they work) and from __FUNCSIG__ which is very similar on MSVC. The
routine falls back gracefully on a stub "UNKNOWN_TYPE" string with
compilers or formats it doesn't understand.
This should be enough for a lot of common cases in LLVM where the real
goal is just to log or print a type name as a debugging aid, and save
a ton of boilerplate in the process. Notably, I'm planning to use this
to remove all the getName() boiler plate from the new pass manager.
The design and implementation is based on a bunch of advice and
discussion with Richard Smith and experimenting with most versions of
Clang and GCC. David Majnemer also provided excellent advice on how best
to do this with MSVC. Richard also checked that ICC does something
reasonable and I'll watch the build bots for other compilers. It'd be
great if someone could contribute logic for xlC and/or other toolchains.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17565
llvm-svn: 261819
(This is the second attemp to commit this patch, after fixing pr26652 & pr26653).
This patch detects vector reductions before instruction selection. Vector
reductions are vectorized reduction operations, and for such operations we have
freedom to reorganize the elements of the result as long as the reduction of them
stay unchanged. This will enable some reduction pattern recognition during
instruction combine such as SAD/dot-product on X86. A flag is added to
SDNodeFlags to mark those vector reduction nodes to be checked during instruction
combine.
To detect those vector reductions, we search def-use chains starting from the
given instruction, and check if all uses fall into two categories:
1. Reduction with another vector.
2. Reduction on all elements.
in which 2 is detected by recognizing the pattern that the loop vectorizer
generates to reduce all elements in the vector outside of the loop, which
includes several ShuffleVector and one ExtractElement instructions.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15250
llvm-svn: 261804
Summary: This is extracted from D17555
Reviewers: davidxl, reames, sanjoy, MatzeB, pete
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17579
llvm-svn: 261796
This fixes bugs in copy elimination code in llvm. It slightly changes the
semantics of clearRegisterKills(). This is appropriate because:
- Users in lib/CodeGen/MachineCopyPropagation.cpp and
lib/Target/AArch64RedundantCopyElimination.cpp and
lib/Target/SystemZ/SystemZElimCompare.cpp are incorrect without it
(see included testcase).
- All other users in llvm are unaffected (they pass TRI==nullptr)
- (Kill flags are optional anyway so removing too many shouldn't hurt.)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17554
llvm-svn: 261763
This is a part of the refactoring to unify isSafeToLoadUnconditionally and isDereferenceablePointer functions. In subsequent change I'm going to eliminate isDerferenceableAndAlignedPointer from Loads API, leaving isSafeToLoadSpecualtively the only function to check is load instruction can be speculated.
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16180
llvm-svn: 261736
Summary: If a function is hot, put it in text.hot section.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17532
llvm-svn: 261607
Change TargetInstrInfo API to take `MachineInstr&` instead of
`MachineInstr*` in the functions related to predicated instructions
(I'll try to come back later and get some of the rest). All of these
functions require non-null parameters already, so references are more
clear. As a bonus, this happens to factor away a host of implicit
iterator => pointer conversions.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 261605
These are really handles that ensure the analyses get cleared at
appropriate places, and as such copying doesn't really make sense.
Instead, they should look more like unique ownership objects. Make that
the case.
Relatedly, if you create a temporary of one and move out of it
its destructor shouldn't actually clear anything. I don't think there is
any code that can trigger this currently, but it seems like a more
robust implementation.
If folks want, I can add a unittest that forces this to be exercised,
but that seems somewhat pointless -- whether a temporary is ever created
in the innards of AnalysisManager is not really something we should be
adding a reliance on, but I didn't want to leave a timebomb in the code
here.
If anyone has a cleaner way to represent this, I'm all ears, but
I wanted to assure myself that this wasn't in fact responsible for
another bug I'm chasing down (it wasn't) and figured I'd commit that.
llvm-svn: 261594
Summary: If a function is hot, put it in text.hot section.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: eraman, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17460
llvm-svn: 261582
Summary:
Since this is an IR pass it's nice to be able to write tests without
llc. This is the counterpart of the llc test under
CodeGen/PowerPC/loop-data-prefetch.ll.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17464
llvm-svn: 261578
This is a little embarrassing.
When I reverted r261504 (getIterator() => getInstrIterator()) in
r261567, I did a `git grep` to see if there were new calls to
`getInstrIterator()` that I needed to migrate. There were 10-20 hits,
and I blindly did a `sed ...` before calling `ninja check`.
However, these were `MachineInstrBundleIterator::getInstrIterator()`,
which predated r261567. Perhaps coincidentally, these had an identical
name and return type.
This commit undoes my careless sed and restores
`MachineBasicBlock::iterator::getInstrIterator()`.
llvm-svn: 261577
Rename makeNoWrapRegion to a more obvious makeGuaranteedNoWrapRegion,
and add a comment about the counter-intuitive aspects of the function.
This is to help prevent cases like PR26628.
llvm-svn: 261532
This reverts commit r261510, effectively reapplying r261509. The
original commit missed a caller in AArch64ConditionalCompares.
Original commit message:
Pass non-null arguments by reference in MachineTraceMetrics::Trace,
simplifying future work to remove implicit iterator => pointer
conversions.
llvm-svn: 261511
Pass non-null arguments by reference in MachineTraceMetrics::Trace,
simplifying future work to remove implicit iterator => pointer
conversions.
llvm-svn: 261509
Delete MachineInstr::getIterator(), since the term "iterator" is
overloaded when talking about MachineInstr.
- Downcast to ilist_node in iplist::getNextNode() and getPrevNode() so
that ilist_node::getIterator() is still available.
- Add it back as MachineInstr::getInstrIterator(). This matches the
naming in MachineBasicBlock.
- Add MachineInstr::getBundleIterator(). This is explicitly called
"bundle" (not matching MachineBasicBlock) to disintinguish it clearly
from ilist_node::getIterator().
- Update all calls. Some of these I switched to `auto` to remove
boiler-plate, since the new name is clear about the type.
There was one call I updated that looked fishy, but it wasn't clear what
the right answer was. This was in X86FrameLowering::inlineStackProbe(),
added in r252578 in lib/Target/X86/X86FrameLowering.cpp. I opted to
leave the behaviour unchanged, but I'll reply to the original commit on
the list in a moment.
llvm-svn: 261504
The resolver uses the fxsave/fxrstor instructions, which require 16-byte
alignment, to save SSE state to the stack. Since 16-byte alignment can't be
assumed on all OSes (and all i386 OSes share this function) - add code to
automatically bump the alignment to 16-bytes on entry to the function.
llvm-svn: 261503
Split MachineBasicBlock::bundle_iterator into a separate file, and
rename the class to MachineBundleIterator.
This is a precursor to adding a `MachineInstr::getBundleIterator()`
accessor, which will eventually let us delete the final call to
getNodePtrUnchecked(), and then remove the UB from ilist_iterator.
As a drive-by, I removed an unnecessary second template parameter.
llvm-svn: 261502
I completely missed these non-class operators when I removed the
implicit conversions in r252380. Remove them now. r261498 should have
already removed all uses.
Note (repeated from r252380): if you have out-of-tree code, it should be
fairly easy to revert this patch downstream while you update your
out-of-tree call sites. Note that these conversions are occasionally
latent bugs (that may happen to "work" now, but only because of getting
lucky with UB; follow-ups will change your luck). When they are valid,
I suggest using `->getIterator()` to go from pointer to iterator, and
`&*` to go from iterator to pointer.
llvm-svn: 261499
I missed == and != when I removed implicit conversions between iterators
and pointers in r252380 since they were defined outside ilist_iterator.
Since they depend on getNodePtrUnchecked(), they indirectly rely on UB.
This commit removes all uses of these operators. (I'll delete the
operators themselves in a separate commit so that it can be easily
reverted if necessary.)
There should be NFC here.
llvm-svn: 261498
Remove explicitly deleted random access API from ilist_iterator.
Since it no longer has implicit conversions to a pointer type, we
no longer need this protection.
llvm-svn: 261491
Add a common parent `ConstantData` to the constants that have no
operands. These are guaranteed to represent abstract data that is in no
way tied to a specific Module.
This is a good cleanup on its own. It also makes it simpler to disallow
RAUW (and factor away use-lists) on these constants in the future. (I
have some experimental patches that make RAUW illegal on ConstantData,
and they seem to catch a bunch of bugs...)
llvm-svn: 261464
COFF doesn't have sections with mergeable contents. Instead, each
constant pool entry ends up in a COMDAT section. The linker, when
choosing between COMDAT sections, doesn't choose the max alignment of
the two sections. You just get whatever alignment was on the section.
If one constant needed a higher alignment in one object file from
another one, then we will get into trouble if the linker chooses the
lower alignment one.
Instead, lets promote the alignment of the constant pool entry to make
sure we don't use an under aligned constant with an instruction which
assumed otherwise.
This fixes PR26680.
llvm-svn: 261462
it to actually test the new pass manager AA wiring.
This patch was extracted from the (somewhat too large) D12357 and
rebosed on top of the slightly different design of the new pass manager
AA wiring that I just landed. With this we can start testing the AA in
a thorough way with the new pass manager.
Some minor cleanups to the code in the pass was necessitated here, but
otherwise it is a very minimal change.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17372
llvm-svn: 261403
This patch enables the vectorization of first-order recurrences. A first-order
recurrence is a non-reduction recurrence relation in which the value of the
recurrence in the current loop iteration equals a value defined in the previous
iteration. The load PRE of the GVN pass often creates these recurrences by
hoisting loads from within loops.
In this patch, we add a new recurrence kind for first-order phi nodes and
attempt to vectorize them if possible. Vectorization is performed by shuffling
the values for the current and previous iterations. The vectorization cost
estimate is updated to account for the added shuffle instruction.
Contributed-by: Matthew Simpson and Chad Rosier <mcrosier@codeaurora.org>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16197
llvm-svn: 261346
routine.
We were getting this wrong in small ways and generally being very
inconsistent about it across loop passes. Instead, let's have a common
place where we do this. One minor downside is that this will require
some analyses like SCEV in more places than they are strictly needed.
However, this seems benign as these analyses are complete no-ops, and
without this consistency we can in many cases end up with the legacy
pass manager scheduling deciding to split up a loop pass pipeline in
order to run the function analysis half-way through. It is very, very
annoying to fix these without just being very pedantic across the board.
The only loop passes I've not updated here are ones that use
AU.setPreservesAll() such as IVUsers (an analysis) and the pass printer.
They seemed less relevant.
With this patch, almost all of the problems in PR24804 around loop pass
pipelines are fixed. The one remaining issue is that we run simplify-cfg
and instcombine in the middle of the loop pass pipeline. We've recently
added some loop variants of these passes that would seem substantially
cleaner to use, but this at least gets us much closer to the previous
state. Notably, the seven loop pass managers is down to three.
I've not updated the loop passes using LoopAccessAnalysis because that
analysis hasn't been fully wired into LoopSimplify/LCSSA, and it isn't
clear that those transforms want to support those forms anyways. They
all run late anyways, so this is harmless. Similarly, LSR is left alone
because it already carefully manages its forms and doesn't need to get
fused into a single loop pass manager with a bunch of other loop passes.
LoopReroll didn't use loop simplified form previously, and I've updated
the test case to match the trivially different output.
Finally, I've also factored all the pass initialization for the passes
that use this technique as well, so that should be done regularly and
reliably.
Thanks to James for the help reviewing and thinking about this stuff,
and Ben for help thinking about it as well!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17435
llvm-svn: 261316
Old compilers don't like constexpr, but we're only going to use this in one
place anyway: this file. Everyone else should go through PointerLikeTypeTraits.
Update to r261259.
llvm-svn: 261268
This patch is part of the work to make PPCLoopDataPrefetch
target-independent
(http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/92758).
Obviously the pass still only used from PPC at this point. Subsequent
patches will start driving this from ARM64 as well.
Due to the previous patch most lines should show up as moved lines.
llvm-svn: 261265
IRBuilder has two ways of putting bundle operands on calls: the default
operand bundle, and an overload of CreateCall that takes an operand
bundle list.
Previously, this overload used a default argument of None. This made it
impossible to distinguish between the case were the caller doesn't care
about bundles, and the case where the caller explicitly wants no
bundles. We behaved as if they wanted the latter behavior rather than
the former, which led to problems with simplifylibcalls and WinEH.
This change fixes it by making the parameter non-optional, so we can
distinguish these two cases.
llvm-svn: 261258
Summary: As per title. There was a lot of part missing in the C API, so I had to extend the invoke and landingpad API.
Reviewers: echristo, joker.eph, Wallbraker
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17359
llvm-svn: 261254
Summary:
These correspond to IMAGE_LOAD/STORE[_MIP] and are going to be used by Mesa
for the GL_ARB_shader_image_load_store extension.
IMAGE_LOAD is already matched by llvm.SI.image.load. That intrinsic has
a legacy name and pretends not to read memory.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17276
llvm-svn: 261224
convert one test to use this.
This is a particularly significant milestone because it required
a working per-function AA framework which can be queried over each
function from within a CGSCC transform pass (and additionally a module
analysis to be accessible). This is essentially *the* point of the
entire pass manager rewrite. A CGSCC transform is able to query for
multiple different function's analysis results. It works. The whole
thing appears to actually work and accomplish the original goal. While
we were able to hack function attrs and basic-aa to "work" in the old
pass manager, this port doesn't use any of that, it directly leverages
the new fundamental functionality.
For this to work, the CGSCC framework also has to support SCC-based
behavior analysis, etc. The only part of the CGSCC pass infrastructure
not sorted out at this point are the updates in the face of inlining and
running function passes that mutate the call graph.
The changes are pretty boring and boiler-plate. Most of the work was
factored into more focused preperatory patches. But this is what wires
it all together.
llvm-svn: 261203
analysis passes, support pre-registering analyses, and use that to
implement parsing and pre-registering a custom alias analysis pipeline.
With this its possible to configure the particular alias analysis
pipeline used by the AAManager from the commandline of opt. I've updated
the test to show this effectively in use to build a pipeline including
basic-aa as part of it.
My big question for reviewers are around the APIs that are used to
expose this functionality. Are folks happy with pass-by-lambda to do
pass registration? Are folks happy with pre-registering analyses as
a way to inject customized instances of an analysis while still using
the registry for the general case?
Other thoughts of course welcome. The next round of patches will be to
add the rest of the alias analyses into the new pass manager and wire
them up here so that they can be used from opt. This will require
extending the (somewhate limited) functionality of AAManager w.r.t.
module passes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17259
llvm-svn: 261197
Also implements the PDBSymbolCompilandEnv::getValue() method,
which until now had been unimplemented specifically because
variant did not support string values.
llvm-svn: 261173
Every symbol, no matter what it's tag is, supports the method
getSymIndexId(). However, this was being forwarded on every
concrete symbol type, so if someone had a PDBSymbol that they
didn't know what type it was (or simply didn't have an instance
of the concrete symbol type), they would not be able to get its
index id. This patch moves the method up to PDBSymbol, so that
no matter what type of object you have, you can always get its
id.
llvm-svn: 261153
The IDiaSymbol::getValue() method returns a variant. Until now,
I had never encountered a string value, so the Variant wrapper
did not support VT_BSTR. Now we have need to support string
values, so this patch just adds support for one extra type to
Variant.
llvm-svn: 261152
Loop vectorizer now knows to vectorize GEP and create masked gather and scatter intrinsics for random memory access.
The feature is enabled on AVX-512 target.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15690
llvm-svn: 261140
Modify ProfileSummary class to make it not instrumented profile specific.
Add a new InstrumentedProfileSummary class that inherits from ProfileSummary.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17310
llvm-svn: 261119
The dynamic table is also an array of a fixed structure, so it can be
represented with a DynReginoInfo.
No major functionality change. The extra error checking is covered by
existing tests with a broken dynamic program header.
Idea extracted from r260488. I did the extra cleanups.
llvm-svn: 261107
We used to keep both a section and a pointer to the first symbol.
The oddity of keeping a section for dynamic symbols is because there is
a DT_SYMTAB but no DT_SYMTABZ, so to print the table we have to find the
size via a section table.
The reason for still keeping a pointer to the first symbol is because we
want to be able to print relocation tables even if the section table is
missing (it is mandatory only for files used in linking).
With this patch we keep just a DynRegionInfo. This then requires
changing a few places that were asking for a Elf_Shdr but actually just
needed the first symbol.
The test change is to delete the program header pointer.
Now that we use the information of both DT_SYMTAB and .dynsym, we don't
depend on the sh_entsize of .dynsym if we see DT_SYMTAB.
Note: It is questionable if it is worth it putting the effort to report
broken sh_entsize given that in files with no section table we have to
assume it is sizeof(Elf_Sym), but that is for another change.
Extracted from r260488.
llvm-svn: 261099
This patch detects vector reductions before instruction selection. Vector
reductions are vectorized reduction operations, and for such operations we have
freedom to reorganize the elements of the result as long as the reduction of them
stay unchanged. This will enable some reduction pattern recognition during
instruction combine such as SAD/dot-product on X86. A flag is added to
SDNodeFlags to mark those vector reduction nodes to be checked during instruction
combine.
To detect those vector reductions, we search def-use chains starting from the
given instruction, and check if all uses fall into two categories:
1. Reduction with another vector.
2. Reduction on all elements.
in which 2 is detected by recognizing the pattern that the loop vectorizer
generates to reduce all elements in the vector outside of the loop, which
includes several ShuffleVector and one ExtractElement instructions.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15250
llvm-svn: 261070
This reverts commit r261030 and r261036.
(The revision was marked "approved" on phabricator, but some concerns
were raised on the mailing list. Thanks D. Blaikie for notifying me.)
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 261055
reference-edge SCCs.
This essentially builds a more normal call graph as a subgraph of the
"reference graph" that was the old model. This allows both to exist and
the different use cases to use the aspect which addresses their needs.
Specifically, the pass manager and other *ordering* constrained logic
can use the reference graph to achieve conservative order of visit,
while analyses reasoning about attributes and other properties derived
from reachability can reason about the direct call graph.
Note that this isn't necessarily complete: it doesn't model edges to
declarations or indirect calls. Those can be found by scanning the
instructions of the function if desirable, and in fact every user
currently does this in order to handle things like calls to instrinsics.
If useful, we could consider caching this information in the call graph
to save the instruction scans, but currently that doesn't seem to be
important.
An important realization for why the representation chosen here works is
that the call graph is a formal subset of the reference graph and thus
both can live within the same data structure. All SCCs of the call graph
are necessarily contained within an SCC of the reference graph, etc.
The design is to build 'RefSCC's to model SCCs of the reference graph,
and then within them more literal SCCs for the call graph.
The formation of actual call edge SCCs is not done lazily, unlike
reference edge 'RefSCC's. Instead, once a reference SCC is formed, it
directly builds the call SCCs within it and stores them in a post-order
sequence. This is used to provide a consistent platform for mutation and
update of the graph. The post-order also allows for very efficient
updates in common cases by bounding the number of nodes (and thus edges)
considered.
There is considerable common code that I'm still looking for the best
way to factor out between the various DFS implementations here. So far,
my attempts have made the code harder to read and understand despite
reducing the duplication, which seems a poor tradeoff. I've not given up
on figuring out the right way to do this, but I wanted to wait until
I at least had the system working and tested to continue attempting to
factor it differently.
This also requires introducing several new algorithms in order to handle
all of the incremental update scenarios for the more complex structure
involving two edge colorings. I've tried to comment the algorithms
sufficiently to make it clear how this is expected to work, but they may
still need more extensive documentation.
I know that there are some changes which are not strictly necessarily
coupled here. The process of developing this started out with a very
focused set of changes for the new structure of the graph and
algorithms, but subsequent changes to bring the APIs and code into
consistent and understandable patterns also ended up touching on other
aspects. There was no good way to separate these out without causing
*massive* merge conflicts. Ultimately, to a large degree this is
a rewrite of most of the core algorithms in the LCG class and so I don't
think it really matters much.
Many thanks to the careful review by Sanjoy Das!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16802
llvm-svn: 261040
Summary: Loading IR with debug info improves MDString::get() from 19ms to 10ms.
Reviewers: dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16597
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 261030
Summary:
On the contrary to Full LTO, ThinLTO can afford to shift compile time
from the frontend to the linker: both phases are parallel (even if
it is not totally "free": projects like clang are reusing product
from the "compile phase" for multiple link, think about
libLLVMSupport reused for opt, llc, etc.).
This pipeline is based on the proposal in D13443 for full LTO. We
didn't move forward on this proposal because the LTO link was far too
long after that. We believe that we can afford it with ThinLTO.
The ThinLTO pipeline integrates in the regular O2/O3 flow:
- The compile phase perform the inliner with a somehow lighter
function simplification. (TODO: tune the inliner thresholds here)
This is intendend to simplify the IR and get rid of obvious things
like linkonce_odr that will be inlined.
- The link phase will run the pipeline from the start, extended with
some specific passes that leverage the augmented knowledge we have
during LTO. Especially after the inliner is done, a sequence of
globalDCE/globalOpt is performed, followed by another run of the
"function simplification" passes. It is not clear if this part
of the pipeline will stay as is, as the split model of ThinLTO
does not allow the same benefit as FullLTO without added tricks.
The measurements on the public test suite as well as on our internal
suite show an overall net improvement. The binary size for the clang
executable is reduced by 5%. We're still tuning it with the bringup
of ThinLTO and it will evolve, but this should provide a good starting
point.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17115
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 261029
It is intended to contains the passes run over a function after the
inliner is done with a function and before it moves to its callers.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 261028
The usual way to get a 32-bit relocation is to use a constant extender which doubles the size of the instruction, 4 bytes to 8 bytes.
Another way is to put a .word32 and mix code and data within a function. The disadvantage is it's not a valid instruction encoding and jumping over it causes prefetch stalls inside the hardware.
This relocation packs a 23-bit value in to an "r0 = add(rX, #a)" instruction by overwriting the source register bits. Since r0 is the return value register, if this instruction is placed after a function call which return void, r0 will be filled with an undefined value, the prefetch won't be confused, and the callee can access the constant value by way of the link register.
llvm-svn: 261006
Original message:
Get rid of the ifdefs in TargetLowering.
Introduce a new API used only by GlobalISel: CallLowering.
This API will contain target hooks dedicated to call lowering.
llvm-svn: 260998
Original messages:
Revert "[readobj] Handle ELF files with no section table or with no program headers."
Revert "[readobj] Dump DT_JMPREL relocations when outputting dynamic relocations."
r260489 depends on r260488 and among other issues r260488 deleted error
handling code.
llvm-svn: 260962
Summary:
Extending findExistingExpansion can use existing value in ExprValueMap.
This patch gives 0.3~0.5% performance improvements on
benchmarks(test-suite, spec2000, spec2006, commercial benchmark)
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, sanjoy, zzheng
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15559
llvm-svn: 260938
r260925 introduced a version of the *trim methods which is preferable
when trimming a single kind of character. Update all users in llvm.
llvm-svn: 260926
Add support for trimming a single kind of character from a StringRef.
This makes the common case of trimming null bytes much neater. It's also
probably a bit speedier too, since it avoids creating a std::bitset in
find_{first,last}_not_of.
llvm-svn: 260925
Summary: The name is confusing as it matche another method on the module.
Reviewers: joker.eph, Wallbraker, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17283
llvm-svn: 260920
This patch avoids the initial memset at the cost of making iterators
slightly more complex. This should be beneficial as most SmallPtrSets
hold no or only a few elements, while iterating over them is less
common.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16672
llvm-svn: 260913
This ensures that all of the various pieces are working. The next patch
will wire up commandline-driven alias analysis chain building and allow
BasicAA to work with the AAManager.
llvm-svn: 260838
into the new pass manager and fix the latent bugs there.
This lets everything live together nicely, but it isn't really useful
yet. I never finished wiring the AA layer up for the new pass manager,
and so subsequent patches will change this to do that wiring and get AA
stuff more fully integrated into the new pass manager. Turns out this is
necessary even to get functionattrs ported over. =]
llvm-svn: 260836
r180893 added an indirect include of llvm/Config/Targets.def to
llvm/Support/CodeGen.h, which in turn is included by things like
llvm/IR/Module.h. After a full build of LLVM and Clang, ninja had to
rebuild 1274 files after reconfiguring.
This commit strips CodeGen.h back down to just a pile of enums and moves
the expensive includes over to CodeGenCWrappers.h (which is only
included in two places). This gets ninja down to 88 files if you
reconfigure with, e.g., -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=X86.
llvm-svn: 260835
Summary:
Export the CloneDebugInfoMetadata utility, which clones all debug info
associated with a function into the first module. Also use this function
in CloneModule on each function we clone (the CloneFunction entrypoint
already does this).
Without this, cloning a module will lead to DI quality regressions,
especially since r252219 reversed the Function <-> DISubprogram edge
(before we could get lucky and have this edge preserved if the
DISubprogram itself was, e.g. due to location metadata).
This was verified to fix missing debug information in julia and
a unittest to verify the new behavior is included.
Patch by Yichao Yu! Thanks!
Reviewers: loladiro, pcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17165
llvm-svn: 260791
As support expands to more runtimes, we'll need to
distinguish between more than just HSA and unknown.
This also lets us stop using unknown everywhere.
llvm-svn: 260790
Add another interface to function annotateValueSite() which directly uses the
VauleData array.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17108
llvm-svn: 260741
MSan adds a constructor to each translation unit that calls
__msan_init, and does nothing else. The idea is to run __msan_init
before any instrumented code. This results in multiple constructors
and multiple .init_array entries in the final binary, one per
translation unit. This is absolutely unnecessary; one would be
enough.
This change moves the constructors to a comdat group in order to drop
the extra ones.
llvm-svn: 260632
This reverts commit r260458.
It was backported on an internal branch and broke stage2 build. Since
this can lead to weird random crash I'm reverting upstream as well
while investigating.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260605
Summary:
On the contrary to Full LTO, ThinLTO can afford to shift compile time
from the frontend to the linker: both phases are parallel.
This pipeline is based on the proposal in D13443 for full LTO. We ]
didn't move forward on this proposal because the link was far too long
after that.
This patch refactor the "function simplification" passes that are part
of the inliner loop in a helper function (this part is NFC and can be
commited separately to simplify the diff). The ThinLTO pipeline
integrates in the regular O2/O3 flow:
- The compile phase perform the inliner with a somehow lighter
function simplification. (TODO: tune the inliner thresholds here)
This is intendend to simplify the IR and get rid of obvious things
like linkonce_odr that will be inlined.
- The link phase will run the pipeline from the start, extended with
some specific passes that leverage the augmented knowledge we have
during LTO. Especially after the inliner is done, a sequence of
globalDCE/globalOpt is performed, followed by another run of the
"function simplification" passes.
The measurements on the public test suite as well as on our internal
suite show an overall net improvement. The binary size for the clang
executable is reduced by 5%. We're still tuning it with the bringup
of ThinLTO but this should provide a good starting point.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Subscribers: joker.eph, llvm-commits, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17115
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260604
It is intended to contains the passes run over a function after the
inliner is done with a function and before it moves to its callers.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260603
Summary: This required to add binding to Instruction::removeFromParent so that instruction can be forward declared and then moved at the right place.
Reviewers: bogner, chandlerc, echristo, dblaikie, joker.eph, Wallbraker
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17057
llvm-svn: 260597
Rather than storing type units in a vector and emitting them at the end
of code generation, emit them immediately and destroy them, reclaiming the
memory we were using for their DIEs.
In one benchmark carried out against Chromium's 50 largest (by bitcode
file size) translation units, total peak memory consumption with type units
decreased by median 17%, or by 7% when compared against disabling type units.
Tested using check-{llvm,clang}, the GDB 7.5 test suite (with
'-fdebug-types-section') and by eyeballing llvm-dwarfdump output on those
Chromium translation units with split DWARF both disabled and enabled, and
verifying that the only changes were to addresses and abbreviation ordering.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17118
llvm-svn: 260578
We actually need that information only for generic instructions, therefore it
would be nice not to have to pay the extra memory consumption for all
instructions. Especially because a typed non-generic instruction does not make
sense.
The question is then, is it possible to have that information in a union or
something?
My initial thought was that we could have a derived class GenericMachineInstr
with additional information, but in practice it makes little to no sense since
generic MachineInstrs are likely turned into non-generic ones by just switching
the opcode. In other words, we don't want to go through the process of creating
a new, non-generic MachineInstr, object each time we do this switch. The memory
benefit probably is not worth the extra compile time.
Another option would be to keep the type of the MachineInstr in a side table.
This would induce an extra indirection though.
Anyway, I will file a PR to discuss about it and remember we need to come back
to it at some point.
llvm-svn: 260558
This is a part of the refactoring to unify isSafeToLoadUnconditionally and isDereferenceablePointer functions. In the subsequent change isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute will be modified to use isSafeToLoadUnconditionally instead of isDereferenceableAndAlignedPointer.
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16227
llvm-svn: 260520
This adds support for finding the dynamic table and dynamic symbol table via
the section table or the program header table. If there's no section table an
attempt is made to figure out the length of the dynamic symbol table.
llvm-svn: 260488
For now, generic virtual registers will not have a register class. We may want
to change that. For instance, if we want to use all the methods from
TargetRegisterInfo with generic virtual registers, we need to either have some
sort of generic register classes that do what we want, or teach those methods
how to deal with nullptr register class.
Although the latter seems easy enough to do, we may still want to differenciate
generic register classes from nullptr to catch cases where nullptr gets
introduced by a bug of some sort.
Anyway, I will file a PR to keep track of that.
llvm-svn: 260474
There is not reason to pass an array of "char *" to rebuild a set if
the client already has one.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260462
Summary:
Just like the existing find_as() method, the new insert_as() accepts
an extra parameter which is used as a key to find the bucket in the
map.
When creating a Constant, we want to check the map before actually
creating the object. In this case we have to perform two queries to
the map, and this extra parameter can save recomputing the hash value
for the second query.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16268
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260458
Summary: Measured to be more performant when reading bitcode.
Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16285
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260455
The Use argument was used to compute the operand number for a fast
path when replacing only one operand. However we always have to go
through all the operands. So the argument number can be recomputed
locally anyway.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260454
The patch adds a parameter in annotateValueSite() to control the max number
of records written to the value profile meta data for each value site. The
default is kept as the current value of 3.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17084
llvm-svn: 260450
This restores commit r260408, along with a fix for a bot failure.
The bot failure was caused by dereferencing a unique_ptr in the same
call instruction parameter list where it was passed via std::move.
Apparently due to luck this was not exposed when I built the compiler
with clang, only with gcc.
llvm-svn: 260442
Summary:
Refactor common value, scope, and label tracking logic out of DwarfDebug
into a common base class called DebugHandlerBase.
Update an old LLVM IR test case to avoid an assertion in LexicalScopes.
Reviewers: dblaikie, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16931
llvm-svn: 260432
Patch by Alexander Riccio
This patch enables `constexpr` on Visual Studio 2015 by adding `||
LLVM_MSC_PREREQ(1900)` to the preprocessor `#if` statement. Since VS2013
doesn't support `constexpr`, that's purposely excluded. The
`LLVM_CONSTEXPR` macro is used in ~25 places.
I also added the MSVC/SAL equivalent of:
- `__attribute__((__warn_unused_result__))` as an
`LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_RESULT` definition
- `__attribute__((returns_nonnull))` as an
`LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_RETURNS_NONNULL` definition
...in case anybody ever decides to run `/analyze` on LLVM (probably
myself, if anybody)
Reviewers: rnk, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16751
llvm-svn: 260410
Summary:
This patch uses the lower 64-bits of the MD5 hash of a function name as
a GUID in the function index, instead of storing function names. Any
local functions are first given a global name by prepending the original
source file name. This is the same naming scheme and GUID used by PGO in
the indexed profile format.
This change has a couple of benefits. The primary benefit is size
reduction in the combined index file, for example 483.xalancbmk's
combined index file was reduced by around 70%. It should also result in
memory savings for the index file in memory, as the in-memory map is
also indexed by the hash instead of the string.
Second, this enables integration with indirect call promotion, since the
indirect call profile targets are recorded using the same global naming
convention and hash. This will enable the function importer to easily
locate function summaries for indirect call profile targets to enable
their import and subsequent promotion.
The original source file name is recorded in the bitcode in a new
module-level record for use in the ThinLTO backend pipeline.
Reviewers: davidxl, joker.eph
Subscribers: llvm-commits, joker.eph
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17028
llvm-svn: 260408
Currently you can't specify node properties like commutativity on
a PatFrag. If you want to create a PatFrag on a commutative node
with a hasOneUse predicate, this enables you to specify that the
PatFrag is also commutable.
llvm-svn: 260404
Summary:
As discussed on IRC, move the ThinLTOGlobalProcessing code out of
the linker, and into TransformUtils. The name of the class is changed
to FunctionImportGlobalProcessing.
Reviewers: joker.eph, rafael
Subscribers: joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17081
llvm-svn: 260395
This patch uses one bit in profile version to differentiate Clang
instrumentation and IR level instrumentation profiles.
PGOInstrumenation generates a COMDAT variable __llvm_profile_raw_version so
that the compiler runtime can set the right profile kind.
For Maco-O platform, we generate the variable as linkonce_odr linkage as
COMDAT is not supported.
PGOInstrumenation now checks this bit to make sure it's an IR level
instrumentation profile.
The patch was submitted as r260164 but reverted due to a Darwin test breakage.
Original Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15540
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17020
llvm-svn: 260385
Patch by Rong Xu
The problem is exposed by intra-module indirect call promotion where
prof symtab is created from module which does not contain all symbols
from the program. With partial symtab, the result needs to be checked
more strictly.
llvm-svn: 260361
This patch adds a new class, OrcI386, which contains the hooks needed to
support lazy-JITing on i386 (currently only for Pentium 2 or above, as the JIT
re-entry code uses the FXSAVE/FXRSTOR instructions).
Support for i386 is enabled in the LLI lazy JIT and the Orc C API, and
regression and unit tests are enabled for this architecture.
llvm-svn: 260338
Summary:
Tests for this will be added once the AMDGPU backend enables this
option.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16602
llvm-svn: 260336
Summary: As per title. This also include extra support for insertvalue and extracvalue.
Reviewers: bogner, chandlerc, echristo, dblaikie, joker.eph, Wallbraker
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17055
llvm-svn: 260335
Summary: As per title. This remove the need to rely on internal knowledge of call and invoke instruction to find called value and argument count.
Reviewers: bogner, chandlerc, echristo, dblaikie, joker.eph, Wallbraker
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17054
llvm-svn: 260332
Summary:
Remove the convergent attribute on any functions which provably do not
contain or invoke any convergent functions.
After this change, we'll be able to modify clang to conservatively add
'convergent' to all functions when compiling CUDA.
Reviewers: jingyue, joker.eph
Subscribers: llvm-commits, tra, jhen, hfinkel, resistor, chandlerc, arsenm
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17013
llvm-svn: 260319
This pass implements whole program optimization of virtual calls in cases
where we know (via bitset information) that the list of callees is fixed. This
includes the following:
- Single implementation devirtualization: if a virtual call has a single
possible callee, replace all calls with a direct call to that callee.
- Virtual constant propagation: if the virtual function's return type is an
integer <=64 bits and all possible callees are readnone, for each class and
each list of constant arguments: evaluate the function, store the return
value alongside the virtual table, and rewrite each virtual call as a load
from the virtual table.
- Uniform return value optimization: if the conditions for virtual constant
propagation hold and each function returns the same constant value, replace
each virtual call with that constant.
- Unique return value optimization for i1 return values: if the conditions
for virtual constant propagation hold and a single vtable's function
returns 0, or a single vtable's function returns 1, replace each virtual
call with a comparison of the vptr against that vtable's address.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16795
llvm-svn: 260312
Summary: As per title. Also add a facility method to get the name of a basic block from the C API.
Reviewers: bogner, chandlerc, echristo, dblaikie, joker.eph, Wallbraker
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16912
llvm-svn: 260309
I reinvented this functionality in http://reviews.llvm.org/D16828 because it was
hidden away as a static function. The changes in x86 are not based on a complete
audit. I suspect there are other possible uses there, and there are almost certainly
more potential users in other targets.
llvm-svn: 260295
On Windows, the DLL containing the registry will get its own global head
and tail variables, so the entries registered in the DLL will be
invisible to the consumer.
In order to solve this, we need to export a getter function from the
plugin DLL per registry and copy over the data inside it. This patch
adds support for this. This will be used to support clang plugins on
Windows.
llvm-svn: 260261
Summary:
Move the function renaming logic into the Function class, and the
MD5Hash routine into the MD5 header.
This will enable these routines to be shared with ThinLTO, which
will be changed to store the MD5 hash instead of full function name
in the combined index for significant size reductions. And using the same
function naming for locals in the function index facilitates future
integration with indirect call value profiles.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17006
llvm-svn: 260197
compiler-specific issues. Instead, repeat an 'operator delete' definition in
each derived class that is actually deleted, and give up on the static type
safety of an error when sized delete is accidentally used on a type derived
from TrailingObjects.
llvm-svn: 260190
Summary:
Passes that call `getAnalysisIfAvailable<T>` also need to call
`addUsedIfAvailable<T>` in `getAnalysisUsage` to indicate to the
legacy pass manager that it uses `T`. This contract was being
violated by passes that used `createLegacyPMAAResults`. This change
fixes this by exposing a helper in AliasAnalysis.h,
`addUsedAAAnalyses`, that is complementary to createLegacyPMAAResults
and does the right thing when called from `getAnalysisUsage`.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17010
llvm-svn: 260183
This fixes undefined behavior in C++14 due to the size of the object being
deleted being different from sizeof(dynamic type) when it is allocated with
trailing objects.
MSVC seems to have several bugs around using-declarations changing the access
of a member inherited from a base class, so use forwarding functions instead of
using-declarations to make TrailingObjects::operator delete accessible where
desired.
llvm-svn: 260180
Summary:
Unrolling Analyzer is already pretty complicated, and it becomes harder and harder to exercise it with usual IR tests, as with them we can only check the final decision: whether the loop is unrolled or not. This change factors this framework out from LoopUnrollPass to analyses, which allows to use unit tests.
The change itself is supposed to be NFC, except adding a couple of tests.
I plan to add more tests as I add new functionality and find/fix bugs.
Reviewers: chandlerc, hfinkel, sanjoy
Subscribers: zzheng, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16623
llvm-svn: 260169
This patch uses one bit in profile version to differentiate Clang
instrumentation and IR level instrumentation profiles.
PGOInstrumenation generates a COMDAT variable __llvm_profile_raw_version so
that the compiler runtime can set the right profile kind.
PGOInstrumenation now checks this bit to make sure it's an IR level
instrumentation profile.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15540
llvm-svn: 260146
This matches GCC and MSVC's behaviour, and saves on code size.
We were already not extending i1 return values on x86_64 after r127766. This
takes that patch further by applying it to x86 target as well, and also for i8
and i16.
The ABI docs have been unclear about the required behaviour here. The new i386
psABI [1] clearly states (Table 2.4, page 14) that i1, i8, and i16 return
vales do not need to be extended beyond 8 bits. The x86_64 ABI doc is being
updated to say the same [2].
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16907
[1]. https://01.org/sites/default/files/file_attach/intel386-psabi-1.0.pdf
[2]. https://groups.google.com/d/msg/x86-64-abi/E8O33onbnGQ/_RFWw_ixDQAJ
llvm-svn: 260133
This reduces sizes of instrumented object files, final binaries,
process images, and raw profile data.
The format of the indexed profile data remain the same.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16388
llvm-svn: 260117
sanitizer issue. The PredicatedScalarEvolution's copy constructor
wasn't copying the Generation value, and was leaving it un-initialized.
Original commit message:
[SCEV][LAA] Add no wrap SCEV predicates and use use them to improve strided pointer detection
Summary:
This change adds no wrap SCEV predicates with:
- support for runtime checking
- support for expression rewriting:
(sext ({x,+,y}) -> {sext(x),+,sext(y)}
(zext ({x,+,y}) -> {zext(x),+,sext(y)}
Note that we are sign extending the increment of the SCEV, even for
the zext case. This is needed to cover the fairly common case where y would
be a (small) negative integer. In order to do this, this change adds two new
flags: nusw and nssw that are applicable to AddRecExprs and permit the
transformations above.
We also change isStridedPtr in LAA to be able to make use of
these predicates. With this feature we should now always be able to
work around overflow issues in the dependence analysis.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, sanjoy, anemet
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, sanjoy, llvm-commits, rengolin, jmolloy, hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15412
llvm-svn: 260112
Summary:
This change adds no wrap SCEV predicates with:
- support for runtime checking
- support for expression rewriting:
(sext ({x,+,y}) -> {sext(x),+,sext(y)}
(zext ({x,+,y}) -> {zext(x),+,sext(y)}
Note that we are sign extending the increment of the SCEV, even for
the zext case. This is needed to cover the fairly common case where y would
be a (small) negative integer. In order to do this, this change adds two new
flags: nusw and nssw that are applicable to AddRecExprs and permit the
transformations above.
We also change isStridedPtr in LAA to be able to make use of
these predicates. With this feature we should now always be able to
work around overflow issues in the dependence analysis.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, sanjoy, anemet
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, sanjoy, llvm-commits, rengolin, jmolloy, hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15412
llvm-svn: 260085
The Windows bots have been failing for the last two days, with:
FAILED: C:\PROGRA~2\MICROS~1.0\VC\bin\amd64\cl.exe -c LLVMContextImpl.cpp
D:\buildslave\clang-x64-ninja-win7\llvm\lib\IR\LLVMContextImpl.cpp(137) :
error C2248: 'llvm::TrailingObjects<llvm::AttributeSetImpl,
llvm::IndexAttrPair>::operator delete' :
cannot access private member declared in class 'llvm::AttributeSetImpl'
TrailingObjects.h(298) : see declaration of
'llvm::TrailingObjects<llvm::AttributeSetImpl,
llvm::IndexAttrPair>::operator delete'
AttributeImpl.h(213) : see declaration of 'llvm::AttributeSetImpl'
llvm-svn: 260053
Summary:
This is the attribute purpose-made for e.g. __syncthreads. It appears
that NoDuplicate may not be sufficient to prevent Sink from touching a
call to __syncthreads.
Reviewers: jingyue, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski, jhen, rnk, tra, majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16941
llvm-svn: 260005
Summary:
Adds the linkage type to both the per-module and combined function
summaries, which subsumes the current islocal bit. This will eventually
be used to optimized linkage types based on global summary-based
analysis.
Reviewers: joker.eph
Subscribers: joker.eph, davidxl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16943
llvm-svn: 259993
Summary:
When alias analysis is uncertain about the aliasing between any two accesses,
it will return MayAlias. This uncertainty from alias analysis restricts LICM
from proceeding further. In cases where alias analysis is uncertain we might
use loop versioning as an alternative.
Loop Versioning will create a version of the loop with aggressive aliasing
assumptions in addition to the original with conservative (default) aliasing
assumptions. The version of the loop making aggressive aliasing assumptions
will have all the memory accesses marked as no-alias. These two versions of
loop will be preceded by a memory runtime check. This runtime check consists
of bound checks for all unique memory accessed in loop, and it ensures the
lack of memory aliasing. The result of the runtime check determines which of
the loop versions is executed: If the runtime check detects any memory
aliasing, then the original loop is executed. Otherwise, the version with
aggressive aliasing assumptions is used.
The pass is off by default and can be enabled with command line option
-enable-loop-versioning-licm.
Reviewers: hfinkel, anemet, chatur01, reames
Subscribers: MatzeB, grosser, joker.eph, sanjoy, javed.absar, sbaranga,
llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9151
llvm-svn: 259986
check wrong when inheriting a member through two levels of private inheritance,
where the middle one is a class template specialization.
llvm-svn: 259943
-fsized-deallocation. Disable sized deallocation for all objects derived from
TrailingObjects, as we expect the storage allocated for these objects to be
larger than the size of their dynamic type.
llvm-svn: 259942
Summary:
This makes it possible to specify some operands as optional to the AsmMatcher.
Setting this field to true will prevent the AsmMatcher from emitting
'too few operands' errors when there are missing optional operands.
Reviewers: olista01, ab
Subscribers: nhaustov, arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15755
llvm-svn: 259913