Follow-up r235483, with the corresponding support in PPC. We use a regular call
for symbolic targets (because they're much cheaper than indirect calls).
llvm-svn: 242239
I am planning to add more nested classes inside RuntimePointerCheck so
all these triple-nesting would be hard to follow.
Also rename it to RuntimePointerChecking (i.e. append 'ing').
llvm-svn: 242218
We used to take the address specified as the direct target of the patchpoint
and did no TOC-pointer handling. This, however, as not all that useful,
because MCJIT tends to create a lot of modules, and they have their own TOC
sections. Thus, to call from the generated code to other generated code, you
really need to switch TOC pointers. Make this work as expected, and under
ELFv1, tread the address as the function descriptor address so that the correct
TOC pointer can be loaded.
llvm-svn: 242217
For now the Archive owns the buffers of the thin archive members.
This makes for a simple API, but all the buffers are destructed
only when the archive is destructed. This should be fine since we
close the files after mmap so we should not hit an open file
limit.
llvm-svn: 242215
SelectionDAG already had begin/end methods for iterating over all
the nodes, but didn't define an iterator_range for us in foreach
loops.
This adds such a method and uses it in some of the eligible places
throughout the backends.
llvm-svn: 242212
The simplify_type specialisation allows us to cast directly from
SDValue to an SDNode* subclass so we don't need to pass a SDNode*
to cast<>.
llvm-svn: 242209
This commit moves the function 'printReg' towards the start of the file so that
it can be used by the conversion methods in MIRPrinter and not just the printing
methods in MIPrinter.
llvm-svn: 242203
Summary: This patch has the most basic instruction codegen for 32 and 64 bit int/fp.
Reviewers: sunfish
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11193
llvm-svn: 242201
Sometimes an incidentally created instruction can duplicate a Value used
elsewhere. It then often doesn't end up in the leader table. If it's later
removed, we attempt to remove it from the leader table and segfault.
Instead we should just ignore the removal request, which won't cause any
problems. The reverse situation, where the original instruction is replaced by
the new one (which you might think could leave the leader table empty) cannot
occur, because the incidental instruction will never be found in the first
place.
llvm-svn: 242199
MOVSDto64rr and MOV64toSDrr are defined to convert between FR64 (%xmm)
<-> GR64 registers, not VR64 (%mm) <-> GR64. This is wrong.
I found this by inspection and could not find a suitable testcase for it
since (1) we don't handle MMX bitcasts in Peephole optimizer as to
generate COPYs that (2) could be expanded back to the appropriate x86
instruction in ExpandPostRA.
Switch to use the appropriate instructions: MMX_MOVD64from64rr and
MMX_MOVD64to64rr here.
llvm-svn: 242191
PowerPC uses itineraries to describe processor pipelines (and dispatch-group
restrictions for P7/P8 cores). Unfortunately, the target-independent
implementation of TII.getInstrLatency calls ItinData->getStageLatency, and that
looks for the largest cycle count in the pipeline for any given instruction.
This, however, yields the wrong answer for the PPC itineraries, because we
don't encode the full pipeline. Because the functional units are fully
pipelined, we only model the initial stages (there are no relevant hazards in
the later stages to model), and so the technique employed by getStageLatency
does not really work. Instead, we should take the maximum output operand
latency, and that's what PPCInstrInfo::getInstrLatency now does.
This caused some test-case churn, including two unfortunate side effects.
First, the new arrangement of copies we get from function parameters now
sometimes blocks VSX FMA mutation (a FIXME has been added to the code and the
test cases), and we have one significant test-suite regression:
SingleSource/Benchmarks/BenchmarkGame/spectral-norm
56.4185% +/- 18.9398%
In this benchmark we have a loop with a vectorized FP divide, and it with the
new scheduling both divides end up in the same dispatch group (which in this
case seems to cause a problem, although why is not exactly clear). The grouping
structure is hard to predict from the bottom of the loop, and there may not be
much we can do to fix this.
Very few other test-suite performance effects were really significant, but
almost all weakly favor this change. However, in light of the issues
highlighted above, I've left the old behavior available via a
command-line flag.
llvm-svn: 242188
Summary:
Before this change, personality directives were not emitted
if there was no invoke left in the function (of course until
recently this also meant that we couldn't know what
the personality actually was). This patch forces personality directives
to still be emitted, unless it is known to be a noop in the absence of
invokes, or the user explicitly specified `nounwind` (and not
`uwtable`) on the function.
Reviewers: majnemer, rnk
Subscribers: rnk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10884
llvm-svn: 242185
This can be done only with moves which theoretically
will optimize better later.
Although this transform increases the instruction count,
it should be code size / cycle count neutral in the worst
VALU case. It also seems to slightly improve a couple
of testcases due to other DAG combines this exposes.
This is probably slightly worse for the SALU case, so
it might be better to handle this during moveToVALU,
although then you lose some simplifications like
the load width reducing in the simple testcase.
llvm-svn: 242177
If the read2 produced was supposed to be writing into a
super register, it would use the wrong subregister indices.
Fix this by inserting copies, so we only ever write to a vreg_64.
Run the register coalescer again to clean this up, although this
isn't ideal and often does result in an extra move.
Also remove the assert that offset1 > offset0.
There isn't a real reason to not allow this other than a minor
convenience in the compiler, and it doesn't seem worth the effort
of avoiding it.
llvm-svn: 242174
We have a detailed def/use lists for every physical register in
MachineRegisterInfo anyway, so there is little use in maintaining an
additional bitset of which ones are used.
Removing it frees us from extra book keeping. This simplifies
VirtRegMap.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10911
llvm-svn: 242173
Do not use MachineRegisterInfo::setPhysRegUsed()/isPhysRegUsed()
anymore. This bitset changes function-global state and is set by the
VirtRegRewriter anyway.
Simply use a bitvector private to RAGreedy.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10910
llvm-svn: 242169
This changes TargetFrameLowering::processFunctionBeforeCalleeSavedScan():
- Rename the function to determineCalleeSaves()
- Pass a bitset of callee saved registers by reference, thus avoiding
the function-global PhysRegUsed bitset in MachineRegisterInfo.
- Without PhysRegUsed the implementation is fine tuned to not save
physcial registers which are only read but never modified.
Related to rdar://21539507
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10909
llvm-svn: 242165
Revert "-Added API for retrieving the default FPU of a CPU from TargetParser."
This reverts commit 01199ab0c6ff2d5c4f6b2c05a95ec011e41c4669.
llvm-svn: 242147
Summary:
- Signed 16-bit should have priority over unsigned.
- For la, unsigned 16-bit must use ori+addu rather than directly use ori.
- Correct tests on 32-bit immediates with 64-bit predicates by
sign-extending the immediate beforehand. For example, isInt<16>(0xffff8000)
should be true and use addiu.
Also split li/la testing into separate files due to their size.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10967
llvm-svn: 242139
Volatile loads and stores are made visible in global state regardless of
what memory is involved. It is not correct to disregard the ordering
and synchronization scope because it is possible to synchronize with
memory operations performed by hardware.
This partially addresses PR23737.
llvm-svn: 242126
- Factor out code to query and modify the sign bit of a floatingpoint
value as an integer. This also works if none of the targets integer
types is big enough to hold all bits of the floatingpoint value.
- Legalize FABS(x) as FCOPYSIGN(x, 0.0) if FCOPYSIGN is available,
otherwise perform bit manipulation on the sign bit. The previous code
used "x >u 0 ? x : -x" which is incorrect for x being -0.0! It also
takes 34 instructions on ARM Cortex-M4. With this patch we only
require 5:
vldr d0, LCPI0_0
vmov r2, r3, d0
lsrs r2, r3, #31
bfi r1, r2, #31, #1
bx lr
(This could be further improved if the compiler would recognize that
r2, r3 is zero).
- Only lower FCOPYSIGN(x, y) = sign(x) ? -FABS(x) : FABS(x) if FABS is
available otherwise perform bit manipulation on the sign bit.
- Perform the sign(x) test by masking out the sign bit and comparing
with 0 rather than shifting the sign bit to the highest position and
testing for "<s 0". For x86 copysignl (on 80bit values) this gets us:
testl $32768, %eax
rather than:
shlq $48, %rax
sets %al
testb %al, %al
llvm-svn: 242107
Summary:
The capability was lost with D10429 where the personality function was set at function level rather than landing pad level. Now there is no way to get/set the personality function from the C API. That is a problem.
Note that the whole thing could be avoided by improving the C API testing, as started by D10725
Reviewers: chandlerc, bogner, majnemer, andrew.w.kaylor, rafael, rnk, axw
Subscribers: rafael, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10946
llvm-svn: 242104
Previously we would refrain from attempting to increase the linkage of
available_externally globals because they were considered weak for the
linker. Now they are treated more like a declaration instead of a weak
definition.
This was causing SSE alignment faults in Chromuim, when some code
assumed it could increase the alignment of a dllimported global that it
didn't control. http://crbug.com/509256
llvm-svn: 242091
This patch allows VSX swap optimization to succeed more frequently.
Specifically, it is concerned with common code sequences that occur
when copying a scalar floating-point value to a vector register. This
patch currently handles cases where the floating-point value is
already in a register, but does not yet handle loads (such as via an
LXSDX scalar floating-point VSX load). That will be dealt with later.
A typical case is when a scalar value comes in as a floating-point
parameter. The value is copied into a virtual VSFRC register, and
then a sequence of SUBREG_TO_REG and/or COPY operations will convert
it to a full vector register of the class required by the context. If
this vector register is then used as part of a lane-permuted
computation, the original scalar value will be in the wrong lane. We
can fix this by adding a swap operation following any widening
SUBREG_TO_REG operation. Additional COPY operations may be needed
around the swap operation in order to keep register assignment happy,
but these are pro forma operations that will be removed by coalescing.
If a scalar value is otherwise directly referenced in a computation
(such as by one of the many XS* vector-scalar operations), we
currently disable swap optimization. These operations are
lane-sensitive by definition. A MentionsPartialVR flag is added for
use in each swap table entry that mentions a scalar floating-point
register without having special handling defined.
A common idiom for PPC64LE is to convert a double-precision scalar to
a vector by performing a splat operation. This ensures that the value
can be referenced as V[0], as it would be for big endian, whereas just
converting the scalar to a vector with a SUBREG_TO_REG operation
leaves this value only in V[1]. A doubleword splat operation is one
form of an XXPERMDI instruction, which takes one doubleword from a
first operand and another doubleword from a second operand, with a
two-bit selector operand indicating which doublewords are chosen. In
the general case, an XXPERMDI can be permitted in a lane-swapped
region provided that it is properly transformed to select the
corresponding swapped values. This transformation is to reverse the
order of the two input operands, and to reverse and complement the
bits of the selector operand (derivation left as an exercise to the
reader ;).
A new test case that exercises the scalar-to-vector and generalized
XXPERMDI transformations is added as CodeGen/PowerPC/swaps-le-5.ll.
The patch also requires a change to CodeGen/PowerPC/swaps-le-3.ll to
use CHECK-DAG instead of CHECK for two independent instructions that
now appear in reverse order.
There are two small unrelated changes that are added with this patch.
First, the XXSLDWI instruction was incorrectly omitted from the list
of lane-sensitive instructions; this is now fixed. Second, I observed
that the same webs were being rejected over and over again for
different reasons. Since it's sufficient to reject a web only once, I
added a check for this to speed up the compilation time slightly.
llvm-svn: 242081
When spotting that a loop can use ctpop, we were incorrectly replacing all uses of a value with a value derived from ctpop.
The bug here was exposed because we were replacing a use prior to the ctpop with the ctpop value and so we have a use before def, i.e., we changed
%tobool.5 = icmp ne i32 %num, 0
store i1 %tobool.5, i1* %ptr
br i1 %tobool.5, label %for.body.lr.ph, label %for.end
to
store i1 %1, i1* %ptr
%0 = call i32 @llvm.ctpop.i32(i32 %num)
%1 = icmp ne i32 %0, 0
br i1 %1, label %for.body.lr.ph, label %for.end
Even if we inserted the ctpop so that it dominates the store here, that would still be incorrect. The store doesn’t want the result of ctpop.
The fix is very simple, and involves replacing only the branch condition with the ctpop instead of all uses.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel.
llvm-svn: 242068
The outlined funclets call intrinsics which reference labels from the
LSDA. This situation can easily arise in small functions with a single
cleanup at -O0, where Clang marks a definition as nounwind, and then
WinEHPrepare "discovers" that the landingpad is dead by accident and
deletes it.
We now need to ask the LLVM IR Function for it's personality directly,
rather than going through MachineModuleInfo.
Fixes PR23892.
llvm-svn: 242063
Enable partial and runtime loop unrolling for NVPTX backend via
TTI::UnrollingPreferences with a small threshold. This partially unrolls
small loops which are often unrolled by the PTX to SASS compiler
and unrolling earlier can be beneficial.
llvm-svn: 242049
Enable runtime unrolling for loops with unroll count metadata ("#pragma unroll N")
and a runtime trip count. Also, do not unroll loops with unroll full metadata if the
loop has a runtime loop count. Previously, such loops would be unrolled with a
very large threshold (pragma-unroll-threshold) if runtime unrolled happened to be
enabled resulting in a very large (and likely unwise) unroll factor.
llvm-svn: 242047
This commit serializes the fixed stack objects, including fixed spill slots.
The fixed stack objects are serialized using a YAML sequence of YAML inline
mappings. Each mapping has the object's ID, type, size, offset, and alignment.
The objects that aren't spill slots also serialize the isImmutable and isAliased
flags.
The fixed stack objects are a part of the machine function's YAML mapping.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
llvm-svn: 242045
Passes should never modify it, just use the const version. While there
reduce copying in LoopInterchange. No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 242041
It had accidently accepted a symbol+offset value (and emitted
incorrect code for it, keeping only the offset part) instead of
properly reporting the constraint as invalid.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11039
llvm-svn: 242040
The two-address instruction pass will convert these back to v_mad_f32
if necessary.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11060
llvm-svn: 242038
The 64/128-bit vector types are legal if NEON instructions are
available. However, there was no matching patterns for @llvm.cttz.*()
intrinsics and result in fatal error.
This commit fixes the problem by lowering cttz to:
a. ctpop((x & -x) - 1)
b. width - ctlz(x & -x) - 1
llvm-svn: 242037
Summary:
The iteration order within a member of DepCands is deterministic
and therefore we don't have to sort the accesses within a member.
We also don't have to copy the indices of the pointers into a
vector, since we can iterate over the members of the class.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11145
llvm-svn: 242033
In this patch I have only encoding. Intrinsics and DAG lowering will be in the next patch.
I temporary removed the old intrinsics test (just to split this patch).
Half types are not covered here.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11134
llvm-svn: 242023
Summary:
This at least saves compile time. I also encountered a case where
ephemeral values affect whether other variables are promoted, causing
performance issues. It may be a bug in LSR, but I didn't manage to
reduce it yet. Anyhow, I believe it's in general not worth considering
ephemeral values in LSR.
Reviewers: atrick, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11115
llvm-svn: 242011
Register r12 ('ip') is used by GCC for this purpose
and hence is used here. As discussed on the GCC mailing
list, the register choice is an ABI issue and so
choosing the same register as GCC means
__builtin_call_with_static_chain is compatible.
A similar patch has just gone in the AArch64 backend,
so this is just the ARM counterpart, following the same
discussion.
Patch by Stephen Cross.
llvm-svn: 241996
While the v4i32 shl operation is already vectorized using a cvttps2dq/pmulld pattern, the lshr/ashr opeations are still scalarized.
This patch adds vectorization support for non-uniform v4i32 shift operations - it splats constant shift amounts to allow them to use the immediate sse shift instructions, or extracts/zero-extends non-constant shift amounts. The individual results are then blended together.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11063
llvm-svn: 241989
There is no suitable basic block to sink instructions in loops without
exits. The only way an instruction in a loop without exits can be used
is as an incoming value to a PHI. In such cases, the incoming block for
the corresponding value is unreachable.
This fixes PR24013.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10903
llvm-svn: 241987
r238842 added the TargetRecip system for controlling use of reciprocal
estimates for sqrt and division using a set of parameters that can be set by
the frontend. Clang now supports a sophisticated -mrecip option, and this will
allow that option to effectively control the relevant code-generation
functionality of the PPC backend.
llvm-svn: 241985
This adds support for the 'nest' attribute, which allows the static chain
register to be set for functions calls under non-Darwin PPC/PPC64 targets. r11
is the chain register (which the PPC64 ELF ABI calls the "environment
pointer"). For indirect calls under PPC64 ELFv1, this would normally be loaded
from the function descriptor, but providing an explicit 'nest' parameter will
override that process and use the value provided.
This allows __builtin_call_with_static_chain to work as expected on PowerPC.
llvm-svn: 241984
r236894 caused PR23626 (Clang miscompiles webkit's base64 decoder), and was
reverted in r237984. This reapplies the patch with an additional test case for
PR23626 and the associated fix (both scales and offsets in the
BasicAliasAnalysis::constantOffsetHeuristic should initially be zero).
Patch by Nick White, thanks!
llvm-svn: 241981
The following functions are moved from the LoopVectorizer to VectorUtils:
- getGEPInductionOperand
- stripGetElementPtr
- getUniqueCastUse
- getStrideFromPointer
These used to be static functions in LoopVectorize, but will also be used by
the upcoming loop versioning LICM transformation.
Patch by Ashutosh Nema!
llvm-svn: 241980
This change adds new attribute called "argmemonly". Function marked with this attribute can only access memory through it's argument pointers. This attribute directly corresponds to the "OnlyAccessesArgumentPointees" ModRef behaviour in alias analysis.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10398
llvm-svn: 241979
No in-tree alias analysis used this facility, and it was not called in
any particularly rigorous way, so it seems unlikely to be correct.
Note that one of the only stateful AA implementations in-tree,
GlobalsModRef is completely broken currently (and any AA passes like it
are equally broken) because Module AA passes are not effectively
invalidated when a function pass that fails to update the AA stack runs.
Ultimately, it doesn't seem like we know how we want to build stateful
AA, and until then trying to support and maintain correctness for an
untested API is essentially impossible. To that end, I'm planning to rip
out all of the update API. It can return if and when we need it and know
how to build it on top of the new pass manager and as part of *tested*
stateful AA implementations in the tree.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10889
llvm-svn: 241975
Disallow all mutation of `MCSubtargetInfo` expect the feature bits.
Besides deleting the assignment operators -- which were dead "code" --
this restricts `InitMCProcessorInfo()` to subclass initialization
sequences, and exposes a new more limited function called
`setDefaultFeatures()` for use by the ARMAsmParser `.cpu` directive.
There's a small functional change here: ARMAsmParser used to adjust
`MCSubtargetInfo::CPUSchedModel` as a side effect of calling
`InitMCProcessorInfo()`, but I've removed that suspicious behaviour.
Since the AsmParser shouldn't be doing any scheduling, there shouldn't
be any observable change...
llvm-svn: 241961
Most loads and stores are derived from pointers derived from
a kernel argument load inserted during argument lowering.
This was just using the EntryToken chain for the argument loads,
and any users of these loads were also on the EntryToken chain.
Return the chain of the lowered argument load so that dependent loads
end up on the correct chain.
No test since I'm not aware of any case where this actually
broke.
llvm-svn: 241960
Force all creators of `MCSubtargetInfo` to immediately initialize it,
merging the default constructor and the initializer into an initializing
constructor. Besides cleaning up the code a little, this makes it clear
that the initializer is never called again later.
Out-of-tree backends need a trivial change: instead of calling:
auto *X = new MCSubtargetInfo();
InitXYZMCSubtargetInfo(X, ...);
return X;
they should call:
return createXYZMCSubtargetInfoImpl(...);
There's no real functionality change here.
llvm-svn: 241957
Remove all calls to `MCSubtargetInfo::InitCPUSched()` and merge its body
into the only relevant caller, `MCSubtargetInfo::InitMCProcessorInfo()`.
We were only calling the former after explicitly calling the latter with
the same CPU; it's confusing to have both methods exposed.
Besides a minor (surely unmeasurable) speedup in ARM and X86 from
avoiding running the logic twice, no functionality change.
llvm-svn: 241956
This in turn would sometimes introduce new cleanupblocks that didn't
previously exist. The uses were being introduced by SSA value demotion.
We actually want to *promote* uses of EH pointers and selectors, so I
added some spcecial casing to avoid demoting such instructions. This is
getting overly complicated, but hopefully we'll come along and delete it
in the new representation.
llvm-svn: 241950
The motivation is to allow GatherAllAliases / FindBetterChain
to not give up on dependent loads of a pointer from constant memory.
This is important for AMDGPU, because most loads are pointers
derived from a load of a kernel argument from constant memory.
llvm-svn: 241948
`MCSchedModel` is large. Make `MCSchedModel::GetDefaultSchedModel()`
return by-reference instead of by-value, so we can store a pointer in
`MCSubtargetInfo::CPUSchedModel` instead of a copy.
Note: since `MCSchedModel` is POD, this doesn't create a static
constructor.
llvm-svn: 241947
Fixes PR23804: assertion failure in emitPrologue in the case of a
function with an empty frame and a dynamic alloca that needs stack
realignment. This is a typical case for AddressSanitizer.
llvm-svn: 241943
Summary:
Following the discussion on r241884, it's more reasonable to assume that a
target has no vector registers by default instead of letting every such
target overrides getNumberOfRegisters.
Therefore, this patch modifies BasicTTIImpl::getNumberOfRegisters to
return 0 when Vector is true, and partially reverts r241884 which
modifies NVPTXTTIImpl::getNumberOfRegisters.
It also fixes a performance bug in LoopVectorizer. Even if a target has
no vector registers, vectorization may still help ILP. So, we need both
checks to be false before disabling loop vectorization all together.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11108
llvm-svn: 241942
Summary:
The class will obviously need improvement down the road. For one, there
is no reason that addPHINodes would have to be exposed like that. I
will make this and other improvements in follow-up patches.
The main goal is to be able to share this functionality. The
LoopLoadElimination pass I am working on needs it too. Later we can
move other clients as well (LV and Ashutosh's LICMVer).
Reviewers: hfinkel, ashutosh.nema
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10577
llvm-svn: 241932
Summary:
This makes them available to the LoopVersioning class as that is moved
to its own module in the next patch.
Reviewers: ashutosh.nema, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10576
llvm-svn: 241931
This commit factors out common code from MergeBaseUpdateLoadStore() and
MergeBaseUpdateLSMultiple() and introduces a new function
MergeBaseUpdateLSDouble() which merges adds/subs preceding/following a
strd/ldrd instruction into an strd/ldrd instruction with writeback where
possible.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10676
llvm-svn: 241928
If our two inputs have known top-zero bit counts M and N, we trivially
know that the output cannot have any bits set in the top (min(M, N)-1)
bits, since nothing could carry past that point.
llvm-svn: 241927
Summary:
This code is based on AArch64 for modern backend good practice, and NVPTX for
virtual ISA concerns.
Reviewers: sunfish
Subscribers: aemerson, llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11070
llvm-svn: 241923
This commit implements the initial serialization of stack objects from the
MachineFrameInfo class. It can only serialize the ordinary stack objects
(including ordinary spill slots), but it doesn't serialize variable sized or
fixed stack objects yet.
The stack objects are serialized using a YAML sequence of YAML inline mappings.
Each mapping has the object's ID, type, size, offset and alignment. The stack
objects are a part of machine function's YAML mapping.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
llvm-svn: 241922
Summary:
The target frame lowering's concrete type is always known in RegisterInfo, yet it's only sometimes devirtualized through a static_cast. This change adds an auto-generated static function <Target>GenRegisterInfo::getFrameLowering(const MachineFunction &MF) which does this devirtualization, and uses this function in all targets which can.
This change was suggested by sunfish in D11070 for WebAssembly, I figure that I may as well improve the other targets while I'm here.
Subscribers: sunfish, ted, llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11093
llvm-svn: 241921
This improves the logic in several ways and is a preparation for
followup patches:
- First perform an analysis and create a list of merge candidates, then
transform. This simplifies the code in that you have don't have to
care to much anymore that you may be holding iterators to
MachineInstrs that get removed.
- Analyze/Transform basic blocks in reverse order. This allows to use
LivePhysRegs to find free registers instead of the RegisterScavenger.
The RegisterScavenger will become less precise in the future as it
relies on the deprecated kill-flags.
- Return the newly created node in MergeOps so there's no need to look
around in the schedule to find it.
- Rename some MBBI iterators to InsertBefore to make their role clear.
- General code cleanup.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10140
llvm-svn: 241920
FCmp behaves a lot like a floating-point binary operator in many ways,
and can benefit from fast-math information. Flags such as nsz and nnan
can affect if this fcmp (in combination with a select) can be treated
as a fminnum/fmaxnum operation.
This adds backwards-compatible bitcode support, IR parsing and writing,
LangRef changes and IRBuilder changes. I'll need to audit InstSimplify
and InstCombine in a followup to find places where flags should be
copied.
llvm-svn: 241901
After changes in rL231820 loop re-rotation is performed even in -Oz mode. Since loop rotation is disabled for -Oz, it seems loop re-rotation should be disabled too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10961
llvm-svn: 241897
Summary:
This introduces new instructions neccessary to implement MSVC-compatible
exception handling support. Most of the middle-end and none of the
back-end haven't been audited or updated to take them into account.
Reviewers: rnk, JosephTremoulet, reames, nlewycky, rjmccall
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11041
llvm-svn: 241888
Not doing this can lead to misoptimizations down the line, e.g. because
of range metadata on the replacing load excluding values that are valid
for the load that is being replaced.
llvm-svn: 241886
Summary:
Without this patch, LoopVectorizer in certain cases (see loop-vectorize.ll)
produces code with complex control flow which hurts later optimizations. Since
NVPTX doesn't have vector registers in LLVM's sense
(NVPTXTTI::getRegisterBitWidth(true) == 32), we for now declare no vector
registers to effectively disable loop vectorization.
Reviewers: jholewinski
Subscribers: jingyue, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11089
llvm-svn: 241884
Apparently this is important, otherwise _except_handler3 assumes that
the registration node is corrupted and ignores it.
Also fix a bug in WinEHPrepare where we would insert code after a
terminator instruction.
llvm-svn: 241877
The virtual registers are serialized using a YAML sequence of YAML inline
mappings. Each mapping has the id of the virtual register and the register
class.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10981
llvm-svn: 241868
Currently canCheckPtrAtRT returns two flags NeedRTCheck and CanDoRT.
NeedRTCheck says whether we need checks and CanDoRT whether we can
generate the checks. The idea is to encode three states with these:
Need/Can:
(1) false/dont-care: no checks are needed
(2) true/false: we need checks but can't generate them
(3) true/true: we need checks and we can generate them
This is pretty unnecessary since the caller (analyzeLoop) is only
interested in whether we can generate the checks if we actually need
them (i.e. 1 or 3).
So this change cleans up to return just that (CanDoRTIfNeeded) and pulls
all the underlying logic into canCheckPtrAtRT.
By doing all this, we simplify analyzeLoop which is the complex function
in LAA.
There is further room for improvement here by using RtCheck.Need
directly rather than a new local variable NeedRTCheck but that's for a
later patch.
llvm-svn: 241866
The runtime does not restore CSRs when transferring control back to the
function handling the exception. According to the experts on IRC, LLVM's
register allocator has no way to model register clobbers that only
happen on one edge of the CFG. For now, don't worry about trying to use
the meager three CSRs available on 32-bit X86 and just say that such
invokes preserve nothing.
llvm-svn: 241865
This commit adds a new error which is reported when the MIR Parser encounters
a machine function without any machine basic blocks. The machine verifier
expects that the machine functions have at least one MBB, and this error will
prevent machine functions without MBBs from reaching the machine verifier and
crashing with an assertion.
llvm-svn: 241862
Summary:
Before this change ImplicitNullChecks would only pick loads of the form:
```
test Reg, Reg
jz elsewhere
fallthrough:
movl 32(Reg), Reg2
```
but not (say)
```
test Reg, Reg
jz elsewhere
fallthrough:
inc Reg3
movl 32(Reg), Reg2
```
This change teaches ImplicitNullChecks to look through "unrelated"
instructions like `inc Reg3` when searching for a load instruction
to convert to a trapping load.
Reviewers: atrick, JosephTremoulet, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11044
llvm-svn: 241850
This commit serializes the 13 scalar boolean and integer attributes from the
MachineFrameInfo class: IsFrameAddressTaken, IsReturnAddressTaken, HasStackMap,
HasPatchPoint, StackSize, OffsetAdjustment, MaxAlignment, AdjustsStack,
HasCalls, MaxCallFrameSize, HasOpaqueSPAdjustment, HasVAStart, and
HasMustTailInVarArgFunc. These attributes are serialized as part
of the frameInfo YAML mapping, which itself is a part of the machine function's
YAML mapping.
llvm-svn: 241844
It looks like ld64 requires it. With this we seem to be able to bootstrap using
llvm-ar+/usr/bin/true instead of ar+ranlib (currently on stage2).
llvm-svn: 241842
Summary:
In RewriteLoopExitValues, before expanding out an SCEV expression using
SCEVExpander, try to see if an existing LLVM IR expression already
computes the value we're interested in. If so use that existing
expression.
Apart from reducing IndVars' reliance on the rest of the compilation
pipeline, this also prevents IndVars from concluding some expressions as
"high cost" when they're not. For instance,
`InductiveRangeCheckElimination` often emits code of the following form:
```
len = umin(len_A, len_B)
loop:
...
if (i++ < len)
goto loop
outside_loop:
use(i)
```
`SCEVExpander` refuses to rewrite the use of `i` in `outside_loop`,
since it thinks the value of `i` on loop exit, `len`, is a high cost
expansion since it contains an `umax` in it. With this change,
`IndVars` can see that it can re-use `len` instead of creating a new
expression to compute `umin(len_A, len_B)`.
I considered putting this cleverness in `SCEVExpander`, but I was
worried that it may then have a deterimental effect on other passes
that use it. So I decided it was better to just do this in the one
place where it seems like an obviously good idea, with the intent of
generalizing later if needed.
Reviewers: atrick, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10782
llvm-svn: 241838
This patch allows the read_register and write_register intrinsics to
read/write the RBP/EBP registers on X86 iff the targeted register is
the frame pointer for the containing function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10977
llvm-svn: 241827
This patch fixes bugs that were exposed by the addition of fast-math-flags in the DAG:
r237046 ( http://reviews.llvm.org/rL237046 ):
1. When replacing a division node, it's not enough to RAUW.
We should call CombineTo() to delete dead nodes and combine again.
2. Because we are changing the DAG, we can't return an empty SDValue
after the transform. As the code comments say:
Visitation implementation - Implement dag node combining for different node types.
The semantics are as follows: Return Value:
SDValue.getNode() == 0 - No change was made
SDValue.getNode() == N - N was replaced, is dead and has been handled.
otherwise - N should be replaced by the returned Operand.
The new test case shows no difference with or without this patch, but it will crash if
we re-apply r237046 or enable FMF via the current -enable-fmf-dag cl::opt.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9893
llvm-svn: 241826
Summary:
The checking pointer group construction algorithm relied on the iteration on DepCands.
We would need the same leaders across runs and the same iteration order over the underlying std::set for determinism.
This changes the algorithm to process the pointers in the order in which they were added to the runtime check, which is deterministic.
We need to update the tests, since the order in which pointers appear has changed.
No new tests were added, since it is impossible to test for non-determinism.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11064
llvm-svn: 241809
The gnu ar format uses BE numbers. The BSD one uses LE. Add a helper for one or the
other. NFC for now, just removes some noise from the following patch.
llvm-svn: 241808
Summary: If shift amount is a constant value > 64 bit it is handled incorrectly during type legalization and X86 lowering. This patch the type of shift amount argument in function DAGTypeLegalizer::ExpandShiftByConstant from unsigned to APInt.
Reviewers: nadav, majnemer, sanjoy, RKSimon
Subscribers: RKSimon, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10767
llvm-svn: 241806
The nest attribute is currently supported on the x86 (32-bit) and x86-64
backends, but not on ARM (32-bit) or AArch64. This patch adds support for
nest to the AArch64 backend.
Register x18 is used by GCC for this purpose and hence is used here.
As discussed on the GCC mailing list the register choice is an ABI issue
and so choosing the same register as GCC means __builtin_call_with_static_chain
is compatible.
Patch by Stephen Cross.
llvm-svn: 241794
The newly added function returns the size of the specified floating
point semantics in bits.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8413
llvm-svn: 241793
Summary: If shift amount is a constant value > 64 bit it is handled incorrectly during type legalization and X86 lowering. This patch the type of shift amount argument in function DAGTypeLegalizer::ExpandShiftByConstant from unsigned to APInt.
Reviewers: nadav, majnemer, sanjoy, RKSimon
Subscribers: RKSimon, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10767
llvm-svn: 241790
The justification of this change is here: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2015-March/082989.html
According to the current GEP syntax, vector GEP requires that each index must be a vector with the same number of elements.
%A = getelementptr i8, <4 x i8*> %ptrs, <4 x i64> %offsets
In this implementation I let each index be or vector or scalar. All vector indices must have the same number of elements. The scalar value will mean the splat vector value.
(1) %A = getelementptr i8, i8* %ptr, <4 x i64> %offsets
or
(2) %A = getelementptr i8, <4 x i8*> %ptrs, i64 %offset
In all cases the %A type is <4 x i8*>
In the case (2) we add the same offset to all pointers.
The case (1) covers C[B[i]] case, when we have the same base C and different offsets B[i].
The documentation is updated.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10496
llvm-svn: 241788
The original name was too close to NeedRTCheck which is what the actual
memcheck analysis returns. This flag, as the new name suggests, is only
used to whether to initiate that analysis.
Also a comment is added to answer one question I had about this code for
a long time. Namely, how does this flag differ from
isDependencyCheckNeeded since they are seemingly set at the same time.
llvm-svn: 241784
Summary:
Remove empty subclass in the process.
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits, rafael, yaron.keren, ted
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11045
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241780
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: yaron.keren, rafael, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11042
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241779
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits, rafael, yaron.keren
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11040
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241778
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: yaron.keren, rafael, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11038
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241777
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits, rafael, yaron.keren
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11037
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241776
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, ted, yaron.keren, rafael, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11028
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241775
DataLayout is no longer optional. It was initialized with or without
a DataLayout, and the DataLayout when supplied could have been the
one from the TargetMachine.
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits, rafael, yaron.keren
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11021
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241774
Summary:
Avoid using the TargetMachine owned DataLayout and use the Module owned
one instead. This requires passing the DataLayout up the stack to
ComputeValueVTs().
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, yaron.keren, rafael, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11019
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241773
Column information is present in CodeView when the line table subsection
has bit 0 set to 1 in it's flags field. The column information is
represented as a pair of 16-bit quantities: a starting and ending
column. This information is present at the end of the chunk, after all
the line-PC pairs.
llvm-svn: 241764
This commit ([LAA] Fix estimation of number of memchecks) regressed the
logic a bit. We shouldn't quit the analysis if we encounter a pointer
without known bounds *unless* we actually need to emit a memcheck for
it.
The original code was using NumComparisons which is now computed
differently. Instead I compute NeedRTCheck from NumReadPtrChecks and
NumWritePtrChecks.
As side note, I find the separation of NeedRTCheck and CanDoRT
confusing, so I will try to merge them in a follow-up patch.
llvm-svn: 241756
Place all code corresponding to a run-time check in one place.
Previously we generated some code, then proceeded to a next check, then
finished the code for the first check (like splitting blocks and
generating branches). Now the code for generating a check is
self-contained.
llvm-svn: 241741