benchmarks, and that it can be simplified to X/Y. (In general you can only
simplify (Z*Y)/Y to Z if the multiplication did not overflow; if Z has the
form "X/Y" then this is the case). This patch implements that transform and
moves some Div logic out of instcombine and into InstructionSimplify.
Unfortunately instcombine gets in the way somewhat, since it likes to change
(X/Y)*Y into X-(X rem Y), so I had to teach instcombine about this too.
Finally, thanks to the NSW/NUW flags, sometimes we know directly that "Z*Y"
does not overflow, because the flag says so, so I added that logic too. This
eliminates a bunch of divisions and subtractions in 447.dealII, and has good
effects on some other benchmarks too. It seems to have quite an effect on
tramp3d-v4 but it's hard to say if it's good or bad because inlining decisions
changed, resulting in massive changes all over.
llvm-svn: 124487
optimized code are:
(non-negative number)+(power-of-two) != 0 -> true
and
(x | 1) != 0 -> true
Instcombine knows about the second one of course, but only does it if X|1
has only one use. These fire thousands of times in the testsuite.
llvm-svn: 124183
auto-simplier the transform most missed by early-cse is (zext X) != 0 -> X != 0.
This patch adds this transform and some related logic to InstructionSimplify
and removes some of the logic from instcombine (unfortunately not all because
there are several situations in which instcombine can improve things by making
new instructions, whereas instsimplify is not allowed to do this). At -O2 this
often results in more than 15% more simplifications by early-cse, and results in
hundreds of lines of bitcode being eliminated from the testsuite. I did see some
small negative effects in the testsuite, for example a few additional instructions
in three programs. One program, 483.xalancbmk, got an additional 35 instructions,
which seems to be due to a function getting an additional instruction and then
being inlined all over the place.
llvm-svn: 123911
These were not recommended by my auto-simplifier since they don't fire often enough.
However they do fire from time to time, for example they remove one subtraction from
the final bitcode for 483.xalancbmk.
llvm-svn: 123755
simplification in fully optimized code. It occurs sporadically in the testsuite, and
many times in 403.gcc: the final bitcode has 131 fewer subtractions after this change.
The reason that the multiplies are not eliminated is the same reason that instcombine
did not catch this: they are used by other instructions (instcombine catches this with
a more general transform which in general is only profitable if the operands have only
one use).
llvm-svn: 123754
simplification present in fully optimized code (I think instcombine fails to
transform some of these when "X-Y" has more than one use). Fires here and
there all over the test-suite, for example it eliminates 8 subtractions in
the final IR for 445.gobmk, 2 subs in 447.dealII, 2 in paq8p etc.
llvm-svn: 123442
threading of shifts over selects and phis while there. This fires here and
there in the testsuite, to not much effect. For example when compiling spirit
it fires 5 times, during early-cse, resulting in 6 more cse simplifications,
and 3 more terminators being folded by jump threading, but the final bitcode
doesn't change in any interesting way: other optimizations would have caught
the opportunity anyway, only later.
llvm-svn: 123441
While there, I noticed that the transform "undef >>a X -> undef" was wrong.
For example if X is 2 then the top two bits must be equal, so the result can
not be anything. I fixed this in the constant folder as well. Also, I made
the transform for "X << undef" stronger: it now folds to undef always, even
though X might be zero. This is in accordance with the LangRef, but I must
admit that it is fairly aggressive. Also, I added "i32 X << 32 -> undef"
following the LangRef and the constant folder, likewise fairly aggressive.
llvm-svn: 123417
is "X != 0 -> X" when X is a boolean. This occurs a lot because of the way
llvm-gcc converts gcc's conditional expressions. Add this, and a few other
similar transforms for completeness.
llvm-svn: 123372
numbering, in which it considers (for example) "%a = add i32 %x, %y" and
"%b = add i32 %x, %y" to be equal because the operands are equal and the
result of the instructions only depends on the values of the operands.
This has almost no effect (it removes 4 instructions from gcc-as-one-file),
and perhaps slows down compilation: I measured a 0.4% slowdown on the large
gcc-as-one-file testcase, but it wasn't statistically significant.
llvm-svn: 122654
the original instruction, half the cases were missed (making it not
wrong but suboptimal). Also correct a typo (A <-> B) in the second
chunk.
llvm-svn: 122414
a couple of existing transforms. This fires surprisingly often, for
example when compiling gcc "(X+(-1))+1->X" fires quite a lot as well
as various "and" simplifications (usually with a phi node operand).
Most of the time this doesn't make a real difference since the same
thing would have been done elsewhere anyway, eg: by instcombine, but
there are a few places where this results in simplifications that we
were not doing before.
llvm-svn: 122326
(they had just been forgotten before). Adding Xor causes "main" in the
existing testcase 2010-11-01-lshr-mask.ll to be hugely more simplified.
llvm-svn: 122245
it to be replaced by undef rather than not replaced at all, the idea being that
this may reduce the amount of work done by whoever called InstructionSimplify.
llvm-svn: 121860
uninitialized. The warning is terrible, has incorrect source locations, and has
a huge false positive rate such as *all* of these.
If anyone has a better solution, please let me know. Alternatively, I'll
happily add -Wno-uninitialized to the -Werror build mode. Maybe I can even do
it *only* when building with GCC instead of Clang.
llvm-svn: 120281
folding improvements: if P points to a type of size zero, turn "gep P, N" into "P".
More generally, if a gep index type has size zero, instcombine could replace the
index with zero, but that is not done here.
llvm-svn: 119942
instructions out of InstCombine and into InstructionSimplify. While
there, introduce an m_AllOnes pattern to simplify matching with integers
and vectors with all bits equal to one.
llvm-svn: 119536
simplified to itself (this can only happen in unreachable blocks).
Change it to return null instead. Hopefully this will fix some
buildbot failures.
llvm-svn: 119490
class, uses DominatorTree which is an analysis. This change moves all of
the tricky hasConstantValue logic to SimplifyInstruction, and replaces it
with a very simple literal implementation. I already taught users of
hasConstantValue that need tricky stuff to use SimplifyInstruction instead.
I didn't update InlineFunction because the IR looks like it might be in a
funky state at the point it calls hasConstantValue, which makes calling
SimplifyInstruction dangerous since it can in theory do a lot of tricky
reasoning. This may be a pessimization, for example in the case where
all phi node operands are either undef or a fixed constant.
llvm-svn: 119459
over a phi node by applying it to each operand may be wrong if the
operation and the phi node are mutually interdependent (the testcase
has a simple example of this). So only do this transform if it would
be correct to perform the operation in each predecessor of the block
containing the phi, i.e. if the other operands all dominate the phi.
This should fix the FFMPEG snow.c regression reported by İsmail Dönmez.
llvm-svn: 119347
offload the work to hasConstantValue rather than do something more
complicated (such handling mutually recursive phis) because (1) it is
not clear it is worth it; and (2) if it is worth it, maybe such logic
would be better placed in hasConstantValue. Adjust some GVN tests
which are now cleaned up much further (eg: all phi nodes are removed).
llvm-svn: 119043
nodes can be used in loops, this could result in infinite looping
if there is no recursion limit, so add such a limit. It is also
used for the SelectInst case because in theory there could be an
infinite loop there too if the basic block is unreachable.
llvm-svn: 118694
The simplifications performed here never create new instructions, they
only return existing instructions (or a constant), and so are always a
win. In theory they should transform (for example)
%z = and i32 %x, %y
%s = select i1 %cond, i32 %y, i32 %z
%r = and i32 %x, %s
into
%r = and i32 %x, y
but in practice they get into a fight with instcombine, and lose.
Unfortunately instcombine does a poor job in this case. Nonetheless
I'm committing this transform to make it easier to discuss what to
do to make peace with instcombine.
llvm-svn: 118679
of a select instruction, see if doing the compare with the
true and false values of the select gives the same result.
If so, that can be used as the value of the comparison.
llvm-svn: 118378
more careful not to call SimplifyInstructionsInBlock() on an unreachable block, the issue has been fixed at a higher level. Add
a big warning to SimplifyInstructionsInBlock() to hopefully prevent this in the future.
llvm-svn: 114117
mutated by recursive simplification. This also enhances
ReplaceAndSimplifyAllUses to actually do a real RAUW
at the end of it, which updates any value handles
pointing to "From" to start pointing to "To". This
seems useful for debug info and random other VH users.
llvm-svn: 108415
except that the result may not be a constant. Switch jump threading to
use it so that it gets things like (X & 0) -> 0, which occur when phi preds
are deleted and the remaining phi pred was a zero.
llvm-svn: 86637
takes decimated instructions and applies identities to them. This
is pretty minimal at this point, but I plan to pull some instcombine
logic out into these and similar routines.
llvm-svn: 86613