Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes.
I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module
include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or
care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time
and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything
(I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they
may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the
API being implemented.
Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header
files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main
module rule does in fact have its merits. =]
llvm-svn: 169131
No functional change, just moved header files.
Targets can inject custom passes between register allocation and
rewriting. This makes it possible to tweak the register allocation
before rewriting, using the full global interference checking available
from LiveRegMatrix.
llvm-svn: 168806
PR14098 contains an example where we would rematerialize a MOV8ri
immediately after the original instruction:
%vreg7:sub_8bit<def> = MOV8ri 9; GR32_ABCD:%vreg7
%vreg22:sub_8bit<def> = MOV8ri 9; GR32_ABCD:%vreg7
Besides being pointless, it is also wrong since the original instruction
only redefines part of the register, and the value read by the new
instruction is wrong.
The problem was the LiveRangeEdit::allUsesAvailableAt() didn't
special-case OrigIdx == UseIdx and found the wrong SSA value.
llvm-svn: 166068
LiveRangeEdit::eliminateDeadDefs() can delete a dead instruction that
reads unreserved physregs. This would leave the corresponding regunit
live interval dangling because we don't have shrinkToUses() for physical
registers.
Fix this problem by turning the instruction into a KILL instead of
deleting it. This happens in a landing pad in
test/CodeGen/X86/2012-05-19-CoalescerCrash.ll:
%vreg27<def,dead> = COPY %EDX<kill>; GR32:%vreg27
becomes:
KILL %EDX<kill>
An upcoming fix to the machine verifier will catch problems like this by
verifying regunit live intervals.
This fixes PR13498. I am not including the test case from the PR since
we already have one exposing the problem once the verifier is fixed.
llvm-svn: 161182
LiveRangeEdit::foldAsLoad() can eliminate a register by folding a load
into its only use. Only do that when the load is safe to move, and it
won't extend any live ranges.
This fixes PR13414.
llvm-svn: 160575
Dead code elimination during coalescing could cause a virtual register
to be split into connected components. The following rewriting would be
confused about the already joined copies present in the code, but
without a corresponding value number in the live range.
Erase all joined copies instantly when joining intervals such that the
MI and LiveInterval representations are always in sync.
llvm-svn: 157135
methods are no longer needed now that LinearScan has gone away.
(Contains tweaks trivialSpillEverywhere to enable the removal of getNewVRegs).
llvm-svn: 151658
If we create new intervals for a variable that is being spilled, then those new intervals are not guaranteed to also spill. This means that anything reading from the original spilling value might not get the correct value if spills were missed.
Fixes <rdar://problem/10546864>
llvm-svn: 146428
generator to it. For non-bundle instructions, these behave exactly the same
as the MC layer API.
For properties like mayLoad / mayStore, look into the bundle and if any of the
bundled instructions has the property it would return true.
For properties like isPredicable, only return true if *all* of the bundled
instructions have the property.
For properties like canFoldAsLoad, isCompare, conservatively return false for
bundles.
llvm-svn: 146026
The old naming scheme (load/use/def/store) can be traced back to an old
linear scan article, but the names don't match how slots are actually
used.
The load and store slots are not needed after the deferred spill code
insertion framework was deleted.
The use and def slots don't make any sense because we are using
half-open intervals as is customary in C code, but the names suggest
closed intervals. In reality, these slots were used to distinguish
early-clobber defs from normal defs.
The new naming scheme also has 4 slots, but the names match how the
slots are really used. This is a purely mechanical renaming, but some
of the code makes a lot more sense now.
llvm-svn: 144503
This function doesn't have anything to do with spill weights, and MRI
already has functions for manipulating the register class of a virtual
register.
llvm-svn: 137123
Remat during spilling triggers dead code elimination. If a phi-def
becomes unused, that may also cause live ranges to split into separate
connected components.
This type of splitting is different from normal live range splitting. In
particular, there may not be a common original interval.
When the split range is its own original, make sure that the new
siblings are also their own originals. The range being split cannot be
used as an original since it doesn't cover the new siblings.
llvm-svn: 134413
When an interfering live range ends at a dead slot index between two
instructions, make sure that the inserted copy instruction gets a slot index
after the dead ones. This makes it possible to avoid the interference.
Ideally, there shouldn't be interference ending at a deleted instruction, but
physical register coalescing can sometimes do that to sub-registers.
This fixes PR9823.
llvm-svn: 130687
When DCE clones a live range because it separates into connected components,
make sure that the clones enter the same register allocator stage as the
register they were cloned from.
For instance, clones may be split even when they where created during spilling.
Other registers created during spilling are not candidates for splitting or even
(re-)spilling.
llvm-svn: 128524
The instruction to be rematerialized may not be the one defining the register
that is being spilled. The traceSiblingValue() function sees through sibling
copies to find the remat candidate.
llvm-svn: 128449
I have convinced myself that it can only happen when a phi value dies. When it
happens, allocate new virtual registers for the components.
llvm-svn: 127827
LiveRangeEdit::eliminateDeadDefs() will eventually be used by coalescing,
splitting, and spilling for dead code elimination. It can delete chains of dead
instructions as long as there are no dependency loops.
llvm-svn: 127287