Before, only Thumb functions were marked as ".code 16". These
".code x" directives are effective until the next directive of its
kind is encountered. Therefore, in code with interleaved ARM and
Thumb functions, it was possible to declare a function as ARM and
end up with a Thumb function after assembly. A test has been added.
An existing test has also been fixed to take this change into
account.
Reviewers: aschwaighofer, t.p.northover, jmolloy, rengolin
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24337
llvm-svn: 281324
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.
llvm-svn: 281323
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
llvm-svn: 281314
descriptions now tag add instructions, and the Hexagon backend is using this to
identify loop induction statements.
Patch by Sam Parker and Sjoerd Meijer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23601
llvm-svn: 281304
Optimized (truncate (assertzext x) to i1) and anyext i1 to i8/16/32.
Optimization of this patterns is a one more step towards i1 optimization on AVX-512.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24456
llvm-svn: 281302
We currently return 4 for stackmaps and patchpoints, which is very optimistic
and can in rare cases cause the branch relaxation pass to fail to relax certain
branches.
This patch causes getInstSizeInBytes to return a pessimistic estimate of the
size as the number of bytes requested in the stackmap/patchpoint. In the future,
we could provide a more accurate estimate by sharing some of the logic in
AArch64::LowerSTACKMAP/PATCHPOINT.
Fixes part of https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28750
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24073
llvm-svn: 281301
This patch reverses the edge from DIGlobalVariable to GlobalVariable.
This will allow us to more easily preserve debug info metadata when
manipulating global variables.
Fixes PR30362. A program for upgrading test cases is attached to that
bug.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20147
llvm-svn: 281284
That confuses e.g. machine basic block placement, which then doesn't
realize that control can fall through a block that ends with a conditional
tail call. Instead, isBranch=1 should be set.
Also, mark EFLAGS as used by these instructions.
llvm-svn: 281281
Summary: If consecutive select instructions are lowered separately in CGP, it will introduce redundant condition check and branches that cannot be removed by later optimization phases. This patch lowers all consecutive select instructions at the same to to avoid inefficent code as demonstrated in https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=29095
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: vsk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24147
llvm-svn: 281252
r280832 added 32-bit support for emitting conditional tail-calls, but
dropped imp-used parameter registers. This went unnoticed until
r281113, which added 64-bit support, as this is only exposed with
parameter passing via registers.
Don't drop the imp-used parameters.
llvm-svn: 281223
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.
llvm-svn: 281215
If a constant is unamed_addr and is only used within one function, we can save
on the code size and runtime cost of an indirection by changing the global's storage
to inside the constant pool. For example, instead of:
ldr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: &format_string
format_string: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
We can emit:
adr r0, .CPI0
bl printf
bx lr
.CPI0: .asciz "hello, world!\n"
This can cause significant code size savings when many small strings are used in one
function (4 bytes per string).
llvm-svn: 281213
Summary:
This test was not testing the intrinsics. A function like this:
define %v4f32 @test_v4f32.floor(%v4f32 %a){
...
%1 = call %v4f32 @llvm.floor.v4f32(%v4f32 %a)
...
}
is transformed into the following assembly:
_test_v4f32.floor: @ @test_v4f32.floor
...
bl _floorf
...
In each function tested, there are two CHECK: one that checked
for the label and another one for the intrinsic that should be used
inside the function (in our case, "floor"). However, although the
first CHECK was matching the label, the second was not matching the
intrinsic, but the second "floor" in the same line as the label.
This is fixed by making the first CHECK match the entire line.
Reviewers: jmolloy, rengolin
Subscribers: rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24398
llvm-svn: 281211
Unlike SDag, we use a separate G_GEP instruction (much simplified, only taking
a single byte offset) to preserve the pointer type information through
selection.
llvm-svn: 281205
Some generic instructions have multiple types. While in theory these always be
discovered by inspecting the single definition of each generic vreg, in
practice those definitions won't always be local and traipsing through a big
function to find them will not be fun.
So this changes MIRPrinter to print out the type of uses as well as defs, if
they're known to be different or not known to be the same.
On the parsing side, we're a little more flexible: provided each register is
given a type in at least one place it's mentioned (and all types are
consistent) we accept the MIR. This doesn't introduce ambiguity but makes
writing tests manually a bit less painful.
llvm-svn: 281204
How I missed this locally is beyond me. I suspect llc didn't recompile. This is just changing the CHECK line back to what it was before r280364.
llvm-svn: 281161
Summary:
With this change (plus some changes to prevent !invariant from being
clobbered within llvm), clang will be able to model the __ldg CUDA
builtin as an invariant load, rather than as a target-specific llvm
intrinsic. This will let the optimizer play with these loads --
specifically, we should be able to vectorize them in the load-store
vectorizer.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: jholewinski, hfinkel, llvm-commits, chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23477
llvm-svn: 281152
If the literal is being folded into src0, it doesn't matter
if it's an SGPR because it's being replaced with the literal.
Also fixes initially selecting 32-bit versions of some instructions
which also confused commuting.
llvm-svn: 281117
This extends the optimization in r280832 to also work for 64-bit. The only
quirk is that we can't do this for 64-bit Windows (yet).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24423
llvm-svn: 281113
Summary:
Previously these only worked via NVPTX-specific intrinsics.
This change will allow us to convert these target-specific intrinsics
into the general LLVM versions, allowing existing LLVM passes to reason
about their behavior.
It also gets us some minor codegen improvements as-is, from situations
where we canonicalize code into one of these llvm intrinsics.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24300
llvm-svn: 281092
The CMPZ #0 disappears during peepholing, leaving just a tADDi3, tADDi8 or t2ADDri. This avoids having to materialize the expensive negative constant in Thumb-1, and allows a shrinking from a 32-bit CMN to a 16-bit ADDS in Thumb-2.
llvm-svn: 281040
These instructions were only necessary when type information was stored in the
MachineInstr (because only generic MachineInstrs possessed a type). Now that
it's in MachineRegisterInfo, COPY and PHI work fine.
llvm-svn: 281037
We want each register to have a canonical type, which means the best place to
store this is in MachineRegisterInfo rather than on every MachineInstr that
happens to use or define that register.
Most changes following from this are pretty simple (you need an MRI anyway if
you're going to be doing any transformations, so just check the type there).
But legalization doesn't really want to check redundant operands (when, for
example, a G_ADD only ever has one type) so I've made use of MCInstrDesc's
operand type field to encode these constraints and limit legalization's work.
As an added bonus, more validation is possible, both in MachineVerifier and
MachineIRBuilder (coming soon).
llvm-svn: 281035
Summary:
Also removed duplicate code from AMDGPUTargetAsmStreamer.
This change only change how amd_kernel_code_t is parsed and printed. No variable names are changed.
Reviewers: vpykhtin, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, wdng, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24296
llvm-svn: 281028
This avoids us doing a completely unneeded "cmp r0, #0" after a flag-setting instruction if we only care about the Z or C flags.
Add LSL/LSR to the whitelist while we're here and add testing. This code could really do with a spring clean.
llvm-svn: 281027
As part of this effort, remove MipsFCmp nodes and use tablegen
patterns rather than custom lowering through C++.
Unexpectedly, this improves codesize for microMIPS as previous floating
point setcc expansions would materialize 0 and 1 into GPRs before using
the relevant mov[tf].[sd] instruction. Now $zero is used directly.
Reviewers: dsanders, vkalintiris, zoran.jovanovic
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23118
llvm-svn: 281022
This adds more tests for shuffles where the output width does not match
the input width and/or the output is generated from more than two inputs.
llvm-svn: 281005
The REX prefix should be used on indirect jmps, but not direct ones.
For direct jumps, the unwinder looks at the offset to determine if
it's inside the current function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24359
llvm-svn: 281003
And associated commits, as they broke the Thumb bots.
This reverts commit r280935.
This reverts commit r280891.
This reverts commit r280888.
llvm-svn: 280967
Materializing something like "-3" can be done as 2 instructions:
MOV r0, #3
MVN r0, r0
This has a cost of 2, not 3. It looks like we were already trying to detect this pattern in TII::getIntImmCost(), but were taking the complement of the zero-extended value instead of the sign-extended value which is unlikely to ever produce a number < 256.
There were no tests failing after changing this... :/
llvm-svn: 280928
Add the ability to computeKnownBits and SimplifyDemandedBits to extract the known zero/one bits from BUILD_VECTOR, returning the known bits that are shared by every vector element.
This is an initial step towards determining the sign bits of a vector (PR29079).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24253
llvm-svn: 280927
This reverts commit r280808.
It is possible that this change results in an infinite loop. This
is causing timeouts in some tests on ARM, and a Chromebook bot is
failing.
llvm-svn: 280918
CGP tail-duplicates rets into blocks that end with a call that feed the ret.
This puts the call in tail position, potentially allowing the DAG builder to
lower it as a tail call. To avoid tail duplication in cases where we won't
form the tail call, CGP tried to predict whether this is going to be possible,
and avoids doing it when lowering as a tail call will definitely fail.
However, it was being too conservative by always throwing away calls to
functions with a signext/zeroext attribute on the return type.
Instead, we can use the same logic the builder uses to determine whether the
attributes work out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24315
llvm-svn: 280894
This is a port of XRay to ARM 32-bit, without Thumb support yet. The XRay instrumentation support is moving up to AsmPrinter.
This is one of 3 commits to different repositories of XRay ARM port. The other 2 are:
1. https://reviews.llvm.org/D23932 (Clang test)
2. https://reviews.llvm.org/D23933 (compiler-rt)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23931
llvm-svn: 280888
Shadow uses need to be analyzed together, since each individual shadow
will only have a partial reaching def. All shadows together may cover
a given register ref, while each individual shadow may not.
llvm-svn: 280855
The patch is to fix PR30298, which is caused by rL272694. The solution is to
bail out if the target has no SSE2.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24288
llvm-svn: 280837
The original commit was too aggressive about marking LibCalls as AAPCS. The
libcalls contain libc/libm/libunwind calls which are not AAPCS, but C.
llvm-svn: 280833
When branching to a block that immediately tail calls, it is possible to fold
the call directly into the branch if the call is direct and there is no stack
adjustment, saving one byte.
Example:
define void @f(i32 %x, i32 %y) {
entry:
%p = icmp eq i32 %x, %y
br i1 %p, label %bb1, label %bb2
bb1:
tail call void @foo()
ret void
bb2:
tail call void @bar()
ret void
}
before:
f:
movl 4(%esp), %eax
cmpl 8(%esp), %eax
jne .LBB0_2
jmp foo
.LBB0_2:
jmp bar
after:
f:
movl 4(%esp), %eax
cmpl 8(%esp), %eax
jne bar
.LBB0_1:
jmp foo
I don't expect any significant size savings from this (on a Clang bootstrap I
saw 288 bytes), but it does make the code a little tighter.
This patch only does 32-bit, but 64-bit would work similarly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24108
llvm-svn: 280832
OpenCL kernels have hidden kernel arguments for global offset and printf buffer. For consistency, these hidden argument should be included in the runtime metadata. Also updated kernel argument kind metadata.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23424
llvm-svn: 280829
Summary:
This saves a library call to __aeabi_uidivmod. However, the
processor must feature hardware division in order to benefit from
the transformation.
Reviewers: scott-0, jmolloy, compnerd, rengolin
Subscribers: t.p.northover, compnerd, aemerson, rengolin, samparker, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24133
llvm-svn: 280808
Summary:
The o32 ABI doesn't not support the TImode helpers. For the time being,
disable just the shift libcalls as they break recursive builds on MIPS.
Reviewers: sdardis
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sdardis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24259
llvm-svn: 280798
When folding an addi into a memory access that can take an immediate offset, we
were implicitly assuming that the existing offset was zero. This was incorrect.
If we're dealing with an addi with a plain constant, we can add it to the
existing offset (assuming that doesn't overflow the immediate, etc.), but if we
have anything else (i.e. something that will become a relocation expression),
we'll go back to requiring the existing immediate offset to be zero (because we
don't know what the requirements on that relocation expression might be - e.g.
maybe it is paired with some addis in some relevant way).
On the other hand, when dealing with a plain addi with a regular constant
immediate, the alignment restrictions (from the TOC base pointer, etc.) are
irrelevant.
I've added the test case from PR30280, which demonstrated the bug, but also
demonstrates a missed optimization opportunity (i.e. we don't need the memory
accesses at all).
Fixes PR30280.
llvm-svn: 280789
The previous commit (r280368 - https://reviews.llvm.org/D23313) does not cover AVX-512F, KNL set.
FNEG(x) operation is lowered to (bitcast (vpxor (bitcast x), (bitcast constfp(0x80000000))).
It happens because FP XOR is not supported for 512-bit data types on KNL and we use integer XOR instead.
I added pattern match for integer XOR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24221
llvm-svn: 280785
I might have called this "r246507, the sequel". It fixes the same issue, as the
issue has cropped up in a few more places. The underlying problem is that
isSetCCEquivalent can pick up select_cc nodes with a result type that is not
legal for a setcc node to have, and if we use that type to create new setcc
nodes, nothing fixes that (and so we've violated the contract that the
infrastructure has with the backend regarding setcc node types).
Fixes PR30276.
For convenience, here's the commit message from r246507, which explains the
problem is greater detail:
[DAGCombine] Fixup SETCC legality checking
SETCC is one of those special node types for which operation actions (legality,
etc.) is keyed off of an operand type, not the node's value type. This makes
sense because the value type of a legal SETCC node is determined by its
operands' value type (via the TLI function getSetCCResultType). When the
SDAGBuilder creates SETCC nodes, it either creates them with an MVT::i1 value
type, or directly with the value type provided by TLI.getSetCCResultType.
The first problem being fixed here is that DAGCombine had several places
querying TLI.isOperationLegal on SETCC, but providing the return of
getSetCCResultType, instead of the operand type directly. This does not mean
what the author thought, and "luckily", most in-tree targets have SETCC with
Custom lowering, instead of marking them Legal, so these checks return false
anyway.
The second problem being fixed here is that two of the DAGCombines could create
SETCC nodes with arbitrary (integer) value types; specifically, those that
would simplify:
(setcc a, b, op1) and|or (setcc a, b, op2) -> setcc a, b, op3
(which is possible for some combinations of (op1, op2))
If the operands of the and|or node are actual setcc nodes, then this is not an
issue (because the and|or must share the same type), but, the relevant code in
DAGCombiner::visitANDLike and DAGCombiner::visitORLike actually calls
DAGCombiner::isSetCCEquivalent on each operand, and that function will
recognise setcc-like select_cc nodes with other return types. And, thus, when
creating new SETCC nodes, we need to be careful to respect the value-type
constraint. This is even true before type legalization, because it is quite
possible for the SELECT_CC node to have a legal type that does not happen to
match the corresponding TLI.getSetCCResultType type.
To be explicit, there is nothing that later fixes the value types of SETCC
nodes (if the type is legal, but does not happen to match
TLI.getSetCCResultType). Creating SETCCs with an MVT::i1 value type seems to
work only because, either MVT::i1 is not legal, or it is what
TLI.getSetCCResultType returns if it is legal. Fixing that is a larger change,
however. For the time being, restrict the relevant transformations to produce
only SETCC nodes with a value type matching TLI.getSetCCResultType (or MVT::i1
prior to type legalization).
Fixes PR24636.
llvm-svn: 280767
- Implemented amdgpu-flat-work-group-size attribute
- Implemented amdgpu-num-active-waves-per-eu attribute
- Implemented amdgpu-num-sgpr attribute
- Implemented amdgpu-num-vgpr attribute
- Dynamic LDS constraints are in a separate patch
Patch by Tom Stellard and Konstantin Zhuravlyov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21562
llvm-svn: 280747