Instead of this:
i32.const $push10=, __stack_pointer
i32.load $push11=, 0($pop10)
Emit this:
i32.const $push10=, 0
i32.load $push11=, __stack_pointer($pop10)
It's not currently clear which is better, though there's a chance the second
form may be better at overall compression. We can revisit this when we have
more data; for now it makes sense to make PEI consistent with isel.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20411
llvm-svn: 270635
This saves a small amount of code size, and is a first small step toward
passing values on the stack across block boundaries.
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20450
llvm-svn: 270294
We currently don't represent get_local and set_local explicitly; they
are just implied by virtual register use and def. This avoids a lot of
clutter, but it does complicate stackifying: get_locals read their
operands at their position in the stack evaluation order, rather than
at their parent instruction. This patch adds code to walk the stack to
determine the precise ordering, when needed.
llvm-svn: 269854
MachineInstr::isSafeToMove is more conservative than is needed here;
use a more explicit check, and incorporate knowledge of some
WebAssembly-specific opcodes.
llvm-svn: 269736
Move the register stackification and coloring passes to run very late, after
PEI, tail duplication, and most other passes. This means that all code emitted
and expanded by those passes is now exposed to these passes. This also
eliminates the need for prologue/epilogue code to be manually stackified,
which significantly simplifies the code.
This does require running LiveIntervals a second time. It's useful to think
of these late passes not as late optimization passes, but as a domain-specific
compression algorithm based on knowledge of liveness information. It's used to
compress the code after all conventional optimizations are complete, which is
why it uses LiveIntervals at a phase when actual optimization passes don't
typically need it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20075
llvm-svn: 269012
The register stackifier currently checks for intervening stores (and
loads that may alias them) but doesn't account for the fact that the
instruction being moved may affect intervening loads.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17298
llvm-svn: 261014
This avoids some complications updating LiveIntervals to be aware of the new
register lifetimes, because we can just compute new intervals from scratch
rather than describe how the old ones have been changed.
llvm-svn: 260971
This patch revamps the RegStackifier pass with a new tree traversal mechanism,
enabling three major new features:
- Stackification of values with multiple uses, using the result value of set_local
- More aggressive stackification of instructions with side effects
- Reordering operands in commutative instructions to enable more stackification.
llvm-svn: 259009
Teach the register stackifier to rematerialize constants that have multiple
uses instead of leaving them in registers. In the WebAssembly encoding, it's
the same code size to materialize most constants as it is to read a value
from a register.
llvm-svn: 258142
This patch changes the way labels are referenced. Instead of referencing the
basic-block label name (eg. .LBB0_0), instructions now just have an immediate
which indicates the depth in the control-flow stack to find a label to jump to.
This makes them much closer to what we expect to have in the binary encoding,
and avoids the problem of basic-block label names not being explicit in the
binary encoding.
Also, it terminates blocks and loops with end_block and end_loop instructions,
rather than basic-block label names, for similar reasons.
This will also fix problems where two constructs appear to have the same label,
because we no longer explicitly use labels, so consumers that need labels will
presumably create their own labels, and presumably they won't reuse labels
when they do.
This patch does make the code a little more awkward to read; as a partial
mitigation, this patch also introduces comments showing where the labels are,
and comments on each branch showing where it's branching to.
llvm-svn: 257505
The MC assembler doesn't like using the empty string as a private label
prefix because then it treats all labels as private. This commit reverts
back to the default prefix, which is .L, which is common in ELF targets
and consistent with the LLVM name mangler.
llvm-svn: 257083
Move RegStackify after coalescing and teach it to use LiveIntervals instead
of depending on SSA form. This avoids a problem where a register in a COPY
instruction is stackified and then subsequently coalesced with a register
that is not stackified.
This also puts it after the scheduler, which allows us to simplify the
EXPR_STACK constraint, as we no longer have instructions being reordered
after stackification and before coloring.
llvm-svn: 256402
Reinteroduce the code for moving ARGUMENTS back to the top of the basic block.
While the ARGUMENTS physical register prevents sinking and scheduling from
moving them, it does not appear to be sufficient to prevent SelectionDAG from
moving them down in the initial schedule. This patch introduces a patch that
moves them back to the top immediately after SelectionDAG runs.
This is still hopefully a temporary solution. http://reviews.llvm.org/D14750 is
one alternative, though the review has not been favorable, and proposed
alternatives are longer-term and have other downsides.
This fixes the main outstanding -verify-machineinstrs failures, so it adds
-verify-machineinstrs to several tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15377
llvm-svn: 255125
This patch introduces a codegen-only instruction currently named br_unless,
which makes it convenient to implement ReverseBranchCondition and re-enable
the MachineBlockPlacement pass. Then in a late pass, it lowers br_unless
back into br_if.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14995
llvm-svn: 254826
Add physical register defs to instructions used from stackified
instructions to prevent them from being scheduled into the middle of
a stack sequence. This is a conservative measure which may be loosened
in the future.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15252
llvm-svn: 254811