register dependency (rather than glue them together). This is general
goodness as it gives scheduler more freedom. However it is motivated by
a nasty bug in isel.
When a i64 sub is expanded to subc + sube.
libcall #1
\
\ subc
\ / \
\ / \
\ / libcall #2
sube
If the libcalls are not serialized (i.e. both have chains which are dag
entry), legalizer can serialize them in arbitrary orders. If it's
unlucky, it can force libcall #2 before libcall #1 in the above case.
subc
|
libcall #2
|
libcall #1
|
sube
However since subc and sube are "glued" together, this ends up being a
cycle when the scheduler combine subc and sube as a single scheduling
unit.
The right solution is to fix LegalizeType too chains the libcalls together.
However, LegalizeType is not processing nodes in order so that's harder than
it should be. For now, the move to physical register dependency will do.
rdar://10019576
llvm-svn: 138791
Fix base register type and canonicallize to the "ldm" spelling rather than
"ldmia." Add diagnostics for incorrect writeback token and out-of-range
registers.
llvm-svn: 137986
(including compilation, assembly). Move relocation model Reloc::Model from
TargetMachine to MCCodeGenInfo so it's accessible even without TargetMachine.
llvm-svn: 135468
if (x != 0) x = 1
if (x == 1) x = 1
Previous codegen looks like this:
mov r1, r0
cmp r1, #1
mov r0, #0
moveq r0, #1
The naive lowering select between two different values. It should recognize the
test is equality test so it's more a conditional move rather than a select:
cmp r0, #1
movne r0, #0
rdar://9758317
llvm-svn: 135017
The normal tBX instruction is predicable, so there's no reason the
pseudos for using it as a return shouldn't be. Gives us some nice code-gen
improvements as can be seen by the test changes. In particular, several
tests now have to disable if-conversion because it works too well and defeats
the test.
llvm-svn: 134746
The DSP instructions in the Thumb2 instruction set are an optional extension
in the Cortex-M* archtitecture. When present, the implementation is considered
an "ARMv7E-M implementation," and when not, an "ARMv7-M implementation."
Add a subtarget feature hook for the v7e-m instructions and hook it up. The
cortex-m3 cpu is an example of a v7m implementation, while the cortex-m4 is
a v7e-m implementation.
rdar://9572992
llvm-svn: 134261
Fix a FIXME and allow predication (in Thumb2) for the T1 register to
register MOV instructions. This allows some better codegen with
if-conversion (as seen in the test updates), plus it lays the groundwork
for pseudo-izing the tMOVCC instructions.
llvm-svn: 134197
It's just a t2LDMIA_UPD instruction with extra codegen properties, so it
doesn't need the encoding information. As a side-benefit, we now correctly
recognize for instruction printing as a 'pop' instruction.
llvm-svn: 134173
for pre-2.9 bitcode files. We keep x86 unaligned loads, movnt, crc32, and the
target indep prefetch change.
As usual, updating the testsuite is a PITA.
llvm-svn: 133337
we try to branch to them.
Before we were creating successor lists with duplicated entries. Fixing that
found a bug in isBlockOnlyReachableByFallthrough that would causes it to
return the wrong answer for
-----------
...
jne foo
jmp bar
foo:
----------
llvm-svn: 132882
of reserved registers.
Use RegisterClassInfo in RABasic as well. This slightly changes som
allocation orders because RegisterClassInfo puts CSR aliases last.
llvm-svn: 132581
by non-CMP expressions. The executable test case (129821) would test
this as well, if we had an "-O0 -disable-arm-fast-isel" LLVM-GCC
tester. Alas, the ARM assembly would be very difficult to check with
FileCheck.
The thumb2-cbnz.ll test is affected; it generates larger code (tst.w
vs. cmp #0), but I believe the new version is correct.
rdar://problem/9298790
llvm-svn: 131261
Original message:
Teach MachineCSE how to do simple cross-block CSE involving physregs. This allows, for example, eliminating duplicate cmpl's on x86. Part of rdar://problem/8259436 .
llvm-svn: 130877
These tests all follow the same pattern:
mov r2, r0
movs r0, #0
$CMP r2, r1
it eq
moveq r0, #1
bx lr
The first 'mov' can be eliminated by rematerializing 'movs r0, #0' below the
test instruction:
$CMP r0, r1
mov.w r0, #0
it eq
moveq r0, #1
bx lr
So far, only physreg coalescing can do that. The register allocators won't yet
split live ranges just to eliminate copies. They can learn, but this particular
problem is not likely to show up in real code. It only appears because r0 is
used for both the function argument and return value.
llvm-svn: 130858
more callee-saved registers and introduce copies. Only allows it if scheduling
a node above calls would end up lessen register pressure.
Call operands also has added ABI restrictions for register allocation, so be
extra careful with hoisting them above calls.
rdar://9329627
llvm-svn: 130245
Fixes Thumb2 ADCS and SBCS lowering: <rdar://problem/9275821>.
t2ADCS/t2SBCS are now pseudo instructions, consistent with ARM, so the
assembly printer correctly prints the 's' suffix.
Fixes Thumb2 adde -> SBC matching to check for live/dead carry flags.
Fixes the internal ARM machine opcode mnemonic for ADCS/SBCS.
Fixes ARM SBC lowering to check for live carry (potential bug).
llvm-svn: 130048
add <rd>, sp, #<imm8>
ldr <rd>, [sp, #<imm8>]
When the offset from sp is multiple of 4 and in range of 0-1020.
This saves code size by utilizing 16-bit instructions.
rdar://9321541
llvm-svn: 129971
Additional fixes:
Do something reasonable for subtargets with generic
itineraries by handle node latency the same as for an empty
itinerary. Now nodes default to unit latency unless an itinerary
explicitly specifies a zero cycle stage or it is a TokenFactor chain.
Original fixes:
UnitsSharePred was a source of randomness in the scheduler: node
priority depended on the queue data structure. I rewrote the recent
VRegCycle heuristics to completely replace the old heuristic without
any randomness. To make the ndoe latency adjustments work, I also
needed to do something a little more reasonable with TokenFactor. I
gave it zero latency to its consumers and always schedule it as low as
possible.
llvm-svn: 129421
masks to match inversely for the code as is to work. For the example given
we actually want:
bfi r0, r2, #1, #1
not #0, however, given the way the pattern is written it's not possible
at the moment.
Fixes rdar://9177502
llvm-svn: 128320
Optimize trivial branches in CodeGenPrepare, which often get created from the
lowering of objectsize intrinsics. Unfortunately, a number of tests were relying
on llc not optimizing trivial branches, so I had to add an option to allow them
to continue to test what they originally tested.
This fixes <rdar://problem/8785296> and <rdar://problem/9112893>.
llvm-svn: 127498
lowering of objectsize intrinsics. Unfortunately, a number of tests were relying
on llc not optimizing trivial branches, so I had to add an option to allow them
to continue to test what they originally tested.
This fixes <rdar://problem/8785296> and <rdar://problem/9112893>.
llvm-svn: 127459
1. Fixed ARM pc adjustment.
2. Fixed dynamic-no-pic codegen
3. CSE of pc-relative load of global addresses.
It's now enabled by default for Darwin.
llvm-svn: 123991
DAG. Disable using "-disable-sched-cycles".
For ARM, this enables a framework for modeling the cpu pipeline and
counting stalls. It also activates several heuristics to drive
scheduling based on the model. Scheduling is inherently imprecise at
this stage, and until spilling is improved it may defeat attempts to
schedule. However, this framework provides greater control over
tuning codegen.
Although the flag is not target-specific, it should have very little
affect on the default scheduler used by x86. The only two changes that
affect x86 are:
- scheduling a high-latency operation bumps the current cycle so independent
operations can have their latency covered. i.e. two independent 4
cycle operations can produce results in 4 cycles, not 8 cycles.
- Two operations with equal register pressure impact and no
latency-based stalls on their uses will be prioritized by depth before height
(height is irrelevant if no stalls occur in the schedule below this point).
llvm-svn: 123971
Also fix an off-by-one in SelectionDAGBuilder that was preventing shuffle
vectors from being translated to EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR.
Patch by Tim Northover.
The test changes are needed to keep those spill-q tests from testing aligned
spills and restores. If the only aligned stack objects are spill slots, we
no longer realign the stack frame. Prior to this patch, an EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR
was legalized by loading from the stack, which created an aligned frame index.
Now, however, there is nothing except the spill slot in the stack frame, so
I added an aligned alloca.
llvm-svn: 122995
Use the same COPY_TO_REGCLASS approach as for the 2-register *_sfp instructions.
This change made a big difference in the code generated for the
CodeGen/Thumb2/cross-rc-coalescing-2.ll test: The coalescer is still doing
a fine job, but some instructions that were previously moved outside the loop
are not moved now. It's using fewer VFP registers now, which is generally
a good thing, so I think the estimates for register pressure changed and that
affected the LICM behavior. Since that isn't obviously wrong, I've just
changed the test file. This completes the work for Radar 8711675.
llvm-svn: 121730
state. Previously Thumb2 would restore sp from fp like this:
mov sp, r7
sub, sp, #4
If an interrupt is taken after the 'mov' but before the 'sub', callee-saved
registers might be clobbered by the interrupt handler. Instead, try
restoring directly from sp:
add sp, #4
Or, if necessary (with VLA, etc.) use a scratch register to compute sp and
then restore it:
sub.w r4, r7, #8
mov sp, r7
rdar://8465407
llvm-svn: 119977
Remove movePastCSLoadStoreOps and associated code for simple pointer
increments. Update routines that depended upon other opcodes for save/restore.
Adjust all testcases accordingly.
llvm-svn: 119725
and xor. The 32-bit move immediates can be hoisted out of loops by machine
LICM but the isel hacks were preventing them.
Instead, let peephole optimization pass recognize registers that are defined by
immediates and the ARM target hook will fold the immediates in.
Other changes include 1) do not fold and / xor into cmp to isel TST / TEQ
instructions if there are multiple uses. This happens when the 'and' is live
out, machine sink would have sinked the computation and that ends up pessimizing
code. The peephole pass would recognize situations where the 'and' can be
toggled to define CPSR and eliminate the comparison anyway.
2) Move peephole pass to after machine LICM, sink, and CSE to avoid blocking
important optimizations.
rdar://8663787, rdar://8241368
llvm-svn: 119548
1. Fix pre-ra scheduler so it doesn't try to push instructions above calls to
"optimize for latency". Call instructions don't have the right latency and
this is more likely to use introduce spills.
2. Fix if-converter cost function. For ARM, it should use instruction latencies,
not # of micro-ops since multi-latency instructions is completely executed
even when the predicate is false. Also, some instruction will be "slower"
when they are predicated due to the register def becoming implicit input.
rdar://8598427
llvm-svn: 118135
There were a number of issues to fix up here:
* The "device" argument of the llvm.memory.barrier intrinsic should be
used to distinguish the "Full System" domain from the "Inner Shareable"
domain. It has nothing to do with using DMB vs. DSB instructions.
* The compiler should never need to emit DSB instructions. Remove the
ARMISD::SYNCBARRIER node and also remove the instruction patterns for DSB.
* Merge the separate DMB/DSB instructions for options only used for the
disassembler with the default DMB/DSB instructions. Add the default
"full system" option ARM_MB::SY to the ARM_MB::MemBOpt enum.
* Add a separate ARMISD::MEMBARRIER_MCR node for subtargets that implement
a data memory barrier using the MCR instruction.
* Fix up encodings for these instructions (except MCR).
I also updated the tests and added a few new ones to check for DMB options
that were not currently being exercised.
llvm-svn: 117756
operand and one of them has a single use that is a live out copy, favor the
one that is live out. Otherwise it will be difficult to eliminate the copy
if the instruction is a loop induction variable update. e.g.
BB:
sub r1, r3, #1
str r0, [r2, r3]
mov r3, r1
cmp
bne BB
=>
BB:
str r0, [r2, r3]
sub r3, r3, #1
cmp
bne BB
This fixed the recent 256.bzip2 regression.
llvm-svn: 117675
- Initial register pressure in the loop should be all the live defs into the
loop. Not just those from loop preheader which is often empty.
- When an instruction is hoisted, update register pressure from loop preheader
to the original BB.
- Treat only use of a virtual register as kill since the code is still SSA.
llvm-svn: 116956
"long latency" enough to hoist even if it may increase spilling. Reloading
a value from spill slot is often cheaper than performing an expensive
computation in the loop. For X86, that means machine LICM will hoist
SQRT, DIV, etc. ARM will be somewhat aggressive with VFP and NEON
instructions.
- Enable register pressure aware machine LICM by default.
llvm-svn: 116781
callee-saved registers at the end of the lists. Also prefer to avoid using
the low registers that are in register subclasses required by certain
instructions, so that those registers will more likely be available when needed.
This change makes a huge improvement in spilling in some cases. Thanks to
Jakob for helping me realize the problem.
Most of this patch is fixing the testsuite. There are quite a few places
where we're checking for specific registers. I changed those to wildcards
in places where that doesn't weaken the tests. The spill-q.ll and
thumb2-spill-q.ll tests stopped spilling with this change, so I added a bunch
of live values to force spills on those tests.
llvm-svn: 116055
between the high and low registers for prologue/epilogue code. This was
a Darwin-only thing that wasn't providing a realistic benefit anymore.
Combining the save areas simplifies the compiler code and results in better
ARM/Thumb2 codegen.
For example, previously we would generate code like:
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
add r7, sp, #12
stmdb sp!, {r8, r10, r11}
With this change, we combine the register saves and generate:
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, r8, r10, r11, lr}
add r7, sp, #12
rdar://8445635
llvm-svn: 114340
take multiple cycles to decode.
For the current if-converter clients (actually only ARM), the instructions that
are predicated on false are not nops. They would still take machine cycles to
decode. Micro-coded instructions such as LDM / STM can potentially take multiple
cycles to decode. If-converter should take treat them as non-micro-coded
simple instructions.
llvm-svn: 113570
"For ARM stack frames that utilize variable sized objects and have either
large local stack areas or require dynamic stack realignment, allocate a
base register via which to access the local frame. This allows efficient
access to frame indices not accessible via the FP (either due to being out
of range or due to dynamic realignment) or the SP (due to variable sized
object allocation). In particular, this greatly improves efficiency of access
to spill slots in Thumb functions which contain VLAs."
r112986 fixed a latent bug exposed by the above.
llvm-svn: 112989
large local stack areas or require dynamic stack realignment, allocate a
base register via which to access the local frame. This allows efficient
access to frame indices not accessible via the FP (either due to being out
of range or due to dynamic realignment) or the SP (due to variable sized
object allocation). In particular, this greatly improves efficiency of access
to spill slots in Thumb functions which contain VLAs.
rdar://7352504
rdar://8374540
rdar://8355680
llvm-svn: 112883
int x(int t) {
if (t & 256)
return -26;
return 0;
}
We generate this:
tst.w r0, #256
mvn r0, #25
it eq
moveq r0, #0
while gcc generates this:
ands r0, r0, #256
it ne
mvnne r0, #25
bx lr
Scandalous really!
During ISel time, we can look for this particular pattern. One where we have a
"MOVCC" that uses the flag off of a CMPZ that itself is comparing an AND
instruction to 0. Something like this (greatly simplified):
%r0 = ISD::AND ...
ARMISD::CMPZ %r0, 0 @ sets [CPSR]
%r0 = ARMISD::MOVCC 0, -26 @ reads [CPSR]
All we have to do is convert the "ISD::AND" into an "ARM::ANDS" that sets [CPSR]
when it's zero. The zero value will all ready be in the %r0 register and we only
need to change it if the AND wasn't zero. Easy!
llvm-svn: 112664
comparison that would overflow.
- The other under/overflow cases can't actually happen because the immediates
which would trigger them are legal (so we don't enter this code), but
adjusted the style to make it clear the transform is always valid.
llvm-svn: 112053
platform. It's apparently "bl __muldf3" on linux, for example. Since that's
not what we're checking here, it's more robust to just force a triple. We
just wwant to check that the inline FP instructions are only generated
on cpus that have them."
llvm-svn: 110830
memory and synchronization barrier dmb and dsb instructions.
- Change instruction names to something more sensible (matching name of actual
instructions).
- Added tests for memory barrier codegen.
llvm-svn: 110785
Also added a test case to check for the added benefit of this patch: it's optimizing away the unnecessary restore of sp from fp for some non-leaf functions.
llvm-svn: 110707
have 4 bits per register in the operand encoding), but have undefined
behavior when the operand value is 13 or 15 (SP and PC, respectively).
The trivial coalescer in linear scan sometimes will merge a copy from
SP into a subsequent instruction which uses the copy, and if that
instruction cannot legally reference SP, we get bad code such as:
mls r0,r9,r0,sp
instead of:
mov r2, sp
mls r0, r9, r0, r2
This patch adds a new register class for use by Thumb2 that excludes
the problematic registers (SP and PC) and is used instead of GPR
for those operands which cannot legally reference PC or SP. The
trivial coalescer explicitly requires that the register class
of the destination for the COPY instruction contain the source
register for the COPY to be considered for coalescing. This prevents
errant instructions like that above.
PR7499
llvm-svn: 109842
integers with mov + vdup. 8003375. This is
currently disabled by default because LICM will
not hoist a VDUP, so it pessimizes the code if
the construct occurs inside a loop (8248029).
llvm-svn: 109799
Add explicit testcases for tail calls within the same module.
Duplicate some code to humor those who think .w doesn't apply on ARM.
Leave this disabled on Thumb1, and add some comments explaining why it's hard
and won't gain much.
llvm-svn: 107851
There are 2 changes relative to the previous version of the patch:
1) For the "simple" if-conversion case, there's no need to worry about
RemoveExtraEdges not handling an unanalyzable branch. Predicated terminators
are ignored in this context, so RemoveExtraEdges does the right thing.
This might break someday if we ever treat indirect branches (BRIND) as
predicable, but for now, I just removed this part of the patch, because
in the case where we do not add an unconditional branch, we rely on keeping
the fall-through edge to CvtBBI (which is empty after this transformation).
The change relative to the previous patch is:
@@ -1036,10 +1036,6 @@
IterIfcvt = false;
}
- // RemoveExtraEdges won't work if the block has an unanalyzable branch,
- // which is typically the case for IfConvertSimple, so explicitly remove
- // CvtBBI as a successor.
- BBI.BB->removeSuccessor(CvtBBI->BB);
RemoveExtraEdges(BBI);
// Update block info. BB can be iteratively if-converted.
2) My patch exposed a bug in the code for merging the tail of a "diamond",
which had previously never been exercised. The code was simply checking that
the tail had a single predecessor, but there was a case in
MultiSource/Benchmarks/VersaBench/dbms where that single predecessor was
neither edge of the diamond. I added the following change to check for
that:
@@ -1276,7 +1276,18 @@
// tail, add a unconditional branch to it.
if (TailBB) {
BBInfo TailBBI = BBAnalysis[TailBB->getNumber()];
- if (TailBB->pred_size() == 1 && !TailBBI.HasFallThrough) {
+ bool CanMergeTail = !TailBBI.HasFallThrough;
+ // There may still be a fall-through edge from BBI1 or BBI2 to TailBB;
+ // check if there are any other predecessors besides those.
+ unsigned NumPreds = TailBB->pred_size();
+ if (NumPreds > 1)
+ CanMergeTail = false;
+ else if (NumPreds == 1 && CanMergeTail) {
+ MachineBasicBlock::pred_iterator PI = TailBB->pred_begin();
+ if (*PI != BBI1->BB && *PI != BBI2->BB)
+ CanMergeTail = false;
+ }
+ if (CanMergeTail) {
MergeBlocks(BBI, TailBBI);
TailBBI.IsDone = true;
} else {
With these fixes, I was able to run all the SingleSource and MultiSource
tests successfully.
llvm-svn: 107110
if-conversion. The RemoveExtraEdges function doesn't work for blocks that
end with unanalyzable branches, so in those cases, the "extra" edges must
be explicitly removed. The CopyAndPredicateBlock and MergeBlocks methods
can also avoid copying successor edges due to branches that have already
been removed. The latter case is especially helpful when MergeBlocks is
called for handling "diamond" if-conversions, where otherwise you can end
up with some weird intermediate states in the CFG. Unfortunately I've
been unable to find cases where this cleanup actually makes a significant
difference in the code. There is one test where we manage to remove an
empty block at the end of a function. Radar 6911268.
llvm-svn: 106939
when the condition is constant. This optimization shouldn't be
necessary, because codegen shouldn't be able to find dead control
paths that the IR-level optimizer can't find. And it's undesirable,
because it encourages bugpoint to leave "br i1 false" branches
in its output. And it wasn't updating the CFG.
I updated all the tests I could, but some tests are too reduced
and I wasn't able to meaningfully preserve them.
llvm-svn: 106748
- This fixed a number of bugs in if-converter, tail merging, and post-allocation
scheduler. If-converter now runs branch folding / tail merging first to
maximize if-conversion opportunities.
- Also changed the t2IT instruction slightly. It now defines the ITSTATE
register which is read by instructions in the IT block.
- Added Thumb2 specific hazard recognizer to ensure the scheduler doesn't
change the instruction ordering in the IT block (since IT mask has been
finalized). It also ensures no other instructions can be scheduled between
instructions in the IT block.
This is not yet enabled.
llvm-svn: 106344
instructions, but it doesn't really understand live ranges, so the first
INSERT_SUBREG uses an implicitly defined register.
Fix it in LiveVariableAnalysis by adding the <undef> flag.
llvm-svn: 106333
basic tests.
This has been well tested on Darwin but not elsewhere.
It should work provided the linker correctly resolves
B.W <label in other function>
which it has not seen before, at least from llvm-based
compilers. I'm leaving the arm-tail-calls switch in
until I see if there's any problems because of that;
it might need to be disabled for some environments.
llvm-svn: 106299
LiveVariableAnalysis was a bit picky about a register only being redefined once,
but that really isn't necessary.
Here is an example of chained INSERT_SUBREGs that we can handle now:
68 %reg1040<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %reg1040, %reg1028<kill>, 14
register: %reg1040 +[70,134:0)
76 %reg1040<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %reg1040, %reg1029<kill>, 13
register: %reg1040 replace range with [70,78:1) RESULT: %reg1040,0.000000e+00 = [70,78:1)[78,134:0) 0@78-(134) 1@70-(78)
84 %reg1040<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %reg1040, %reg1030<kill>, 12
register: %reg1040 replace range with [78,86:2) RESULT: %reg1040,0.000000e+00 = [70,78:1)[78,86:2)[86,134:0) 0@86-(134) 1@70-(78) 2@78-(86)
92 %reg1040<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %reg1040, %reg1031<kill>, 11
register: %reg1040 replace range with [86,94:3) RESULT: %reg1040,0.000000e+00 = [70,78:1)[78,86:2)[86,94:3)[94,134:0) 0@94-(134) 1@70-(78) 2@78-(86) 3@86-(94)
rdar://problem/8096390
llvm-svn: 106152
Given a copy instruction, CoalescerPair can determine which registers to
coalesce in order to eliminate the copy. It deals with all the subreg fun to
determine a tuple (DstReg, SrcReg, SubIdx) such that:
- SrcReg is a virtual register that will disappear after coalescing.
- DstReg is a virtual or physical register whose live range will be extended.
- SubIdx is 0 when DstReg is a physical register.
- SrcReg can be joined with DstReg:SubIdx.
CoalescerPair::isCoalescable() determines if another copy instruction is
compatible with the same tuple. This fixes some NEON miscompilations where
shuffles are getting coalesced as if they were copies.
The CoalescerPair class will replace a lot of the spaghetti logic in JoinCopy
later.
llvm-svn: 105997
copying VFP subregs. This exposed a bunch of dead code in the *spill-q.ll
tests, so I tweaked those tests to keep that code from being optimized away.
Radar 7872877.
llvm-svn: 104415
beneficial cases. See the changes in test/CodeGen/X86/tail-opts.ll and
test/CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt2.ll for details.
The fix is to change HashEndOfMBB to hash at most one instruction,
instead of trying to apply heuristics about when it will be profitable to
consider more than one instruction. The regular tail-merging heuristics
are already prepared to handle the same cases, and they're more precise.
Also, make test/CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt5.ll and
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-branch.ll slightly more complex so that they
continue to test what they're intended to test.
And, this eliminates the problem in
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/2009-10-15-ITBlockBranch.ll, the testcase from
PR5204. Update it accordingly.
llvm-svn: 102907
instructions to help disassembly.
We also changed the output of the addressing modes to omit the '+' from the
assembler syntax #+/-<imm> or +/-<Rm>. See, for example, A8.6.57/58/60.
And modified test cases to not expect '+' in +reg or #+num. For example,
; CHECK: ldr.w r9, [r7, #28]
llvm-svn: 98745
U test/CodeGen/ARM/tls2.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/arm-negative-stride.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/2009-10-30.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/globals.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/str_pre-2.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/ldrd.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/2009-10-27-double-align.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-strb.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/ldr-str-imm12.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-strh.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-ldr.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-str_pre.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-str.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-ldrh.ll
U utils/TableGen/TableGen.cpp
U utils/TableGen/DisassemblerEmitter.cpp
D utils/TableGen/RISCDisassemblerEmitter.h
D utils/TableGen/RISCDisassemblerEmitter.cpp
U Makefile.rules
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMInstrNEON.td
U lib/Target/ARM/Makefile
U lib/Target/ARM/AsmPrinter/ARMInstPrinter.cpp
U lib/Target/ARM/AsmPrinter/ARMAsmPrinter.cpp
U lib/Target/ARM/AsmPrinter/ARMInstPrinter.h
D lib/Target/ARM/Disassembler
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMInstrFormats.td
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMAddressingModes.h
U lib/Target/ARM/Thumb2ITBlockPass.cpp
llvm-svn: 98640
(RISCDisassemblerEmitter) which emits the decoder functions for ARM and Thumb,
and the disassembler core which invokes the decoder function and builds up the
MCInst based on the decoded Opcode.
Added sub-formats to the NeonI/NeonXI instructions to further refine the NEONFrm
instructions to help disassembly.
We also changed the output of the addressing modes to omit the '+' from the
assembler syntax #+/-<imm> or +/-<Rm>. See, for example, A8.6.57/58/60.
And modified test cases to not expect '+' in +reg or #+num. For example,
; CHECK: ldr.w r9, [r7, #28]
llvm-svn: 98637
immediate instructions cannot set the condition codes, so they do not have
the extra cc_out operand. We hit an assertion during tail duplication
because the instruction being duplicated had more operands that expected.
llvm-svn: 98001
- Function uses all scratch registers AND
- Function does not use any callee saved registers AND
- Stack size is too big to address with immediate offsets.
In this case a register must be scavenged to calculate the address of a stack
object, and the scavenger needs a spare register or emergency spill slot.
llvm-svn: 97071
phi cycles. Adjust a few tests to keep dead instructions from being optimized
away. This (together with my previous change for phi cycles) fixes Apple
radar 7627077.
llvm-svn: 96057
bug fixes, and with improved heuristics for analyzing foreign-loop
addrecs.
This change also flattens IVUsers, eliminating the stride-oriented
groupings, which makes it easier to work with.
llvm-svn: 95975
reduce down to a single value. InstCombine already does this transformation
but DAG legalization may introduce new opportunities. This has turned out to
be important for ARM where 64-bit values are split up during type legalization:
InstCombine is not able to remove the PHI cycles on the 64-bit values but
the separate 32-bit values can be optimized. I measured the compile time
impact of this (running llc on 176.gcc) and it was not significant.
llvm-svn: 95951
This new version is much more aggressive about doing "full" reduction in
cases where it reduces register pressure, and also more aggressive about
rewriting induction variables to count down (or up) to zero when doing so
reduces register pressure.
It currently uses fairly simplistic algorithms for finding reuse
opportunities, but it introduces a new framework allows it to combine
multiple strategies at once to form hybrid solutions, instead of doing
all full-reduction or all base+index.
llvm-svn: 94061
cannot be folded into target cmp instruction.
- Avoid a phase ordering issue where early cmp optimization would prevent the
later count-to-zero optimization.
- Add missing checks which could cause LSR to reuse stride that does not have
users.
- Fix a bug in count-to-zero optimization code which failed to find the pre-inc
iv's phi node.
- Remove, tighten, loosen some incorrect checks disable valid transformations.
- Quite a bit of code clean up.
llvm-svn: 86969
tail merging support to handle more cases.
- Recognize several cases where tail merging is beneficial even when
the tail size is smaller than the generic threshold.
- Make use of MachineInstrDesc::isBarrier to help detect
non-fallthrough blocks.
- Check for and avoid disrupting fall-through edges in more cases.
llvm-svn: 86871
except it doesn't care if the definitions' virtual registers differ. This is
used by machine LICM and other MI passes to perform CSE.
- Teach Thumb2InstrInfo::isIdentical() to check two t2LDRpci_pic are identical.
Since pc relative constantpool entries are always different, this requires it
it check if the values can actually the same.
llvm-svn: 86328
load of a GV from constantpool and then add pc. It allows the code sequence to
be rematerializable so it would be hoisted by machine licm.
- Add a late pass to break these pseudo instructions into a number of real
instructions. Also move the code in Thumb2 IT pass that breaks up t2MOVi32imm
to this pass. This is done before post regalloc scheduling to allow the
scheduler to proper schedule these instructions. It also allow them to be
if-converted and shrunk by later passes.
llvm-svn: 86304
instruction. This makes it re-materializable.
Thumb2 will split it back out into two instructions so IT pass will generate the
right mask. Also, this expose opportunies to optimize the movw to a 16-bit move.
llvm-svn: 82982