Summary:
This patch implements a tablegen-driven Instruction Compression
mechanism for generating RISCV compressed instructions
(C Extension) from the expanded instruction form.
This tablegen backend processes CompressPat declarations in a
td file and generates all the compile-time and runtime checks
required to validate the declarations, validate the input
operands and generate correct instructions.
The checks include validating register operands, immediate
operands, fixed register operands and fixed immediate operands.
Example:
class CompressPat<dag input, dag output> {
dag Input = input;
dag Output = output;
list<Predicate> Predicates = [];
}
let Predicates = [HasStdExtC] in {
def : CompressPat<(ADD GPRNoX0:$rs1, GPRNoX0:$rs1, GPRNoX0:$rs2),
(C_ADD GPRNoX0:$rs1, GPRNoX0:$rs2)>;
}
The result is an auto-generated header file
'RISCVGenCompressEmitter.inc' which exports two functions for
compressing/uncompressing MCInst instructions, plus
some helper functions:
bool compressInst(MCInst& OutInst, const MCInst &MI,
const MCSubtargetInfo &STI,
MCContext &Context);
bool uncompressInst(MCInst& OutInst, const MCInst &MI,
const MCRegisterInfo &MRI,
const MCSubtargetInfo &STI);
The clients that include this auto-generated header file and
invoke these functions can compress an instruction before emitting
it, in the target-specific ASM or ELF streamer, or can uncompress
an instruction before printing it, when the expanded instruction
format aliases is favored.
The following clients were added to implement compression\uncompression
for RISCV:
1) RISCVAsmParser::MatchAndEmitInstruction:
Inserted a call to compressInst() to compresses instructions
parsed by llvm-mc coming from an ASM input.
2) RISCVAsmPrinter::EmitInstruction:
Inserted a call to compressInst() to compress instructions that
were lowered from Machine Instructions (MachineInstr).
3) RVInstPrinter::printInst:
Inserted a call to uncompressInst() to print the expanded
version of the instruction instead of the compressed one (e.g,
add s0, s0, a5 instead of c.add s0, a5) when -riscv-no-aliases
is not passed.
This patch squashes D45119, D42780 and D41932. It was reviewed in smaller patches by
asb, efriedma, apazos and mgrang.
Reviewers: asb, efriedma, apazos, llvm-commits, sabuasal
Reviewed By: sabuasal
Subscribers: mgorny, eraman, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, apazos, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45385
llvm-svn: 329455
Allows preserving MachineMemOperands on intrinsics
through selection. For reasons I don't understand, this
is a static property of the pattern and the selector
deliberately goes out of its way to drop if not present.
Intrinsics already inherit from SDPatternOperator allowing
them to be used directly in instruction patterns. SDPatternOperator
has a list of SDNodeProperty, but you currently can't set them on
the intrinsic. Without SDNPMemOperand, when the node is selected
any memory operands are always dropped. Allowing setting this
on the intrinsics avoids needing to introduce another equivalent
target node just to have SDNPMemOperand set.
llvm-svn: 321212
This is a tablegen backend to generate documentation for the opcodes that exist
for each target. For each opcode, it lists the assembly string, the names and
types of all operands, and the flags and predicates that apply to the opcode.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31025
llvm-svn: 318155
After the original commit ([[ https://reviews.llvm.org/rL304088 | rL304088 ]]) was reverted, a discussion in llvm-dev was opened on 'how to accomplish this task'.
In the discussion we concluded that the best way to achieve our goal (which is to automate the folding tables and remove the manually maintained tables) is:
# Commit the tablegen backend disabled by default.
# Proceed with an incremental updating of the manual tables - while checking the validity of each added entry.
# Repeat previous step until we reach a state where the generated and the manual tables are identical. Then we can safely remove the manual tables and include the generated tables instead.
# Schedule periodical (1 week/2 weeks/1 month) runs of the pass:
- if changes appear (new entries):
- make sure the entries are legal
- If they are not, mark them as illegal to folding
- Commit the changes (if there are any).
CMake flag added for this purpose is "X86_GEN_FOLD_TABLES". Building with this flags will run the pass and emit the X86GenFoldTables.inc file under build/lib/Target/X86/ directory which is a good reference for any developer who wants to take part in the effort of completing the current folding tables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38028
llvm-svn: 315173
This replaces TableGen's type inference to operate on parameterized
types instead of MVTs, and as a consequence, some interfaces have
changed:
- Uses of MVTs are replaced by ValueTypeByHwMode.
- EEVT::TypeSet is replaced by TypeSetByHwMode.
This affects the way that types and type sets are printed, and the
tests relying on that have been updated.
There are certain users of the inferred types outside of TableGen
itself, namely FastISel and GlobalISel. For those users, the way
that the types are accessed have changed. For typical scenarios,
these replacements can be used:
- TreePatternNode::getType(ResNo) -> getSimpleType(ResNo)
- TreePatternNode::hasTypeSet(ResNo) -> hasConcreteType(ResNo)
- TypeSet::isConcrete -> TypeSetByHwMode::isValueTypeByHwMode(false)
For more information, please refer to the review page.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31951
llvm-svn: 313271
In testing, we've found yet another miscompile caused by the new tables.
And this one is even less clear how to fix (we could teach it to fold
a 16-bit load instead of the 32-bit load it wants, or block folding
entirely).
Also, the approach to excluding instructions seems increasingly to not
scale well.
I have left a more detailed analysis on the review log for the original
patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/D32684) along with suggested path
forward. I will land an additional test case that I wrote which covers
the code that was miscompiling (folding into the output of `pextrw`) in
a subsequent commit to keep this a pure revert.
For each commit reverted here, I've restricted the revert to the
non-test code touching the x86 fold table emission until the last commit
where I did revert the test updates. This means the *new* test cases
added for `insertps` and `xchg` remain untouched (and continue to pass).
Reverted commits:
r304540: [X86] Don't fold into memory operands into insertps in the ...
r304347: [TableGen] Adapt more places to getValueAsString now ...
r304163: [X86] Don't fold away the memory operand of an xchg.
r304123: Don't capture a temporary std::string in a StringRef.
r304122: Resubmit "[X86] Adding new LLVM TableGen backend that ..."
Original commit was in r304088, and after a string of fixes was reverted
previously in r304121 to fix build bots, and then re-landed in r304122.
llvm-svn: 304762
This was reverted due to buildbot breakages and I was not familiar
with this code to investigate it. But while trying to get a
useful backtrace for the author, it turns out the fix was very
obvious. Resubmitting this patch as is, and will submit the
fix in a followup so that the fix is not hidden in the larger
CL.
llvm-svn: 304122
This reverts commit 28cb1003507f287726f43c771024a1dc102c45fe as well
as all subsequent followups. llvm-tblgen currently segfaults with
this change, and it seems it has been broken on the bots all
day with no fixes in preparation. See, for example:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86-windows-msvc2015/
llvm-svn: 304121
X86 backend holds huge tables in order to map between the register and memory forms of each instruction.
This TableGen Backend automatically generated all these tables with the appropriate flags for each entry.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32684
llvm-svn: 304088
X86EvexToVex machine instruction pass compresses EVEX encoded instructions by replacing them with their identical VEX encoded instructions when possible.
It uses manually supported 2 large tables that map the EVEX instructions to their VEX ideticals.
This TableGen backend replaces the tables by automatically generating them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30451
llvm-svn: 297127
Summary:
Adds a RegisterBank tablegen class that can be used to declare the register
banks and an associated tablegen pass to generate the necessary code.
Changes since first commit attempt:
* Added missing guards
* Added more missing guards
* Found and fixed a use-after-free bug involving Twine locals
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aditya_nandakumar, rengolin, kristof.beyls, vkalintiris, mgorny, dberris, llvm-commits, rovka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27338
llvm-svn: 292478
Summary:
Adds a RegisterBank tablegen class that can be used to declare the register
banks and an associated tablegen pass to generate the necessary code.
Changes since last commit:
The new tablegen pass is now correctly guarded by LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL and
this should fix the buildbots however it may not be the whole fix. The previous
buildbot failures suggest there may be a memory bug lurking that I'm unable to
reproduce (including when using asan) or spot in the source. If they re-occur
on this commit then I'll need assistance from the bot owners to track it down.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aditya_nandakumar, rengolin, kristof.beyls, vkalintiris, mgorny, dberris, llvm-commits, rovka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27338
llvm-svn: 292367
Summary:
Adds a RegisterBank tablegen class that can be used to declare the register
banks and an associated tablegen pass to generate the necessary code.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet
Subscribers: aditya_nandakumar, rengolin, kristof.beyls, vkalintiris, mgorny, dberris, llvm-commits, rovka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27338
llvm-svn: 292132
This adds a basic tablegen backend that analyzes the SelectionDAG
patterns to find simple ones that are eligible for GlobalISel-emission.
That's similar to FastISel, with one notable difference: we're not fed
ISD opcodes, so we need to map the SDNode operators to generic opcodes.
That's done using GINodeEquiv in TargetGlobalISel.td.
Otherwise, this is mostly boilerplate, and lots of filtering of any kind
of "complicated" pattern. On AArch64, this is sufficient to match G_ADD
up to s64 (to ADDWrr/ADDXrr) and G_BR (to B).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26878
llvm-svn: 290284
Summary:
This change is preparation for a change that will allow targets to verify that the instructions
they emit meet the predicates they specify. This is useful to ensure that C++
legalization/lowering/instruction-selection doesn't incorrectly select code for a different
subtarget than intended. Such cases are not caught by the integrated assembler when emitting
instructions directly to an object file.
Reviewers: qcolombet
Subscribers: qcolombet, beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25614
llvm-svn: 286945
The way the named arguments for various system instructions are handled at the
moment has a few problems:
- Large-scale duplication between AArch64BaseInfo.h and AArch64BaseInfo.cpp
- That weird Mapping class that I have no idea what I was on when I thought
it was a good idea.
- Searches are performed linearly through the entire list.
- We print absolutely all registers in upper-case, even though some are
canonically mixed case (SPSel for example).
- The ARM ARM specifies sysregs in terms of 5 fields, but those are relegated
to comments in our implementation, with a slightly opaque hex value
indicating the canonical encoding LLVM will use.
This adds a new TableGen backend to produce efficiently searchable tables, and
switches AArch64 over to using that infrastructure.
llvm-svn: 274576
This is a step towards consolidating some of the information regarding
attributes in a single place.
This patch moves the enum attributes in Attributes.h to the table-gen
file. Additionally, it adds definitions of target independent string
attributes that will be used in follow-up commits by the inliner to
check attribute compatibility.
rdar://problem/19836465
llvm-svn: 252796
To use this in conjunction with exuberant ctags to generate a single
combined tags file, run tblgen first and then
$ ctags --append [...]
Since some identifiers have corresponding definitions in C++ code,
it can be useful (if using vim) to also use cscope, and
:set cscopetagorder=1
so that
:tag X
will preferentially select the tablegen symbol, while
:cscope find g X
will always find the C++ symbol.
Patch by Kevin Schoedel!
(a couple small formatting changes courtesy of clang-format)
llvm-svn: 177682
Most places can use PrintFatalError as the unwinding mechanism was not
used for anything other than printing the error. The single exception
was CodeGenDAGPatterns.cpp, where intermediate errors during type
resolution were ignored to simplify incremental platform development.
This use is replaced by an error flag in TreePattern and bailout earlier
in various places if it is set.
llvm-svn: 166712
subtarget CPU descriptions and support new features of
MachineScheduler.
MachineModel has three categories of data:
1) Basic properties for coarse grained instruction cost model.
2) Scheduler Read/Write resources for simple per-opcode and operand cost model (TBD).
3) Instruction itineraties for detailed per-cycle reservation tables.
These will all live side-by-side. Any subtarget can use any
combination of them. Instruction itineraries will not change in the
near term. In the long run, I expect them to only be relevant for
in-order VLIW machines that have complex contraints and require a
precise scheduling/bundling model. Once itineraries are only actively
used by VLIW-ish targets, they could be replaced by something more
appropriate for those targets.
This tablegen backend rewrite sets things up for introducing
MachineModel type #2: per opcode/operand cost model.
llvm-svn: 159891
one aspect of them by having them use the (annoying, if not broken)
proper library dependency model for adding the LLVMTableGen library as
a dependency. This could manifest as a link order issue in the presence
of separate LLVM / Clang source builds with CMake and a linker that
really cares about such things.
Also, add the Support dependency to llvm-tblgen itself so that it
doesn't rely on TableGen's transitive Support dependency. A parallel
change for clang-tblgen will be forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 143531
This allows the (many) pseudo-instructions we have that map onto a single
real instruction to have their expansion during MC lowering handled
automatically instead of the current cumbersome manual expansion required.
These sorts of pseudos are common when an instruction is used in situations
that require different MachineInstr flags (isTerminator, isBranch, et. al.)
than the generic instruction description has. For example, using a move
to the PC to implement a branch.
llvm-svn: 134704
I'll be moving some more code there to gather all of the
register-specific stuff in one place. Currently it is shared between
CodeGenTarget and RegisterInfoEmitter.
The plan is that CodeGenRegisters can compute the full register bank
structure while RegisterInfoEmitter only will handle the printing part.
llvm-svn: 132788
A TableGen backend can define how certain classes can be expanded into
ordered sets of defs, typically by evaluating a specific field in the
record. The SetTheory class can then evaluate DAG expressions that refer
to these named sets.
A number of standard set and list operations are predefined, and the
backend can add more specialized operators if needed. The -print-sets
backend is used by SetTheory.td to provide examples.
This is intended to simplify how register classes are defined:
def GR32_NOSP : RegisterClass<"X86", [i32], 32, (sub GR32, ESP)>;
llvm-svn: 132621
library.
Installs tblgen (required by Clang).
Translates handling of user settings and platform-dependant options to
its own file, where it can included by another project.
Installs the .cmake files required by projects like Clang.
llvm-svn: 124816