Remove an accidentally-added instruction definition and add a comment in the
test case. This is in response to a post-commit review by Bill Schmidt.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 177404
The ARM backend currently has poor codegen for long sext/zext
operations, such as v8i8 -> v8i32. This patch addresses this
by performing a custom expansion in ARMISelLowering. It also
adds/changes the cost of such lowering in ARMTTI.
This partially addresses PR14867.
Patch by Pete Couperus
llvm-svn: 177380
For each compile unit, we want to register a function that will flush that
compile unit. Otherwise, __gcov_flush() would only flush the counters within the
current compile unit, and not any outside of it.
PR15191 & <rdar://problem/13167507>
llvm-svn: 177340
PPC64 supports unaligned loads and stores of 64-bit values, but
in order to use the r+i forms, the offset must be a multiple of 4.
Unfortunately, this cannot always be determined by examining the
immediate itself because it might be available only via a TOC entry.
In order to get around this issue, we additionally predicate the
selection of the r+i form on the alignment of the load or store
(forcing it to be at least 4 in order to select the r+i form).
llvm-svn: 177338
The default logic marks them as too expensive.
For example, before this patch we estimated:
cost of 16 for instruction: %r = uitofp <4 x i16> %v0 to <4 x float>
While this translates to:
vmovl.u16 q8, d16
vcvt.f32.u32 q8, q8
All other costs are left to the values assigned by the fallback logic. Theses
costs are mostly reasonable in the sense that they get progressively more
expensive as the instruction sequences emitted get longer.
radar://13445992
llvm-svn: 177334
Fix cost of some "cheap" cast instructions. Before this patch we used to
estimate for example:
cost of 16 for instruction: %r = fptoui <4 x float> %v0 to <4 x i16>
While we would emit:
vcvt.s32.f32 q8, q8
vmovn.i32 d16, q8
vuzp.8 d16, d17
All other costs are left to the values assigned by the fallback logic. Theses
costs are mostly reasonable in the sense that they get progressively more
expensive as the instruction sequences emitted get longer.
radar://13434072
llvm-svn: 177333
Hal Finkel recently added code to allow unaligned memory references
for PowerPC. Two tests were temporarily modified with
-disable-ppc-unaligned to keep them from failing. This patch adjusts
the expected code generation for the unaligned references.
llvm-svn: 177328
We hitch a ride with the existing OpndItins class that was used to add
instruction itinerary classes in the many multiclasses in this file.
Use the link provided by the X86FoldableSchedWrite.Folded to find the
right SchedWrite for folded loads.
llvm-svn: 177326
This new-style scheduling information is going to replace the
instruction iteneraries.
This also serves as a test case for Andy's fix in r177317.
llvm-svn: 177323
This handles the case where we have an inbounds GEP with alloca as the pointer.
This fixes the regression in PR12750 and rdar://13286434.
Note that we can also fix this by handling some GEP cases in isKnownNonNull.
llvm-svn: 177321
Properly handle cases where a group of instructions have different
SchedRW lists with the same itinerary class.
This was supposed to work, but I left in an early break.
llvm-svn: 177317
Apparently my final cleanup to use a relevant suffix for these tests before
committing r176831 caused them to stop running since lit wasn't configured to
run tests with that suffix in those directories (why don't we just have a
global suffix list?). So, add the suffix to the relevant directories & fix the
test that has bitrotted over the last week due to my debug info schema changes.
llvm-svn: 177315
This commit fixes an assert that would occur on loops with large constant counts
(like looping for ((uint32_t) -1) iterations on PPC64). The existing code did
not handle counts that it computed to be negative (asserting instead), but
these can be created with valid inputs.
This bug was discovered by bugpoint while I was attempting to isolate a
completely different problem.
Also, in writing test cases for the negative-count problem, I discovered that
the ori/lsi handling was broken (there was a typo which caused the logic that
was supposed to detect these pairs and extract the iteration count to always
fail). This has now also been corrected (and is covered by one of the new test
cases).
llvm-svn: 177295
Because the initial-value constants had not been added to the list
of instructions considered for DCE the resulting code had redundant
constant-materialization instructions.
llvm-svn: 177294
we weren't differntiating floating-point zeroinitializers from other zero-initializers)
which was causing problems for code relying upon a + (+0.0f) to, eg, flush denormals to
0. Make the scalar and vector cases have the same behaviour.
llvm-svn: 177279
Unfortunately the previous fix for inserting waits for unordered
defines wasn't sufficient, cause it's possible that even ordered
defines are only partially used (or not used at all).
Signed-off-by: Christian König <christian.koenig@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 177271
MinGW is almost completely compatible to MSVC, with the exception of the _tls_array global not being available.
Patch by David Nadlinger!
llvm-svn: 177257
The linker sorts the .tls$<xyz> sections by name, and we need
to make sure any extra sections we produce (e.g. for weak globals)
always end up between .tls$AAA and .tls$ZZZ, even if the name
starts with e.g. an underscore.
Patch by David Nadlinger!
llvm-svn: 177256
*NOTE* I verified that the original bug behind
dont-infinite-loop-during-block-escape-analysis.ll occurs when using opt on
retain-block-escape-analysis.ll.
llvm-svn: 177240
This is the first step to making all DIScopes have a common metadata prefix (so
that things (using directives, for example) that can appear in any scope can be
added to that common prefix). DIFile is itself a DIScope so the common prefix
of all DIScopes cannot be a DIFile - instead it's the raw filename/directory
name pair.
llvm-svn: 177239
This test makes sure that the ObjCARC escape analysis looks at the uses of
instructions which copy the block pointer value by checking all four cases where
that can occur.
llvm-svn: 177232
This change cleans up two issues with Altivec register spilling:
1. The spilling code was inefficient (using two instructions, and add and a
load, when just one would do)
2. The code assumed that r0 would always be available (true for now, but this
will change)
The new code handles VR spilling just like GPR spills but forced into r+r mode.
As a result, when any VR spills are present, we must now always allocate the
register-scavenger spill slot.
llvm-svn: 177231
As a follow-up to r158719, remove PPCRegisterInfo::avoidWriteAfterWrite.
Jakob pointed out in response to r158719 that this callback is currently unused
and so this has no effect (and the speedups that I thought that I had observed
as a result of implementing this function must have been noise).
llvm-svn: 177228
Implicit defs are not currently positional and not modeled by the
per-operand machine model. Unfortunately, we treat defs that are part
of the architectural instruction description, like flags, the same as
other implicit defs. Really, they should have a fixed MachineInstr
layout and probably shouldn't be "implicit" at all.
For now, we'll change the default latency to be the max operand
latency. That will give flag setting operands full latency for x86
folded loads. Other kinds of "fake" implicit defs don't occur prior to
regalloc anyway, and we would like them to go away postRegAlloc as
well.
llvm-svn: 177227
We always supported a mixture of the old itinerary model and new
per-operand model, but it required a level of indirection to map
itinerary classes to SchedRW lists. This was done for ARM A9.
Now we want to define x86 SchedRW lists, with the goal of removing its
itinerary classes, but still support the itineraries in the mean
time. When I original developed the model, Atom did not have
itineraries, so there was no reason to expect this requirement.
llvm-svn: 177226
Since almost all X86 instructions can fold loads, use a multiclass to
define register/memory pairs of SchedWrites.
An X86FoldableSchedWrite represents the register version of an
instruction. It holds a reference to the SchedWrite to use when the
instruction folds a load.
This will be used inside multiclasses that define rr and rm instruction
versions together.
llvm-svn: 177210
Don't require instructions to inherit Sched<...>. Sometimes it is more
convenient to say:
let SchedRW = ... in {
...
}
Which is now possible.
llvm-svn: 177199
I was too pessimistic in r177105. Vector selects that fit into a legal register
type lower just fine. I was mislead by the code fragment that I was using. The
stores/loads that I saw in those cases came from lowering the conditional off
an address.
Changing the code fragment to:
%T0_3 = type <8 x i18>
%T1_3 = type <8 x i1>
define void @func_blend3(%T0_3* %loadaddr, %T0_3* %loadaddr2,
%T1_3* %blend, %T0_3* %storeaddr) {
%v0 = load %T0_3* %loadaddr
%v1 = load %T0_3* %loadaddr2
==> FROM:
;%c = load %T1_3* %blend
==> TO:
%c = icmp slt %T0_3 %v0, %v1
==> USE:
%r = select %T1_3 %c, %T0_3 %v0, %T0_3 %v1
store %T0_3 %r, %T0_3* %storeaddr
ret void
}
revealed this mistake.
radar://13403975
llvm-svn: 177170
Unaligned access is supported on PPC for non-vector types, and is generally
more efficient than manually expanding the loads and stores.
A few of the existing test cases were using expanded unaligned loads and stores
to test other features (like load/store with update), and for these test cases,
unaligned access remains disabled.
llvm-svn: 177160
In preparation for the addition of other SIMD ISA extensions (such as QPX) we
need to make sure that all Altivec patterns are properly predicated on having
Altivec support.
No functionality change intended (one test case needed to be updated b/c it
assumed that Altivec intrinsics would be supported without enabling Altivec
support).
llvm-svn: 177152
This is a very late complement to r130637 which fixed this on x86_64. Fixes
pr15448.
Since it looks like that every elf architecture uses this encoding when using
cfi, make it the default for elf. Just exclude mips64el. It has a lovely
.ll -> .o test (ef_frame.ll) that tests that nothing changes in the binary
content of the .eh_frame produced by llc. Oblige it.
llvm-svn: 177141
For spills into a large stack frame, the FI-elimination code uses the register
scavenger to obtain a free GPR for use with an r+r-addressed load or store.
When there are no available GPRs, the scavenger gets one by using its spill
slot. Previously, we were not always allocating that spill slot and the RS
would assert when the spill slot was needed.
I don't currently have a small test that triggered the assert, but I've
created a small regression test that verifies that the spill slot is now
added when the stack frame is sufficiently large.
llvm-svn: 177140
The new InstrSchedModel is easier to use than the instruction
itineraries. It will be used to model instruction latency and throughput
in modern Intel microarchitectures like Sandy Bridge.
InstrSchedModel should be able to coexist with instruction itinerary
classes, but for cleanliness we should switch the Atom processor model
to the new InstrSchedModel as well.
llvm-svn: 177122
See the Mips16ISetLowering.cpp patch to see a use of this.
For now now the extra code in Mips16ISetLowering.cpp is a nop but is
used for test purposes. Mips32 registers are setup and then removed and
then the Mips16 registers are setup.
Normally you need to add register classes and then call
computeRegisterProperties.
llvm-svn: 177120
This allows abitrary groups of processor resources. Using something in
a subset automatically counts againts the superset. Currently, this
only works if the superset is also a ProcResGroup as opposed to a
SuperUnit.
This allows SandyBridge to be expressed naturally, which will be
checked in shortly.
def SBPort01 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1]>;
def SBPort15 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
def SBPort23 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort2, SBPort3]>;
def SBPort015 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
llvm-svn: 177112
This is a generic function (derived from PEI); moving it into
MachineFrameInfo eliminates a current redundancy between the ARM and AArch64
backends, and will allow it to be used by the PowerPC target code.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 177111
Add the current PEI register scavenger as a parameter to the
processFunctionBeforeFrameFinalized callback.
This change is necessary in order to allow the PowerPC target code to
set the register scavenger frame index after the save-area offset
adjustments performed by processFunctionBeforeFrameFinalized. Only
after these adjustments have been made is it possible to estimate
the size of the stack frame.
llvm-svn: 177108
Make requiresFrameIndexScavenging return true, and create virtual registers in
the spilling code instead of using the register scavenger directly. This makes
the target-level code simpler, and importantly, delays the scavenging until
after callee-saved register processing (which will be important for later
changes).
Also cleans up trackLivenessAfterRegAlloc (makes it inline in the header with
the other related functions). This makes it clear that it always returns true.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 177107
We used to add a spill slot for the register scavenger whenever the function
has a frame pointer. This is unnecessarily conservative: We may need the spill
slot for dynamic stack allocations, and functions with dynamic stack
allocations always have a FP, but we might also have a FP for other reasons
(such as the user explicitly disabling frame-pointer elimination), and we don't
necessarily need a spill slot for those functions.
The structsinregs test needed adjustment because it disables FP elimination.
llvm-svn: 177106
By terrible I mean we store/load from the stack.
This matters on PAQp8 in _Z5trainPsS_ii (which is inlined into Mixer::update)
where we decide to vectorize a loop with a VF of 8 resulting in a 25%
degradation on a cortex-a8.
LV: Found an estimated cost of 2 for VF 8 For instruction: icmp slt i32
LV: Found an estimated cost of 2 for VF 8 For instruction: select i1, i32, i32
The bug that tracks the CodeGen part is PR14868.
radar://13403975
llvm-svn: 177105
I don't think that it is otherwise clear how the overlapping offsets
are processed into distinct spill slots. Comment that this is done
in processFunctionBeforeFrameFinalized.
llvm-svn: 177094
Rules include:
1)1 x*y +/- x*z => x*(y +/- z)
(the order of operands dosen't matter)
2) y/x +/- z/x => (y +/- z)/x
The transformation is disabled if the new add/sub expr "y +/- z" is a
denormal/naz/inifinity.
rdar://12911472
llvm-svn: 177088
The fundamental problem is that SROA didn't allow for overly wide loads
where the bits past the end of the alloca were masked away and the load
was sufficiently aligned to ensure there is no risk of page fault, or
other trapping behavior. With such widened loads, SROA would delete the
load entirely rather than clamping it to the size of the alloca in order
to allow mem2reg to fire. This was exposed by a test case that neatly
arranged for GVN to run first, widening certain loads, followed by an
inline step, and then SROA which miscompiles the code. However, I see no
reason why this hasn't been plaguing us in other contexts. It seems
deeply broken.
Diagnosing all of the above took all of 10 minutes of debugging. The
really annoying aspect is that fixing this completely breaks the pass.
;] There was an implicit reliance on the fact that no loads or stores
extended past the alloca once we decided to rewrite them in the final
stage of SROA. This was used to encode information about whether the
loads and stores had been split across multiple partitions of the
original alloca. That required threading explicit tracking of whether
a *use* of a partition is split across multiple partitions.
Once that was done, another problem arose: we allowed splitting of
integer loads and stores iff they were loads and stores to the entire
alloca. This is a really arbitrary limitation, and splitting at least
some integer loads and stores is crucial to maximize promotion
opportunities. My first attempt was to start removing the restriction
entirely, but currently that does Very Bad Things by causing *many*
common alloca patterns to be fully decomposed into i8 operations and
lots of or-ing together to produce larger integers on demand. The code
bloat is terrifying. That is still the right end-goal, but substantial
work must be done to either merge partitions or ensure that small i8
values are eagerly merged in some other pass. Sadly, figuring all this
out took essentially all the time and effort here.
So the end result is that we allow splitting only when the load or store
at least covers the alloca. That ensures widened loads and stores don't
hurt SROA, and that we don't rampantly decompose operations more than we
have previously.
All of this was already fairly well tested, and so I've just updated the
tests to cover the wide load behavior. I can add a test that crafts the
pass ordering magic which caused the original PR, but that seems really
brittle and to provide little benefit. The fundamental problem is that
widened loads should Just Work.
llvm-svn: 177055
constructs default arguments. It can now take default arguments from
cl::opt'ions. Add a new -default-gcov-version=... option, and actually test it!
Sink the reverse-order of the version into GCOVProfiling, hiding it from our
users.
llvm-svn: 177002
emitProfileNotes(), similar to emitProfileArcs(). Also update its comment.
Also add a comment on Version[4] (there will be another comment in clang later),
and compress lines that exceeded 80 columns.
llvm-svn: 176994
This doesn't reset all of the target options within the TargetOptions
object. This is because some of those are ABI-specific and must be determined if
it's okay to change those on the fly.
llvm-svn: 176986
codegen passes. This brings it in to line with clang and llc's codegen setup,
and tidies up the code.
If I understand correctly, adding ModulePasses to a FunctionPassManager is
bogus. It only seems to explode if an added ModulePass depends on a
FunctionPass though, which might be why this code has survived so long.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13386816>.
llvm-svn: 176977