The modified tests should test the masked intrinsics.
Currently the mask is constant, which with a future patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/D32805) will cause the intrinsics to be replaced with an unmasked version.
This patch changes the constant mask to be a variable one.
llvm-svn: 302529
Using arguments with attribute inalloca creates problems for verification
of machine representation. This attribute instructs the backend that the
argument is prepared in stack prior to CALLSEQ_START..CALLSEQ_END
sequence (see http://llvm.org/docs/InAlloca.htm for details). Frame size
stored in CALLSEQ_START in this case does not count the size of this
argument. However CALLSEQ_END still keeps total frame size, as caller can
be responsible for cleanup of entire frame. So CALLSEQ_START and
CALLSEQ_END keep different frame size and the difference is treated by
MachineVerifier as stack error. Currently there is no way to distinguish
this case from actual errors.
This patch adds additional argument to CALLSEQ_START and its
target-specific counterparts to keep size of stack that is set up prior to
the call frame sequence. This argument allows MachineVerifier to calculate
actual frame size associated with frame setup instruction and correctly
process the case of inalloca arguments.
The changes made by the patch are:
- Frame setup instructions get the second mandatory argument. It
affects all targets that use frame pseudo instructions and touched many
files although the changes are uniform.
- Access to frame properties are implemented using special instructions
rather than calls getOperand(N).getImm(). For X86 and ARM such
replacement was made previously.
- Changes that reflect appearance of additional argument of frame setup
instruction. These involve proper instruction initialization and
methods that access instruction arguments.
- MachineVerifier retrieves frame size using method, which reports sum of
frame parts initialized inside frame instruction pair and outside it.
The patch implements approach proposed by Quentin Colombet in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27481#c1.
It fixes 9 tests failed with machine verifier enabled and listed
in PR27481.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32394
llvm-svn: 302527
Similar to what we do for vXi8 ASHR(X, 7), use SSE42's PCMPGTQ to splat the sign instead of using the PSRAD+PSHUFD.
Avoiding bitcasts this improves combines that utilize computeNumSignBits, permits memory folding and reduces pipe pressure. Although it does require a second register, given that this is a (cheap) zero register the impact is minimal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32973
llvm-svn: 302525
This reverts commit r302461.
It appears to be causing failures compiling gtest with debug info on the
Linux sanitizer bot. I was unable to reproduce the failure locally,
however.
llvm-svn: 302504
Summary:
For inalloca functions, this is a very common code pattern:
%argpack = type <{ i32, i32, i32 }>
define void @f(%argpack* inalloca %args) {
entry:
%a = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 0
%b = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 1
%c = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 2
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %a, ... "a")
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %c, ... "b")
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %b, ... "c")
Even though these GEPs can be simplified to a constant offset from EBP
or RSP, we don't do that at -O0, and each GEP is computed into a
register. Registers used to compute argument addresses are typically
spilled and clobbered very quickly after the initial computation, so
live debug variable tracking loses information very quickly if we use
DBG_VALUE instructions.
This change moves processing of dbg.declare between argument lowering
and basic block isel, so that we can ask if an argument has a frame
index or not. If the argument lives in a register as is the case for
byval arguments on some targets, then we don't put it in the side table
and during ISel we emit DBG_VALUE instructions.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32980
llvm-svn: 302483
Summary:
An llvm.dbg.declare of a static alloca is always added to the
MachineFunction dbg variable map, so these values are entirely
redundant. They survive all the way through codegen to be ignored by
DWARF emission.
Effectively revert r113967
Two bugpoint-reduced test cases from 2012 broke as a result of this
change. Despite my best efforts, I haven't been able to rewrite the test
case using dbg.value. I'm not too concerned about the lost coverage
because these were reduced from the test-suite, which we still run.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32920
llvm-svn: 302461
Currently combineLogicBlendIntoPBLENDV can only match ASHR to detect sign splatting of a bit mask, this patch generalises this to use computeNumSignBits instead.
This is a first step in several things we can do to improve PBLENDV support:
* Better matching of X86ISD::ANDNP patterns.
* Handle floating point cases.
* Better vector and bitcast support in computeNumSignBits.
* Recognise that PBLENDV only uses the sign bit of the mask, we should be able strip away sign splats (ASHR, PCMPGT isNeg tests etc.).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32953
llvm-svn: 302424
This patch introduces an LLVM intrinsic and a target opcode for custom event
logging in XRay. Initially, its use case will be to allow users of XRay to log
some type of string ("poor man's printf"). The target opcode compiles to a noop
sled large enough to enable calling through to a runtime-determined relative
function call. At runtime, when X-Ray is enabled, the sled is replaced by
compiler-rt with a trampoline to the logic for creating the custom log entries.
Future patches will implement the compiler-rt parts and clang-side support for
emitting the IR corresponding to this intrinsic.
Reviewers: timshen, dberris
Subscribers: igorb, pelikan, rSerge, timshen, echristo, dberris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27503
llvm-svn: 302405
rL294581 broke unnecessary register dependencies on partial v16i8/v8i16 BUILD_VECTORs, but on SSE41 we (currently) use insertion for full BUILD_VECTORs as well. By allowing full insertion to occur on SSE41 targets we can break register dependencies here as well.
llvm-svn: 302355
Remove an extra canonicalization step if ISD::ABS is going to be used anyway.
Updated x86 abs combine to check that we are lowering from both canonicalizations.
llvm-svn: 302337
- MIParser: If the successor list is not specified successors will be
added based on basic block operands in the block and possible
fallthrough.
- MIRPrinter: Adds a new `simplify-mir` option, with that option set:
Skip printing of block successor lists in cases where the
parser is guaranteed to reconstruct it. This means we still print the
list if some successor cannot be determined (happens for example for
jump tables), if the successor order changes or branch probabilities
being unequal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31262
llvm-svn: 302289
This avoids problems on code like this:
char buf[16];
__asm {
movups xmm0, [buf]
mov [buf], eax
}
The frontend size in this case (1) is wrong, and the register makes the
instruction matching unambiguous. There are also enough bytes available
that we shouldn't complain to the user that they are potentially using
an incorrectly sized instruction to access the variable.
Supersedes D32636 and D26586 and fixes PR28266
llvm-svn: 302179
According to psABI, PLT stub clobbers XMM8-XMM15.
In Regcall calling convention those registers are used for passing parameters.
Thus we need to prevent lazy binding in Regcall.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32430
llvm-svn: 302124
Summary:
This change adds a new section to the xray-instrumented binary that
stores an index into ranges of the instrumentation map, where sleds
associated with the same function can be accessed as an array. At
runtime, we can get access to this index by function ID offset allowing
for selective patching and unpatching by function ID.
Each entry in this new section (xray_fn_idx) will include two pointers
indicating the start and one past the end of the sleds associated with
the same function. These entries will be 16 bytes long on x86 and
aarch64. On arm, we align to 16 bytes anyway so the runtime has to take
that into consideration.
__{start,stop}_xray_fn_idx will be the symbols that the runtime will
look for when we implement the selective patching/unpatching by function
id APIs. Because XRay synthesizes the function id's in a monotonically
increasing manner at runtime now, implementations (and users) can use
this table to look up the sleds associated with a specific function.
This is useful in implementations that want to do things like:
- Implement coverage mode for functions by patching everything
pre-main, then as functions are encountered, the installed handler
can unpatch the function that's been encountered after recording
that it's been called.
- Do "learning mode", so that the implementation can figure out some
statistical information about function calls by function id for a
time being, and then determine which functions are worth
uninstrumenting at runtime.
- Do "selective instrumentation" where an implementation can
specifically instrument only certain function id's at runtime
(either based on some external data, or through some other
heuristics) instead of patching all the instrumented functions at
runtime.
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo, chandlerc, javed.absar
Subscribers: pelikan, aemerson, kpw, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32693
llvm-svn: 302109
Summary:
This is an implementation of the loop detection logic that XRay needs to
determine whether a function might take time at runtime. Without this
heuristic, XRay will tend to not instrument short functions that have
loops that might have runtime dependent on inputs or external values.
While this implementation doesn't do any further analysis than just
figuring out whether there is a loop in the MachineFunction being
code-gen'ed, we're paving the way for being able to perform more
sophisticated analysis of the function in the future (for example to
determine whether the trip count for the loop might be constant, and
make a decision on that instead). This enables us to cover more
functions with the default heuristics, and potentially identify ones
that have variable runtime latency just by looking for the presence of
loops.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk, pelikan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32274
llvm-svn: 302103
Summary:
The existing implementation creates a symbolic SCEV expression every
time we analyze a phi node and then has to remove it, when the analysis
is finished. This is very expensive, and in most of the cases it's also
unnecessary. According to the data I collected, ~60-70% of analyzed phi
nodes (measured on SPEC) have the following form:
PN = phi(Start, OP(Self, Constant))
Handling such cases separately significantly speeds this up.
Reviewers: sanjoy, pete
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32663
llvm-svn: 302096
Summary: Do the transform when the carry isn't used. It's a pattern exposed when legalizing large integers.
Reviewers: jyknight, nemanjai, mkuper, spatel, RKSimon, zvi, bkramer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32755
llvm-svn: 302047
This patch adds support for the the LightWeight Profiling (LWP) instructions which are available on all AMD Bulldozer class CPUs (bdver1 to bdver4).
Reapplied - this time without changing line endings of existing files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32769
llvm-svn: 302041
This patch adds support for the the LightWeight Profiling (LWP) instructions which are available on all AMD Bulldozer class CPUs (bdver1 to bdver4).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32769
llvm-svn: 302028
Fixes PR31789 - When loop-vectorize tries to use these intrinsics for a
non-default address space pointer we fail with a "Calling a function with a
bad singature!" assertion. This patch solves this by adding the 'vector of
pointers' argument as an overloaded type which will determine the address
space.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31490
llvm-svn: 302018