I noticed that we weren't generating broadcasts as much I thought we would with
D54271, and this is part of the problem.
Widening the shuffle elements means adding bitcasts and hiding the relationship
between a splatted scalar and the vector. If we can form a broadcast, do that
before going through the rest of the shuffle lowering because broadcasts should
be cheap and can often be load-folded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54280
llvm-svn: 346498
Summary:
This simplifies the code and moves everything to tablegen for consistency. This
also prepares the ground for adding issue counters.
Reviewers: gchatelet, john.brawn, jsji
Subscribers: nemanjai, mgorny, javed.absar, kbarton, tschuett, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54297
llvm-svn: 346489
After D45330, Dominators are required for IPSCCP and can be preserved.
This patch preserves DominatorTreeAnalysis in the new pass manager. AFAIK the legacy pass manager cannot preserve function analysis required by a module analysis.
Reviewers: davide, dberlin, chandlerc, efriedma, kuhar, NutshellySima
Reviewed By: chandlerc, kuhar, NutshellySima
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47259
llvm-svn: 346486
The DAGCombiner tries to SimplifySelectCC as follows:
select_cc(x, y, 16, 0, cc) -> shl(zext(set_cc(x, y, cc)), 4)
It can't cope with the situation of reordered operands:
select_cc(x, y, 0, 16, cc)
In that case we just need to swap the operands and invert the Condition Code:
select_cc(x, y, 16, 0, ~cc)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53236
llvm-svn: 346484
We can stop recording conditions once we reached the immediate dominator
for the block containing the call site. Conditions in predecessors of the
that node will be the same for all paths to the call site and splitting
is not beneficial.
This patch makes CallSiteSplitting dependent on the DT anlysis. because
the immediate dominators seem to be the easiest way of finding the node
to stop at.
I had to update some exiting tests, because they were checking for
conditions that were true/false on all paths to the call site. Those
should now be handled by instcombine/ipsccp.
Reviewers: davide, junbuml
Reviewed By: junbuml
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44627
llvm-svn: 346483
In SimplifyCFG when given a conditional branch that goes to BB1 and BB2, the hoisted common terminator instruction in the two blocks, caused debug line records associated with subsequent select instructions to become ambiguous. It causes the debugger to display unreachable source lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53390
llvm-svn: 346481
Previously, during the search, all values had to have the same
'TypeSize', which is equal to number of bits of the integer type of
the icmp operand. All values in the tree had to match this size;
meaning that, if we searched from i16, we wouldn't accept i8s. A
change in type size requires zext and truncs to perform the casts so,
to allow mixed narrow types, the handling of these instructions is
now slightly different:
- we allow casts if their result or operand is <= TypeSize.
- zexts are sinks if their result > TypeSize.
- truncs are still sinks if their operand == TypeSize.
- truncs are still sources if their result == TypeSize.
The transformation bails on finding an icmp that operates on data
smaller than the current TypeSize.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54108
llvm-svn: 346480
A few code movement things:
- AreSymmetrical is now a method of BinOpChain.
- Created a lambda in CreateParallelMACPairs to reduce loop nesting.
- A Reduction object now gets pasted in a couple of places instead,
including CreateParallelMACPairs so it doesn't need to return a
value.
I've also added RecordSequentialLoads, which is run before the
transformation begins, and caches the interesting loads. This can then
be queried later instead of cross checking many load values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54254
llvm-svn: 346479
Summary:
This change covers a number of things spanning LLVM and compiler-rt,
which are related in a non-trivial way.
In LLVM, we have a library that handles the FDR mode even log loading,
which uses C++'s runtime polymorphism feature to better faithfully
represent the events that are written down by the FDR mode runtime. We
do this by interpreting a trace that's serliased in a common format
agreed upon by both the trace loading library and the FDR mode runtime.
This library is under active development, which consists of features
allowing us to reconstitute a higher-level event log.
This event log is used by the conversion and visualisation tools we have
for interpreting XRay traces.
One of the tools we have is a diagnostic tool in llvm-xray called
`fdr-dump` which we've been using to debug our expectations of what the
FDR runtime should be writing and what the logical FDR event log
structures are. We use this fairly extensively to reason about why some
non-trivial traces we're generating with FDR mode runtimes fail to
convert or fail to parse correctly.
One of these failures we've found in manual debugging of some of the
traces we've seen involve an inconsistency between the buffer extents (a
record indicating how many bytes to follow are part of a logical
thread's event log) and the record of the bytes written into the log --
sometimes it turns out the data could be garbage, due to buffers being
recycled, but sometimes we're seeing the buffer extent indicating a log
is "shorter" than the actual records associated with the buffer. This
case happens particularly with function entry records with a call
argument.
This change for now updates the FDR mode runtime to write the bytes for
the function call and arg record before updating the buffer extents
atomically, allowing multiple threads to see a consistent view of the
data in the buffer using the atomic counter associated with a buffer.
What we're trying to prevent here is partial updates where we see the
intermediary updates to the buffer extents (function record size then
call argument record size) becoming observable from another thread, for
instance, one doing the serialization/flushing.
To do both diagnose this issue properly, we need to be able to honour
the extents being set in the `BufferExtents` records marking the
beginning of the logical buffers when reading an FDR trace. Since LLVM
doesn't use C++'s RTTI mechanism, we instead follow the advice in the
documentation for LLVM Style RTTI
(https://llvm.org/docs/HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI.html). We then rely on
this RTTI feature to ensure that our file-based record producer (our
streaming "deserializer") can honour the extents of individual buffers
as we interpret traces.
This also sets us up to be able to eventually do smart
skipping/continuation of FDR logs, seeking instead to find BufferExtents
records in cases where we find potentially recoverable errors. In the
meantime, we make this change to operate in a strict mode when reading
logical buffers with extent records.
Reviewers: mboerger
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54201
llvm-svn: 346473
Summary:
Reorders the sections in the SIMD tablegen file to roughly match the
new opcode ordering. Depends on D54126.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54134
llvm-svn: 346464
Summary:
The pass incorrectly assumed if there's a longjmp declaration in the
module, there is also a setjmp function declaration. Fixed it, and now
the pass only converts longjmp and does not do any other transformation
when there's no setjmp declaration in the module.
Fixes PR39562.
Reviewers: jgravelle-google, sbc100
Subscribers: dschuff, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54273
llvm-svn: 346445
Use report_fatal_error instead of crashing or miscompiling. (It's
currently easier than it should be to hit this case because we don't
reuse codes across epilogs.)
llvm-svn: 346440
This patch adds logic to detect reductions across the inner and outer
loop by following the incoming values of PHI nodes in the outer loop. If
the incoming values take part in a reduction in the inner loop or come
from outside the outer loop, we found a reduction spanning across inner
and outer loop.
With this change, ~10% more loops are interchanged in the LLVM
test-suite + SPEC2006.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=30472
Reviewers: mcrosier, efriedma, karthikthecool, davide, hfinkel, dmgreen
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43245
llvm-svn: 346438
Summary:
This fixes PR 37422
In ELF, non-weak symbols can also be non-prevailing. In this particular
PR, the __llvm_profile_* symbols are non-prevailing but weren't getting
dropped - causing multiply-defined errors with lld.
Also add a test, strong_non_prevailing.ll, to ensure that multiple
copies of a strong symbol are dropped.
To fix the test regressions exposed by this fix,
- do not mark prevailing copies for symbols with 'appending' linkage.
There's no one prevailing copy for such symbols.
- fix the prevailing version in dead-strip-fulllto.ll
- explicitly pass exported symbols to llvm-lto in fumcimport.ll and
funcimport_var.ll
Reviewers: tejohnson, pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith,
dang, srhines, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54125
llvm-svn: 346436
As discussed in D54073, we have a potential regression from more aggressive vector narrowing here, so let's try to avoid that by changing build-vector lowering slightly.
Insert-vector-element lowering always does this since there's no "pinsr" for ymm/zmm:
// If the vector is wider than 128 bits, extract the 128-bit subvector, insert
// into that, and then insert the subvector back into the result.
...but we can sometimes do better for insert-into-constant-vector by using shuffle lowering.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54271
llvm-svn: 346433
FindBetterNeighborChains simulateanously improves the chain
dependencies of a chain of related stores avoiding the generation of
extra token factors. For chains longer than the GatherAllAliasDepths,
stores further down in the chain will necessarily fail, a potentially
significant waste and preventing otherwise trivial parallelization.
This patch directly parallelize the chains of stores before improving
each store. This generally improves DAG-level parallelism.
Reviewers: courbet, spatel, RKSimon, bogner, efriedma, craig.topper, rnk
Subscribers: sdardis, javed.absar, hiraditya, jrtc27, atanasyan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53552
llvm-svn: 346432
Summary:
When the 3rd argument to these intrinsics is zero, lowering them
to shift instructions produces poison values, since we end up with
shift amounts equal to the number of bits in the shifted value. This
means we can only lower these intrinsics if we can prove that the
3rd argument is not zero.
Reviewers: arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: bnieuwenhuizen, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53739
llvm-svn: 346422
This eliminates the outlining penalty for llvm.trap/unreachable, because
callers no longer have to emit cleanup/ret instructions after calling an
outlined `noreturn` function.
rdar://45523626
llvm-svn: 346421
It was discovered in randomized testing that the SystemZ implementation of
shouldCoalesce() could be caused to crash when subreg liveness was
enabled. This was because an undef use of the virtual register was copied
outside current MBB at the point of shouldCoalesce() being called. For more
details, see https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39276.
This patch changes the check for MBB locality from livein/liveout checks to
do checks for all instructions of both intervals being inside MBB. This
avoids the cases with dead defs / undef uses outside MBB, which are not
affecting liveness in/out of MBB.
The original test case included as a reduced .mir test case.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D54197
llvm-svn: 346406
Generalize code in Thumb2InstrInfo::storeRegToStackSlot() and
loadRegToStackSlot() to allow the GPR class or any of its sub-classes
(including hGPR) to be stored/loaded by ARM::t2STRi12/ARM::t2LDRi12.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51927
llvm-svn: 346401
The patch has been reverted because it ended up prohibiting propagation
of a constant to exit value. For such values, we should skip all checks
related to hard uses because propagating a constant is always profitable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53691
llvm-svn: 346397
LSR reassociates constants as unfolded offsets when the constants fit as
immediate add operands, which currently prevents such constants from being
combined later with loop invariant registers.
This patch modifies GenerateCombinations() to generate a second formula which
includes the unfolded offset in the combined loop-invariant register.
This commit fixes a bug in the original patch (committed at r345114, reverted
at r345123).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51861
llvm-svn: 346390
We have a lot of various bugs that are caused by misuse of SCEV (in particular in LV),
all of them can simply be described as "we ask SCEV to prove some fact on invalid IR".
Some of examples of those are PR36311, PR37221, PR39160.
The problem is that these failues manifest differently (what we saw was failure of various
asserts across SCEV, but there can also be miscompiles). This patch adds an assert into two
SCEV methods that strongly rely on correctness of the IR and are involved in known failues.
This will at least allow us to have a clear indication of what was wrong in this case.
This patch also fixes a unit test with incorrect IR that fails this verification.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52930
Reviewed By: fhahn
llvm-svn: 346389
Summary:
MergeFunctions currently tries to process strong functions before
weak functions, because weak functions can simply call strong
functions, while a strong/weak function cannot call a weak function
(a backing strong function is needed).
This patch additionally tries to process external functions before
local functions, because we definitely have to keep the external
function, but may be able to drop the local one (and definitely
can if it is also unnamed_addr).
Unfortunately, this exposes an existing bug in the implementation:
The FnTree and FNodesInTree structures can currently go out of
sync in the case where two weak functions are merged, because the
function in FnTree/FNodesInTree is RAUWed. This leaves it behind in
FnTree (this is intended, as it is the strong backing function which
should be used for further merges), while it is replaced in
FNodesInTree (this is not intended).
This is fixed by switching FNodesInTree from using a ValueMap to
using a DenseMap of AssertingVH.
This exposes another minor issue: Currently FNodesInTree is not
cleared after MergeFunctions finishes running. Currently, this is
potentially dangerous (e.g. if something else wants to RAUW a function
with a non-function), but at the very least it is unnecessary/inefficient.
After the change to use AssertingVH it becomes more problematic,
because there are certainly passes that remove functions.
This issue is fixed by clearing FNodesInTree at the end of the pass.
Reviewers: jfb, whitequark
Reviewed By: whitequark
Subscribers: rkruppe, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53271
llvm-svn: 346386
Summary:
For unnamed_addr functions we RAUW instead of only replacing direct callers. However, functions in which replacements were performed currently are not added back to the worklist, resulting in missed merging opportunities.
Fix this by calling removeUsers() prior to RAUW.
Reviewers: jfb, whitequark
Reviewed By: whitequark
Subscribers: rkruppe, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53262
llvm-svn: 346385
Turns out knowing more than just the base address might be useful -
specifically a future change to respect a DICompileUnit flag for the use
of base address specifiers in DWARF < 5.
llvm-svn: 346380
If a block doesn't have any ranges of adjacent legal instructions, then it
can't have outlining candidates. There's no point in mapping legal isntructions
in situations like this.
I noticed this reduces the size of the suffix tree in sqlite3 for AArch64 at
-Oz by about 3%.
llvm-svn: 346379
Promote alloca can vectorize a small array by bitcasting it to a
vector type. Extend vectorization for the case when alloca is
already a vector type. We still want to replace GEPs with an
insert/extract element instructions in this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54219
llvm-svn: 346376
Summary:
This change implements assembler parser, code emitter, ELF object writer
and disassembler for the MSP430 ISA. Also, more instruction forms are added
to the target description.
Reviewers: asl
Reviewed By: asl
Subscribers: pftbest, krisb, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53661
llvm-svn: 346374
I noticed that there are lots of basic blocks that don't have enough legal
instructions in them to warrant outlining. We can skip mapping these entirely.
In sqlite3, compiled for AArch64 at -Oz, this results in a 10% reduction of
the total nodes in the suffix tree. These nodes can never be part of a
repeated substring, and so they don't impact the result at all.
Before this, there were 62128 nodes in the tree for sqlite3. After this, there
are 56457 nodes.
llvm-svn: 346373
If all the edge counts for a function are zero, skip count population and
annotation, as nothing will happen. This can save some compile time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54212
llvm-svn: 346370