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35 KiB
ReStructuredText
============================
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Global Instruction Selection
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============================
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.. contents::
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:local:
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:depth: 1
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.. warning::
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This document is a work in progress. It reflects the current state of the
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implementation, as well as open design and implementation issues.
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Introduction
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============
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GlobalISel is a framework that provides a set of reusable passes and utilities
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for instruction selection --- translation from LLVM IR to target-specific
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Machine IR (MIR).
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GlobalISel is intended to be a replacement for SelectionDAG and FastISel, to
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solve three major problems:
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* **Performance** --- SelectionDAG introduces a dedicated intermediate
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representation, which has a compile-time cost.
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GlobalISel directly operates on the post-isel representation used by the
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rest of the code generator, MIR.
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It does require extensions to that representation to support arbitrary
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incoming IR: :ref:`gmir`.
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* **Granularity** --- SelectionDAG and FastISel operate on individual basic
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blocks, losing some global optimization opportunities.
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GlobalISel operates on the whole function.
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* **Modularity** --- SelectionDAG and FastISel are radically different and share
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very little code.
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GlobalISel is built in a way that enables code reuse. For instance, both the
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optimized and fast selectors share the :ref:`pipeline`, and targets can
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configure that pipeline to better suit their needs.
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.. _gmir:
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Generic Machine IR
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==================
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Machine IR operates on physical registers, register classes, and (mostly)
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target-specific instructions.
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To bridge the gap with LLVM IR, GlobalISel introduces "generic" extensions to
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Machine IR:
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.. contents::
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:local:
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``NOTE``:
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The generic MIR (GMIR) representation still contains references to IR
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constructs (such as ``GlobalValue``). Removing those should let us write more
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accurate tests, or delete IR after building the initial MIR. However, it is
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not part of the GlobalISel effort.
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.. _gmir-instructions:
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Generic Instructions
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--------------------
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The main addition is support for pre-isel generic machine instructions (e.g.,
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``G_ADD``). Like other target-independent instructions (e.g., ``COPY`` or
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``PHI``), these are available on all targets.
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``TODO``:
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While we're progressively adding instructions, one kind in particular exposes
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interesting problems: compares and how to represent condition codes.
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Some targets (x86, ARM) have generic comparisons setting multiple flags,
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which are then used by predicated variants.
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Others (IR) specify the predicate in the comparison and users just get a single
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bit. SelectionDAG uses SETCC/CONDBR vs BR_CC (and similar for select) to
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represent this.
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The ``MachineIRBuilder`` class wraps the ``MachineInstrBuilder`` and provides
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a convenient way to create these generic instructions.
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.. _gmir-gvregs:
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Generic Virtual Registers
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-------------------------
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Generic instructions operate on a new kind of register: "generic" virtual
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registers. As opposed to non-generic vregs, they are not assigned a Register
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Class. Instead, generic vregs have a :ref:`gmir-llt`, and can be assigned
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a :ref:`gmir-regbank`.
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``MachineRegisterInfo`` tracks the same information that it does for
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non-generic vregs (e.g., use-def chains). Additionally, it also tracks the
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:ref:`gmir-llt` of the register, and, instead of the ``TargetRegisterClass``,
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its :ref:`gmir-regbank`, if any.
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For simplicity, most generic instructions only accept generic vregs:
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* instead of immediates, they use a gvreg defined by an instruction
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materializing the immediate value (see :ref:`irtranslator-constants`).
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* instead of physical register, they use a gvreg defined by a ``COPY``.
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``NOTE``:
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We started with an alternative representation, where MRI tracks a size for
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each gvreg, and instructions have lists of types.
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That had two flaws: the type and size are redundant, and there was no generic
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way of getting a given operand's type (as there was no 1:1 mapping between
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instruction types and operands).
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We considered putting the type in some variant of MCInstrDesc instead:
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See `PR26576 <http://llvm.org/PR26576>`_: [GlobalISel] Generic MachineInstrs
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need a type but this increases the memory footprint of the related objects
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.. _gmir-regbank:
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Register Bank
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-------------
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A Register Bank is a set of register classes defined by the target.
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A bank has a size, which is the maximum store size of all covered classes.
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In general, cross-class copies inside a bank are expected to be cheaper than
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copies across banks. They are also coalesceable by the register coalescer,
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whereas cross-bank copies are not.
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Also, equivalent operations can be performed on different banks using different
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instructions.
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For example, X86 can be seen as having 3 main banks: general-purpose, x87, and
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vector (which could be further split into a bank per domain for single vs
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double precision instructions).
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Register banks are described by a target-provided API,
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:ref:`RegisterBankInfo <api-registerbankinfo>`.
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.. _gmir-llt:
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Low Level Type
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--------------
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Additionally, every generic virtual register has a type, represented by an
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instance of the ``LLT`` class.
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Like ``EVT``/``MVT``/``Type``, it has no distinction between unsigned and signed
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integer types. Furthermore, it also has no distinction between integer and
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floating-point types: it mainly conveys absolutely necessary information, such
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as size and number of vector lanes:
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* ``sN`` for scalars
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* ``pN`` for pointers
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* ``<N x sM>`` for vectors
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* ``unsized`` for labels, etc..
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``LLT`` is intended to replace the usage of ``EVT`` in SelectionDAG.
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Here are some LLT examples and their ``EVT`` and ``Type`` equivalents:
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============= ========= ======================================
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LLT EVT IR Type
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============= ========= ======================================
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``s1`` ``i1`` ``i1``
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``s8`` ``i8`` ``i8``
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``s32`` ``i32`` ``i32``
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``s32`` ``f32`` ``float``
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``s17`` ``i17`` ``i17``
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``s16`` N/A ``{i8, i8}``
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``s32`` N/A ``[4 x i8]``
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``p0`` ``iPTR`` ``i8*``, ``i32*``, ``%opaque*``
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``p2`` ``iPTR`` ``i8 addrspace(2)*``
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``<4 x s32>`` ``v4f32`` ``<4 x float>``
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``s64`` ``v1f64`` ``<1 x double>``
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``<3 x s32>`` ``v3i32`` ``<3 x i32>``
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``unsized`` ``Other`` ``label``
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============= ========= ======================================
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Rationale: instructions already encode a specific interpretation of types
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(e.g., ``add`` vs. ``fadd``, or ``sdiv`` vs. ``udiv``). Also encoding that
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information in the type system requires introducing bitcast with no real
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advantage for the selector.
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Pointer types are distinguished by address space. This matches IR, as opposed
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to SelectionDAG where address space is an attribute on operations.
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This representation better supports pointers having different sizes depending
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on their addressspace.
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``NOTE``:
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Currently, LLT requires at least 2 elements in vectors, but some targets have
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the concept of a '1-element vector'. Representing them as their underlying
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scalar type is a nice simplification.
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``TODO``:
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Currently, non-generic virtual registers, defined by non-pre-isel-generic
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instructions, cannot have a type, and thus cannot be used by a pre-isel generic
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instruction. Instead, they are given a type using a COPY. We could relax that
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and allow types on all vregs: this would reduce the number of MI required when
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emitting target-specific MIR early in the pipeline. This should purely be
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a compile-time optimization.
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.. _pipeline:
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Core Pipeline
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=============
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There are four required passes, regardless of the optimization mode:
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.. contents::
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:local:
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Additional passes can then be inserted at higher optimization levels or for
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specific targets. For example, to match the current SelectionDAG set of
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transformations: MachineCSE and a better MachineCombiner between every pass.
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``NOTE``:
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In theory, not all passes are always necessary.
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As an additional compile-time optimization, we could skip some of the passes by
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setting the relevant MachineFunction properties. For instance, if the
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IRTranslator did not encounter any illegal instruction, it would set the
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``legalized`` property to avoid running the :ref:`milegalizer`.
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Similarly, we considered specializing the IRTranslator per-target to directly
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emit target-specific MI.
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However, we instead decided to keep the core pipeline simple, and focus on
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minimizing the overhead of the passes in the no-op cases.
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.. _irtranslator:
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IRTranslator
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------------
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This pass translates the input LLVM IR ``Function`` to a GMIR
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``MachineFunction``.
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``TODO``:
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This currently doesn't support the more complex instructions, in particular
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those involving control flow (``switch``, ``invoke``, ...).
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For ``switch`` in particular, we can initially use the ``LowerSwitch`` pass.
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.. _api-calllowering:
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API: CallLowering
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``IRTranslator`` (using the ``CallLowering`` target-provided utility) also
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implements the ABI's calling convention by lowering calls, returns, and
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arguments to the appropriate physical register usage and instruction sequences.
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.. _irtranslator-aggregates:
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Aggregates
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^^^^^^^^^^
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Aggregates are lowered to a single scalar vreg.
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This differs from SelectionDAG's multiple vregs via ``GetValueVTs``.
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``TODO``:
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As some of the bits are undef (padding), we should consider augmenting the
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representation with additional metadata (in effect, caching computeKnownBits
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information on vregs).
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See `PR26161 <http://llvm.org/PR26161>`_: [GlobalISel] Value to vreg during
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IR to MachineInstr translation for aggregate type
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.. _irtranslator-constants:
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Constant Lowering
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``IRTranslator`` lowers ``Constant`` operands into uses of gvregs defined
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by ``G_CONSTANT`` or ``G_FCONSTANT`` instructions.
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Currently, these instructions are always emitted in the entry basic block.
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In a ``MachineFunction``, each ``Constant`` is materialized by a single gvreg.
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This is beneficial as it allows us to fold constants into immediate operands
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during :ref:`instructionselect`, while still avoiding redundant materializations
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for expensive non-foldable constants.
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However, this can lead to unnecessary spills and reloads in an -O0 pipeline, as
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these vregs can have long live ranges.
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``TODO``:
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We're investigating better placement of these instructions, in fast and
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optimized modes.
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.. _milegalizer:
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Legalizer
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---------
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This pass transforms the generic machine instructions such that they are legal.
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A legal instruction is defined as:
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* **selectable** --- the target will later be able to select it to a
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target-specific (non-generic) instruction.
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* operating on **vregs that can be loaded and stored** -- if necessary, the
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target can select a ``G_LOAD``/``G_STORE`` of each gvreg operand.
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As opposed to SelectionDAG, there are no legalization phases. In particular,
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'type' and 'operation' legalization are not separate.
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Legalization is iterative, and all state is contained in GMIR. To maintain the
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validity of the intermediate code, instructions are introduced:
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* ``G_MERGE_VALUES`` --- concatenate multiple registers of the same
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size into a single wider register.
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* ``G_UNMERGE_VALUES`` --- extract multiple registers of the same size
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from a single wider register.
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* ``G_EXTRACT`` --- extract a simple register (as contiguous sequences of bits)
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from a single wider register.
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As they are expected to be temporary byproducts of the legalization process,
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they are combined at the end of the :ref:`milegalizer` pass.
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If any remain, they are expected to always be selectable, using loads and stores
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if necessary.
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The legality of an instruction may only depend on the instruction itself and
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must not depend on any context in which the instruction is used. However, after
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deciding that an instruction is not legal, using the context of the instruction
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to decide how to legalize the instruction is permitted. As an example, if we
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have a ``G_FOO`` instruction of the form::
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%1:_(s32) = G_CONSTANT i32 1
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%2:_(s32) = G_FOO %0:_(s32), %1:_(s32)
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it's impossible to say that G_FOO is legal iff %1 is a ``G_CONSTANT`` with
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value ``1``. However, the following::
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%2:_(s32) = G_FOO %0:_(s32), i32 1
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can say that it's legal iff operand 2 is an immediate with value ``1`` because
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that information is entirely contained within the single instruction.
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.. _api-legalizerinfo:
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API: LegalizerInfo
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The recommended [#legalizer-legacy-footnote]_ API looks like this::
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getActionDefinitionsBuilder({G_ADD, G_SUB, G_MUL, G_AND, G_OR, G_XOR, G_SHL})
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.legalFor({s32, s64, v2s32, v4s32, v2s64})
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.clampScalar(0, s32, s64)
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.widenScalarToNextPow2(0)
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.clampNumElements(0, v2s32, v4s32)
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.clampNumElements(0, v2s64, v2s64)
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.moreElementsToNextPow2(0);
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and describes a set of rules by which we can either declare an instruction legal
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or decide which action to take to make it more legal.
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At the core of this ruleset is the ``LegalityQuery`` which describes the
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instruction. We use a description rather than the instruction to both allow other
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passes to determine legality without having to create an instruction and also to
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limit the information available to the predicates to that which is safe to rely
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on. Currently, the information available to the predicates that determine
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legality contains:
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* The opcode for the instruction
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* The type of each type index (see ``type0``, ``type1``, etc.)
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* The size in bytes and atomic ordering for each MachineMemOperand
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Rule Processing and Declaring Rules
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"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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The ``getActionDefinitionsBuilder`` function generates a ruleset for the given
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opcode(s) that rules can be added to. If multiple opcodes are given, they are
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all permanently bound to the same ruleset. The rules in a ruleset are executed
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from top to bottom and will start again from the top if an instruction is
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legalized as a result of the rules. If the ruleset is exhausted without
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satisfying any rule, then it is considered unsupported.
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When it doesn't declare the instruction legal, each pass over the rules may
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request that one type changes to another type. Sometimes this can cause multiple
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types to change but we avoid this as much as possible as making multiple changes
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can make it difficult to avoid infinite loops where, for example, narrowing one
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type causes another to be too small and widening that type causes the first one
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to be too big.
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In general, it's advisable to declare instructions legal as close to the top of
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the rule as possible and to place any expensive rules as low as possible. This
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helps with performance as testing for legality happens more often than
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legalization and legalization can require multiple passes over the rules.
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As a concrete example, consider the rule::
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getActionDefinitionsBuilder({G_ADD, G_SUB, G_MUL, G_AND, G_OR, G_XOR, G_SHL})
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.legalFor({s32, s64, v2s32, v4s32, v2s64})
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.clampScalar(0, s32, s64)
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.widenScalarToNextPow2(0);
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and the instruction::
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%2:_(s7) = G_ADD %0:_(s7), %1:_(s7)
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this doesn't meet the predicate for the :ref:`.legalFor() <legalfor>` as ``s7``
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is not one of the listed types so it falls through to the
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:ref:`.clampScalar() <clampscalar>`. It does meet the predicate for this rule
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as the type is smaller than the ``s32`` and this rule instructs the legalizer
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to change type 0 to ``s32``. It then restarts from the top. This time it does
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satisfy ``.legalFor()`` and the resulting output is::
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%3:_(s32) = G_ANYEXT %0:_(s7)
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%4:_(s32) = G_ANYEXT %1:_(s7)
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%5:_(s32) = G_ADD %3:_(s32), %4:_(s32)
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%2:_(s7) = G_TRUNC %5:_(s32)
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where the ``G_ADD`` is legal and the other instructions are scheduled for
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processing by the legalizer.
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Rule Actions
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""""""""""""
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There are various rule factories that append rules to a ruleset but they have a
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few actions in common:
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.. _legalfor:
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* ``legalIf()``, ``legalFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be legal if the
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predicate is satisfied.
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* ``narrowScalarIf()``, ``narrowScalarFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be illegal
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if the predicate is satisfied and indicates that narrowing the scalars in one
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of the types to a specific type would make it more legal. This action supports
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both scalars and vectors.
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* ``widenScalarIf()``, ``widenScalarFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be illegal
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if the predicate is satisfied and indicates that widening the scalars in one
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of the types to a specific type would make it more legal. This action supports
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both scalars and vectors.
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* ``fewerElementsIf()``, ``fewerElementsFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be
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illegal if the predicate is satisfied and indicates reducing the number of
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vector elements in one of the types to a specific type would make it more
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legal. This action supports vectors.
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* ``moreElementsIf()``, ``moreElementsFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be illegal
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if the predicate is satisfied and indicates increasing the number of vector
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elements in one of the types to a specific type would make it more legal.
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This action supports vectors.
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* ``lowerIf()``, ``lowerFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be illegal if the
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predicate is satisfied and indicates that replacing it with equivalent
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instruction(s) would make it more legal. Support for this action differs for
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each opcode.
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* ``libcallIf()``, ``libcallFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be illegal if the
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predicate is satisfied and indicates that replacing it with a libcall would
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make it more legal. Support for this action differs for
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each opcode.
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* ``customIf()``, ``customFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be illegal if the
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predicate is satisfied and indicates that the backend developer will supply
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a means of making it more legal.
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* ``unsupportedIf()``, ``unsupportedFor()``, etc. declare an instruction to be illegal
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if the predicate is satisfied and indicates that there is no way to make it
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legal and the compiler should fail.
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* ``fallback()`` falls back on an older API and should only be used while porting
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existing code from that API.
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Rule Predicates
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"""""""""""""""
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The rule factories also have predicates in common:
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* ``legal()``, ``lower()``, etc. are always satisfied.
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* ``legalIf()``, ``narrowScalarIf()``, etc. are satisfied if the user-supplied
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``LegalityPredicate`` function returns true. This predicate has access to the
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information in the ``LegalityQuery`` to make its decision.
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User-supplied predicates can also be combined using ``all(P0, P1, ...)``.
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* ``legalFor()``, ``narrowScalarFor()``, etc. are satisfied if the type matches one in
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a given set of types. For example ``.legalFor({s16, s32})`` declares the
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instruction legal if type 0 is either s16 or s32. Additional versions for two
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and three type indices are generally available. For these, all the type
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indices considered together must match all the types in one of the tuples. So
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``.legalFor({{s16, s32}, {s32, s64}})`` will only accept ``{s16, s32}``, or
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``{s32, s64}`` but will not accept ``{s16, s64}``.
|
|
|
|
* ``legalForTypesWithMemSize()``, ``narrowScalarForTypesWithMemSize()``, etc. are
|
|
similar to ``legalFor()``, ``narrowScalarFor()``, etc. but additionally require a
|
|
MachineMemOperand to have a given size in each tuple.
|
|
|
|
* ``legalForCartesianProduct()``, ``narrowScalarForCartesianProduct()``, etc. are
|
|
satisfied if each type index matches one element in each of the independent
|
|
sets. So ``.legalForCartesianProduct({s16, s32}, {s32, s64})`` will accept
|
|
``{s16, s32}``, ``{s16, s64}``, ``{s32, s32}``, and ``{s32, s64}``.
|
|
|
|
Composite Rules
|
|
"""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
There are some composite rules for common situations built out of the above facilities:
|
|
|
|
* ``widenScalarToNextPow2()`` is like ``widenScalarIf()`` but is satisfied iff the type
|
|
size in bits is not a power of 2 and selects a target type that is the next
|
|
largest power of 2.
|
|
|
|
.. _clampscalar:
|
|
|
|
* ``minScalar()`` is like ``widenScalarIf()`` but is satisfied iff the type
|
|
size in bits is smaller than the given minimum and selects the minimum as the
|
|
target type. Similarly, there is also a ``maxScalar()`` for the maximum and a
|
|
``clampScalar()`` to do both at once.
|
|
|
|
* ``minScalarSameAs()`` is like ``minScalar()`` but the minimum is taken from another
|
|
type index.
|
|
|
|
* ``moreElementsToNextMultiple()`` is like ``moreElementsToNextPow2()`` but is based on
|
|
multiples of X rather than powers of 2.
|
|
|
|
Other Information
|
|
"""""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
``TODO``:
|
|
An alternative worth investigating is to generalize the API to represent
|
|
actions using ``std::function`` that implements the action, instead of explicit
|
|
enum tokens (``Legal``, ``WidenScalar``, ...).
|
|
|
|
``TODO``:
|
|
Moreover, we could use TableGen to initially infer legality of operation from
|
|
existing patterns (as any pattern we can select is by definition legal).
|
|
Expanding that to describe legalization actions is a much larger but
|
|
potentially useful project.
|
|
|
|
.. rubric:: Footnotes
|
|
|
|
.. [#legalizer-legacy-footnote] An API is broadly similar to
|
|
SelectionDAG/TargetLowering is available but is not recommended as a more
|
|
powerful API is available.
|
|
|
|
.. _min-legalizerinfo:
|
|
|
|
Minimum Rule Set
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
GlobalISel's legalizer has a great deal of flexibility in how a given target
|
|
shapes the GMIR that the rest of the backend must handle. However, there are
|
|
a small number of requirements that all targets must meet.
|
|
|
|
Before discussing the minimum requirements, we'll need some terminology:
|
|
|
|
Producer Type Set
|
|
The set of types which is the union of all possible types produced by at
|
|
least one legal instruction.
|
|
|
|
Consumer Type Set
|
|
The set of types which is the union of all possible types consumed by at
|
|
least one legal instruction.
|
|
|
|
Both sets are often identical but there's no guarantee of that. For example,
|
|
it's not uncommon to be unable to consume s64 but still be able to produce it
|
|
for a few specific instructions.
|
|
|
|
Minimum Rules For Scalars
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
* G_ANYEXT must be legal for all inputs from the producer type set and all larger
|
|
outputs from the consumer type set.
|
|
* G_TRUNC must be legal for all inputs from the producer type set and all
|
|
smaller outputs from the consumer type set.
|
|
|
|
G_ANYEXT, and G_TRUNC have mandatory legality since the GMIR requires a means to
|
|
connect operations with different type sizes. They are usually trivial to support
|
|
since G_ANYEXT doesn't define the value of the additional bits and G_TRUNC is
|
|
discarding bits. The other conversions can be lowered into G_ANYEXT/G_TRUNC
|
|
with some additional operations that are subject to further legalization. For
|
|
example, G_SEXT can lower to::
|
|
|
|
%1 = G_ANYEXT %0
|
|
%2 = G_CONSTANT ...
|
|
%3 = G_SHL %1, %2
|
|
%4 = G_ASHR %3, %2
|
|
|
|
and the G_CONSTANT/G_SHL/G_ASHR can further lower to other operations or target
|
|
instructions. Similarly, G_FPEXT has no legality requirement since it can lower
|
|
to a G_ANYEXT followed by a target instruction.
|
|
|
|
G_MERGE_VALUES and G_UNMERGE_VALUES do not have legality requirements since the
|
|
former can lower to G_ANYEXT and some other legalizable instructions, while the
|
|
latter can lower to some legalizable instructions followed by G_TRUNC.
|
|
|
|
Minimum Legality For Vectors
|
|
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
Within the vector types, there aren't any defined conversions in LLVM IR as
|
|
vectors are often converted by reinterpreting the bits or by decomposing the
|
|
vector and reconstituting it as a different type. As such, G_BITCAST is the
|
|
only operation to account for. We generally don't require that it's legal
|
|
because it can usually be lowered to COPY (or to nothing using
|
|
replaceAllUses()). However, there are situations where G_BITCAST is non-trivial
|
|
(e.g. little-endian vectors of big-endian data such as on big-endian MIPS MSA and
|
|
big-endian ARM NEON, see `_i_bitcast`). To account for this G_BITCAST must be
|
|
legal for all type combinations that change the bit pattern in the value.
|
|
|
|
There are no legality requirements for G_BUILD_VECTOR, or G_BUILD_VECTOR_TRUNC
|
|
since these can be handled by:
|
|
* Declaring them legal.
|
|
* Scalarizing them.
|
|
* Lowering them to G_TRUNC+G_ANYEXT and some legalizable instructions.
|
|
* Lowering them to target instructions which are legal by definition.
|
|
|
|
The same reasoning also allows G_UNMERGE_VALUES to lack legality requirements
|
|
for vector inputs.
|
|
|
|
Minimum Legality for Pointers
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
There are no minimum rules for pointers since G_INTTOPTR and G_PTRTOINT can
|
|
be selected to a COPY from register class to another by the legalizer.
|
|
|
|
Minimum Legality For Operations
|
|
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
|
|
|
|
The rules for G_ANYEXT, G_MERGE_VALUES, G_BITCAST, G_BUILD_VECTOR,
|
|
G_BUILD_VECTOR_TRUNC, G_CONCAT_VECTORS, G_UNMERGE_VALUES, G_PTRTOINT, and
|
|
G_INTTOPTR have already been noted above. In addition to those, the following
|
|
operations have requirements:
|
|
|
|
* At least one G_IMPLICIT_DEF must be legal. This is usually trivial as it
|
|
requires no code to be selected.
|
|
* G_PHI must be legal for all types in the producer and consumer typesets. This
|
|
is usually trivial as it requires no code to be selected.
|
|
* At least one G_FRAME_INDEX must be legal
|
|
* At least one G_BLOCK_ADDR must be legal
|
|
|
|
There are many other operations you'd expect to have legality requirements but
|
|
they can be lowered to target instructions which are legal by definition.
|
|
|
|
.. _regbankselect:
|
|
|
|
RegBankSelect
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
This pass constrains the :ref:`gmir-gvregs` operands of generic
|
|
instructions to some :ref:`gmir-regbank`.
|
|
|
|
It iteratively maps instructions to a set of per-operand bank assignment.
|
|
The possible mappings are determined by the target-provided
|
|
:ref:`RegisterBankInfo <api-registerbankinfo>`.
|
|
The mapping is then applied, possibly introducing ``COPY`` instructions if
|
|
necessary.
|
|
|
|
It traverses the ``MachineFunction`` top down so that all operands are already
|
|
mapped when analyzing an instruction.
|
|
|
|
This pass could also remap target-specific instructions when beneficial.
|
|
In the future, this could replace the ExeDepsFix pass, as we can directly
|
|
select the best variant for an instruction that's available on multiple banks.
|
|
|
|
.. _api-registerbankinfo:
|
|
|
|
API: RegisterBankInfo
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The ``RegisterBankInfo`` class describes multiple aspects of register banks.
|
|
|
|
* **Banks**: ``addRegBankCoverage`` --- which register bank covers each
|
|
register class.
|
|
|
|
* **Cross-Bank Copies**: ``copyCost`` --- the cost of a ``COPY`` from one bank
|
|
to another.
|
|
|
|
* **Default Mapping**: ``getInstrMapping`` --- the default bank assignments for
|
|
a given instruction.
|
|
|
|
* **Alternative Mapping**: ``getInstrAlternativeMapping`` --- the other
|
|
possible bank assignments for a given instruction.
|
|
|
|
``TODO``:
|
|
All this information should eventually be static and generated by TableGen,
|
|
mostly using existing information augmented by bank descriptions.
|
|
|
|
``TODO``:
|
|
``getInstrMapping`` is currently separate from ``getInstrAlternativeMapping``
|
|
because the latter is more expensive: as we move to static mapping info,
|
|
both methods should be free, and we should merge them.
|
|
|
|
.. _regbankselect-modes:
|
|
|
|
RegBankSelect Modes
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
``RegBankSelect`` currently has two modes:
|
|
|
|
* **Fast** --- For each instruction, pick a target-provided "default" bank
|
|
assignment. This is the default at -O0.
|
|
|
|
* **Greedy** --- For each instruction, pick the cheapest of several
|
|
target-provided bank assignment alternatives.
|
|
|
|
We intend to eventually introduce an additional optimizing mode:
|
|
|
|
* **Global** --- Across multiple instructions, pick the cheapest combination of
|
|
bank assignments.
|
|
|
|
``NOTE``:
|
|
On AArch64, we are considering using the Greedy mode even at -O0 (or perhaps at
|
|
backend -O1): because :ref:`gmir-llt` doesn't distinguish floating point from
|
|
integer scalars, the default assignment for loads and stores is the integer
|
|
bank, introducing cross-bank copies on most floating point operations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _instructionselect:
|
|
|
|
InstructionSelect
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
This pass transforms generic machine instructions into equivalent
|
|
target-specific instructions. It traverses the ``MachineFunction`` bottom-up,
|
|
selecting uses before definitions, enabling trivial dead code elimination.
|
|
|
|
.. _api-instructionselector:
|
|
|
|
API: InstructionSelector
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The target implements the ``InstructionSelector`` class, containing the
|
|
target-specific selection logic proper.
|
|
|
|
The instance is provided by the subtarget, so that it can specialize the
|
|
selector by subtarget feature (with, e.g., a vector selector overriding parts
|
|
of a general-purpose common selector).
|
|
We might also want to parameterize it by MachineFunction, to enable selector
|
|
variants based on function attributes like optsize.
|
|
|
|
The simple API consists of:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
virtual bool select(MachineInstr &MI)
|
|
|
|
This target-provided method is responsible for mutating (or replacing) a
|
|
possibly-generic MI into a fully target-specific equivalent.
|
|
It is also responsible for doing the necessary constraining of gvregs into the
|
|
appropriate register classes as well as passing through COPY instructions to
|
|
the register allocator.
|
|
|
|
The ``InstructionSelector`` can fold other instructions into the selected MI,
|
|
by walking the use-def chain of the vreg operands.
|
|
As GlobalISel is Global, this folding can occur across basic blocks.
|
|
|
|
SelectionDAG Rule Imports
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
TableGen will import SelectionDAG rules and provide the following function to
|
|
execute them:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
bool selectImpl(MachineInstr &MI)
|
|
|
|
The ``--stats`` option can be used to determine what proportion of rules were
|
|
successfully imported. The easiest way to use this is to copy the
|
|
``-gen-globalisel`` tablegen command from ``ninja -v`` and modify it.
|
|
|
|
Similarly, the ``--warn-on-skipped-patterns`` option can be used to obtain the
|
|
reasons that rules weren't imported. This can be used to focus on the most
|
|
important rejection reasons.
|
|
|
|
PatLeaf Predicates
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
PatLeafs cannot be imported because their C++ is implemented in terms of
|
|
``SDNode`` objects. PatLeafs that handle immediate predicates should be
|
|
replaced by ``ImmLeaf``, ``IntImmLeaf``, or ``FPImmLeaf`` as appropriate.
|
|
|
|
There's no standard answer for other PatLeafs. Some standard predicates have
|
|
been baked into TableGen but this should not generally be done.
|
|
|
|
Custom SDNodes
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Custom SDNodes should be mapped to Target Pseudos using ``GINodeEquiv``. This
|
|
will cause the instruction selector to import them but you will also need to
|
|
ensure the target pseudo is introduced to the MIR before the instruction
|
|
selector. Any preceding pass is suitable but the legalizer will be a
|
|
particularly common choice.
|
|
|
|
ComplexPatterns
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
ComplexPatterns cannot be imported because their C++ is implemented in terms of
|
|
``SDNode`` objects. GlobalISel versions should be defined with
|
|
``GIComplexOperandMatcher`` and mapped to ComplexPattern with
|
|
``GIComplexPatternEquiv``.
|
|
|
|
The following predicates are useful for porting ComplexPattern:
|
|
|
|
* isBaseWithConstantOffset() - Check for base+offset structures
|
|
* isOperandImmEqual() - Check for a particular constant
|
|
* isObviouslySafeToFold() - Check for reasons an instruction can't be sunk and folded into another.
|
|
|
|
There are some important points for the C++ implementation:
|
|
|
|
* Don't modify MIR in the predicate
|
|
* Renderer lambdas should capture by value to avoid use-after-free. They will be used after the predicate returns.
|
|
* Only create instructions in a renderer lambda. GlobalISel won't clean up things you create but don't use.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _maintainability:
|
|
|
|
Maintainability
|
|
===============
|
|
|
|
.. _maintainability-iterative:
|
|
|
|
Iterative Transformations
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
Passes are split into small, iterative transformations, with all state
|
|
represented in the MIR.
|
|
|
|
This differs from SelectionDAG (in particular, the legalizer) using various
|
|
in-memory side-tables.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _maintainability-mir:
|
|
|
|
MIR Serialization
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
.. FIXME: Update the MIRLangRef to include GMI additions.
|
|
|
|
:ref:`gmir` is serializable (see :doc:`MIRLangRef`).
|
|
Combined with :ref:`maintainability-iterative`, this enables much finer-grained
|
|
testing, rather than requiring large and fragile IR-to-assembly tests.
|
|
|
|
The current "stage" in the :ref:`pipeline` is represented by a set of
|
|
``MachineFunctionProperties``:
|
|
|
|
* ``legalized``
|
|
* ``regBankSelected``
|
|
* ``selected``
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _maintainability-verifier:
|
|
|
|
MachineVerifier
|
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
The pass approach lets us use the ``MachineVerifier`` to enforce invariants.
|
|
For instance, a ``regBankSelected`` function may not have gvregs without
|
|
a bank.
|
|
|
|
``TODO``:
|
|
The ``MachineVerifier`` being monolithic, some of the checks we want to do
|
|
can't be integrated to it: GlobalISel is a separate library, so we can't
|
|
directly reference it from CodeGen. For instance, legality checks are
|
|
currently done in RegBankSelect/InstructionSelect proper. We could #ifdef out
|
|
the checks, or we could add some sort of verifier API.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _progress:
|
|
|
|
Progress and Future Work
|
|
========================
|
|
|
|
The initial goal is to replace FastISel on AArch64. The next step will be to
|
|
replace SelectionDAG as the optimized ISel.
|
|
|
|
``NOTE``:
|
|
While we iterate on GlobalISel, we strive to avoid affecting the performance of
|
|
SelectionDAG, FastISel, or the other MIR passes. For instance, the types of
|
|
:ref:`gmir-gvregs` are stored in a separate table in ``MachineRegisterInfo``,
|
|
that is destroyed after :ref:`instructionselect`.
|
|
|
|
.. _progress-fastisel:
|
|
|
|
FastISel Replacement
|
|
--------------------
|
|
|
|
For the initial FastISel replacement, we intend to fallback to SelectionDAG on
|
|
selection failures.
|
|
|
|
Currently, compile-time of the fast pipeline is within 1.5x of FastISel.
|
|
We're optimistic we can get to within 1.1/1.2x, but beating FastISel will be
|
|
challenging given the multi-pass approach.
|
|
Still, supporting all IR (via a complete legalizer) and avoiding the fallback
|
|
to SelectionDAG in the worst case should enable better amortized performance
|
|
than SelectionDAG+FastISel.
|
|
|
|
``NOTE``:
|
|
We considered never having a fallback to SelectionDAG, instead deciding early
|
|
whether a given function is supported by GlobalISel or not. The decision would
|
|
be based on :ref:`milegalizer` queries.
|
|
We abandoned that for two reasons:
|
|
a) on IR inputs, we'd need to basically simulate the :ref:`irtranslator`;
|
|
b) to be robust against unforeseen failures and to enable iterative
|
|
improvements.
|
|
|
|
.. _progress-targets:
|
|
|
|
Support For Other Targets
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
In parallel, we're investigating adding support for other - ideally quite
|
|
different - targets. For instance, there is some initial AMDGPU support.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _porting:
|
|
|
|
Porting GlobalISel to A New Target
|
|
==================================
|
|
|
|
There are four major classes to implement by the target:
|
|
|
|
* :ref:`CallLowering <api-calllowering>` --- lower calls, returns, and arguments
|
|
according to the ABI.
|
|
* :ref:`RegisterBankInfo <api-registerbankinfo>` --- describe
|
|
:ref:`gmir-regbank` coverage, cross-bank copy cost, and the mapping of
|
|
operands onto banks for each instruction.
|
|
* :ref:`LegalizerInfo <api-legalizerinfo>` --- describe what is legal, and how
|
|
to legalize what isn't.
|
|
* :ref:`InstructionSelector <api-instructionselector>` --- select generic MIR
|
|
to target-specific MIR.
|
|
|
|
Additionally:
|
|
|
|
* ``TargetPassConfig`` --- create the passes constituting the pipeline,
|
|
including additional passes not included in the :ref:`pipeline`.
|
|
|
|
.. _other_resources:
|
|
|
|
Resources
|
|
=========
|
|
|
|
* `Global Instruction Selection - A Proposal by Quentin Colombet @LLVMDevMeeting 2015 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6GGbYtae3g>`_
|
|
* `Global Instruction Selection - Status by Quentin Colombet, Ahmed Bougacha, and Tim Northover @LLVMDevMeeting 2016 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tfb344A7w8>`_
|
|
* `GlobalISel - LLVM's Latest Instruction Selection Framework by Diana Picus @FOSDEM17 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6dF6E4BPeU>`_
|
|
* GlobalISel: Past, Present, and Future by Quentin Colombet and Ahmed Bougacha @LLVMDevMeeting 2017
|
|
* Head First into GlobalISel by Daniel Sanders, Aditya Nandakumar, and Justin Bogner @LLVMDevMeeting 2017
|