llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/X86/X86SchedSandyBridge.td

251 lines
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TableGen

//=- X86SchedSandyBridge.td - X86 Sandy Bridge Scheduling ----*- tablegen -*-=//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file defines the machine model for Sandy Bridge to support instruction
// scheduling and other instruction cost heuristics.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
def SandyBridgeModel : SchedMachineModel {
// All x86 instructions are modeled as a single micro-op, and SB can decode 4
// instructions per cycle.
// FIXME: Identify instructions that aren't a single fused micro-op.
let IssueWidth = 4;
let MicroOpBufferSize = 168; // Based on the reorder buffer.
let LoadLatency = 4;
let MispredictPenalty = 16;
// Based on the LSD (loop-stream detector) queue size.
let LoopMicroOpBufferSize = 28;
// FIXME: SSE4 and AVX are unimplemented. This flag is set to allow
// the scheduler to assign a default model to unrecognized opcodes.
let CompleteModel = 0;
}
let SchedModel = SandyBridgeModel in {
// Sandy Bridge can issue micro-ops to 6 different ports in one cycle.
// Ports 0, 1, and 5 handle all computation.
def SBPort0 : ProcResource<1>;
def SBPort1 : ProcResource<1>;
def SBPort5 : ProcResource<1>;
// Ports 2 and 3 are identical. They handle loads and the address half of
// stores.
def SBPort23 : ProcResource<2>;
// Port 4 gets the data half of stores. Store data can be available later than
// the store address, but since we don't model the latency of stores, we can
// ignore that.
def SBPort4 : ProcResource<1>;
// Many micro-ops are capable of issuing on multiple ports.
def SBPort05 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort5]>;
def SBPort15 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
def SBPort015 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
// 54 Entry Unified Scheduler
def SBPortAny : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort23, SBPort4, SBPort5]> {
let BufferSize=54;
}
// Integer division issued on port 0.
def SBDivider : ProcResource<1>;
// Loads are 4 cycles, so ReadAfterLd registers needn't be available until 4
// cycles after the memory operand.
def : ReadAdvance<ReadAfterLd, 4>;
// Many SchedWrites are defined in pairs with and without a folded load.
// Instructions with folded loads are usually micro-fused, so they only appear
// as two micro-ops when queued in the reservation station.
// This multiclass defines the resource usage for variants with and without
// folded loads.
multiclass SBWriteResPair<X86FoldableSchedWrite SchedRW,
ProcResourceKind ExePort,
int Lat> {
// Register variant is using a single cycle on ExePort.
def : WriteRes<SchedRW, [ExePort]> { let Latency = Lat; }
// Memory variant also uses a cycle on port 2/3 and adds 4 cycles to the
// latency.
def : WriteRes<SchedRW.Folded, [SBPort23, ExePort]> {
let Latency = !add(Lat, 4);
}
}
// A folded store needs a cycle on port 4 for the store data, but it does not
// need an extra port 2/3 cycle to recompute the address.
def : WriteRes<WriteRMW, [SBPort4]>;
def : WriteRes<WriteStore, [SBPort23, SBPort4]>;
def : WriteRes<WriteLoad, [SBPort23]> { let Latency = 4; }
def : WriteRes<WriteMove, [SBPort015]>;
def : WriteRes<WriteZero, []>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteALU, SBPort015, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteIMul, SBPort1, 3>;
def : WriteRes<WriteIMulH, []> { let Latency = 3; }
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteShift, SBPort05, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteJump, SBPort5, 1>;
// This is for simple LEAs with one or two input operands.
// The complex ones can only execute on port 1, and they require two cycles on
// the port to read all inputs. We don't model that.
def : WriteRes<WriteLEA, [SBPort15]>;
// This is quite rough, latency depends on the dividend.
def : WriteRes<WriteIDiv, [SBPort0, SBDivider]> {
let Latency = 25;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 10];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteIDivLd, [SBPort23, SBPort0, SBDivider]> {
let Latency = 29;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1, 10];
}
// Scalar and vector floating point.
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFAdd, SBPort1, 3>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFMul, SBPort0, 5>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFDiv, SBPort0, 12>; // 10-14 cycles.
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFRcp, SBPort0, 5>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFRsqrt, SBPort0, 5>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFSqrt, SBPort0, 15>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteCvtF2I, SBPort1, 3>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteCvtI2F, SBPort1, 4>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteCvtF2F, SBPort1, 3>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFShuffle, SBPort5, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFBlend, SBPort05, 1>;
def : WriteRes<WriteFVarBlend, [SBPort0, SBPort5]> {
let Latency = 2;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteFVarBlendLd, [SBPort0, SBPort5, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 6;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1, 1];
}
// Vector integer operations.
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecShift, SBPort05, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecLogic, SBPort015, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecALU, SBPort15, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecIMul, SBPort0, 5>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteShuffle, SBPort15, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteBlend, SBPort15, 1>;
def : WriteRes<WriteVarBlend, [SBPort1, SBPort5]> {
let Latency = 2;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteVarBlendLd, [SBPort1, SBPort5, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 6;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1, 1];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteMPSAD, [SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort5]> {
let Latency = 6;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1, 1];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteMPSADLd, [SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort5, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 6;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1, 1, 1];
}
// String instructions.
// Packed Compare Implicit Length Strings, Return Mask
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpIStrM, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 11;
let ResourceCycles = [3];
}
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpIStrMLd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 11;
let ResourceCycles = [3, 1];
}
// Packed Compare Explicit Length Strings, Return Mask
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpEStrM, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 11;
let ResourceCycles = [8];
}
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpEStrMLd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 11;
let ResourceCycles = [7, 1];
}
// Packed Compare Implicit Length Strings, Return Index
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpIStrI, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 3;
let ResourceCycles = [3];
}
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpIStrILd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 3;
let ResourceCycles = [3, 1];
}
// Packed Compare Explicit Length Strings, Return Index
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpEStrI, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 4;
let ResourceCycles = [8];
}
def : WriteRes<WritePCmpEStrILd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 4;
let ResourceCycles = [7, 1];
}
// AES Instructions.
def : WriteRes<WriteAESDecEnc, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 8;
let ResourceCycles = [2];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteAESDecEncLd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 8;
let ResourceCycles = [2, 1];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteAESIMC, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 8;
let ResourceCycles = [2];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteAESIMCLd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 8;
let ResourceCycles = [2, 1];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteAESKeyGen, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 8;
let ResourceCycles = [11];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteAESKeyGenLd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 8;
let ResourceCycles = [10, 1];
}
// Carry-less multiplication instructions.
def : WriteRes<WriteCLMul, [SBPort015]> {
let Latency = 14;
let ResourceCycles = [18];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteCLMulLd, [SBPort015, SBPort23]> {
let Latency = 14;
let ResourceCycles = [17, 1];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteSystem, [SBPort015]> { let Latency = 100; }
def : WriteRes<WriteMicrocoded, [SBPort015]> { let Latency = 100; }
def : WriteRes<WriteFence, [SBPort23, SBPort4]>;
def : WriteRes<WriteNop, []>;
// AVX2 is not supported on that architecture, but we should define the basic
// scheduling resources anyway.
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFShuffle256, SBPort0, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteShuffle256, SBPort0, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVarVecShift, SBPort0, 1>;
} // SchedModel