The documentation stated "Access to explicit operands of the
instruction." This is misleading, as it also lists implicit operands.
Patch by Philip Ginsbach.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35481
llvm-svn: 344338
Fixes PR32160 by reducing the size of PSHUFB if we only use one of the lanes.
This approach can probably be generalized to handle any target shuffle (and any subvector index) but we have no test coverage at the moment.
llvm-svn: 344336
This patch adds the ability to identify instructions that are "move elimination
candidates". It also allows scheduling models to describe processor register
files that allow move elimination.
A move elimination candidate is an instruction that can be eliminated at
register renaming stage.
Each subtarget can specify which instructions are move elimination candidates
with the help of tablegen class "IsOptimizableRegisterMove" (see
llvm/Target/TargetInstrPredicate.td).
For example, on X86, BtVer2 allows both GPR and MMX/SSE moves to be eliminated.
The definition of 'IsOptimizableRegisterMove' for BtVer2 looks like this:
```
def : IsOptimizableRegisterMove<[
InstructionEquivalenceClass<[
// GPR variants.
MOV32rr, MOV64rr,
// MMX variants.
MMX_MOVQ64rr,
// SSE variants.
MOVAPSrr, MOVUPSrr,
MOVAPDrr, MOVUPDrr,
MOVDQArr, MOVDQUrr,
// AVX variants.
VMOVAPSrr, VMOVUPSrr,
VMOVAPDrr, VMOVUPDrr,
VMOVDQArr, VMOVDQUrr
], CheckNot<CheckSameRegOperand<0, 1>> >
]>;
```
Definitions of IsOptimizableRegisterMove from processor models of a same
Target are processed by the SubtargetEmitter to auto-generate a target-specific
override for each of the following predicate methods:
```
bool TargetSubtargetInfo::isOptimizableRegisterMove(const MachineInstr *MI)
const;
bool MCInstrAnalysis::isOptimizableRegisterMove(const MCInst &MI, unsigned
CPUID) const;
```
By default, those methods return false (i.e. conservatively assume that there
are no move elimination candidates).
Tablegen class RegisterFile has been extended with the following information:
- The set of register classes that allow move elimination.
- Maxium number of moves that can be eliminated every cycle.
- Whether move elimination is restricted to moves from registers that are
known to be zero.
This patch is structured in three part:
A first part (which is mostly boilerplate) adds the new
'isOptimizableRegisterMove' target hooks, and extends existing register file
descriptors in MC by introducing new fields to describe properties related to
move elimination.
A second part, uses the new tablegen constructs to describe move elimination in
the BtVer2 scheduling model.
A third part, teaches llm-mca how to query the new 'isOptimizableRegisterMove'
hook to mark instructions that are candidates for move elimination. It also
teaches class RegisterFile how to describe constraints on move elimination at
PRF granularity.
llvm-mca tests for btver2 show differences before/after this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53134
llvm-svn: 344334
Failure was discovered upon running
projects/compiler-rt/test/builtins/Unit/divtc3_test.c
in a stage2 compiler build.
When compiling projects/compiler-rt/lib/builtins/divtc3.c,
a call to fmaxl within the divtc3 implementation had its
return values read from registers $2 and $3 instead of $f0 and $f2.
Include fmaxl in the list of long double emulation routines
to have its return value correctly interpreted as f128.
Almost exact issue here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D17760
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52649
llvm-svn: 344326
Summary:
This change adds support for the GNU --target flag, which sets both --input-target and --output-target.
GNU objcopy doesn't do any checking for whether both --target and --{input,output}-target are used, and so it allows both, e.g. "--target A --output-target B" is equivalent to "--input-target A --output-target B" since the later command line flag would override earlier ones. This may be error prone, so I chose to implement it as an error if both are used. I'm not sure if anyone is actually using both.
Reviewers: jakehehrlich, jhenderson, alexshap
Reviewed By: jakehehrlich, alexshap
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53029
llvm-svn: 344321
I want to add another pattern here that includes scalar_to_vector,
so this makes that patch smaller. I was hoping to remove the
hasOneUse() check because it shouldn't be necessary for common
codegen, but an AMDGPU test has a comment suggesting that the
extra check makes things better on one of those targets.
llvm-svn: 344320
It originally triggered a stepping problem in the debugger, which could
be fixed by adjusting CodeGen/LexicalScopes.cpp however it seems we prefer
the previous behavior anyway.
See the discussion for details: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20181008/593833.html
This reverts commit r343880.
This reverts commit r343874.
llvm-svn: 344318
DIV/REM by constants should always be expanded into mul/shift/etc.
patterns. Unfortunately the ConstantHoisting pass runs too early at a
point where the pattern isn't expanded yet. However after
ConstantHoisting hoisted some immediate the result may not expand
anymore. Also the hoisting typically doesn't make sense because it
operates on immediates that will change completely during the expansion.
Report DIV/REM as TCC_Free so ConstantHoisting will not touch them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53174
llvm-svn: 344315
Summary:
We have two copies of createPrivateGlobalForString (in asan and in esan).
This change merges them into one. NFC
Reviewers: vitalybuka
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53178
llvm-svn: 344314
Summary:
Instruction with 0 in fence field being disassembled as fence , iorw.
Printing "unknown" to match GAS behavior.
This bug was uncovered by a LLVM MC Disassembler Protocol Buffer Fuzzer
for the RISC-V assembly language.
Reviewers: asb
Subscribers: rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, jfb, PkmX, jocewei, asb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51828
llvm-svn: 344309
In this diff we move out CopyConfig from llvm-oobjcopy.cpp into a separate header CopyConfig.h
to enable us (in the future) reuse this class in the other implementations of objcopy (for coff, mach-o).
Additionally this enables us to unload the complexity from llvm-objcopy.cpp a little bit.
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53006
llvm-svn: 344307
On 64-bit targets the generic legalize will use an i64 load and a scalar_to_vector for us. But on 32-bit targets i64 isn't legal and the generic legalizer will end up emitting two 32-bit loads. We have DAG combines that try to put those two loads back together with pretty good success.
This patch instead uses f64 to avoid the splitting entirely. I've made it do the same for 64-bit mode for consistency and to keep the load in the fp domain.
There are a few things in here that look like regressions in 32-bit mode, but I believe they bring us closer to the 64-bit mode codegen. And that the 64-bit mode code could be better. I think those issues should be looked at separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52528
llvm-svn: 344291
Having a constant value operand in the compound instruction
is not always profitable. This patch improves coremark by ~4% on
Hexagon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53152
llvm-svn: 344284
In future, if we may add any new DAG mutations other than artificial dependencies,
the NodeNum may not be valid. Instead the index from topological schedule DAG can be
used as long as we update it with the DAG change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53104
llvm-svn: 344283
This patch updates the DAG change to reflect in the topological ordering
of the nodes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53105
llvm-svn: 344282
This was originally causing some test failures on non-Windows
platforms, which required fixes in the compiler and linker. After
those fixes, however, other tests started failing. Reverting
temporarily until I can address everything.
llvm-svn: 344279
Revert r344206 "[MC][ELF] Fix section_mergeable_size.ll"
They were causing failures on too many important buildbots for too long.
Please revert eagerly if your fix takes more than a couple of hours to land!
llvm-svn: 344278
This patch ports the legacy pass manager to the new one to take advantage of
the benefits of the new PM. This involved moving a lot of the declarations for
`AddressSantizer` to a header so that it can be publicly used via
PassRegistry.def which I believe contains all the passes managed by the new PM.
This patch essentially decouples the instrumentation from the legacy PM such
hat it can be used by both legacy and new PM infrastructure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52739
llvm-svn: 344274
Also, avoid comparing GUIDs when ordering global addresses, because
source file location can cause different GUID to be calculated. As a
result, a pair of symbols can compare "less" in one directory, but
"greater" in another.
llvm-svn: 344271
This is an alternative to D53080 since I think using a BEXTR for a shifted mask is definitely an improvement when the shl can be absorbed into addressing mode. The other cases I'm less sure about.
We already have several tricks for handling an and of a shift in address matching. This adds a new case for BEXTR.
I've moved the BEXTR matching code back to X86ISelDAGToDAG to allow it to match. I suppose alternatively we could directly emit a X86ISD::BEXTR node that isel could pattern match. But I'm trying to view BEXTR matching as an isel concern so DAG combine can see 'and' and 'shift' operations that are well understood. We did lose a couple cases from tbm_patterns.ll, but I think there are ways to recover that.
I've also put back the manual load folding code in matchBEXTRFromAnd that I removed a few months ago in r324939. This gives us some more freedom to make decisions based on the ability to fold a load. I haven't done anything with that yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53126
llvm-svn: 344270
While it doesn't make a *ton* of sense for POSIX paths to be
in PDBs, it's possible to occur in real scenarios involving
cross compilation.
The tools need to be able to handle this, because certain types
of debugging scenarios are possible without a running process
and so don't necessarily require you to be on a Windows system.
These include post-mortem debugging and binary forensics (e.g.
using a debugger to disassemble functions and examine symbols
without running the process).
There's changes in clang, LLD, and lldb in this patch. After
this the cross-platform disassembly and source-list tests pass
on Linux.
Furthermore, the behavior of LLD can now be summarized by a much
simpler rule than before: Unless you specify /pdbsourcepath and
/pdbaltpath, the PDB ends up with paths that are valid within
the context of the machine that the link is performed on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53149
llvm-svn: 344269
error() in llvm-nm intentionally does not return so that the callee can move on to future files/slices. When printing the archive map, this is not currently handled (the caller assumes that error() returns), so processing continues despite there being an error.
Also, change one return to a break, so that symbols can be printed even if the archive map is corrupt.
llvm-svn: 344268
InstCombine keeps a worklist and assumes that optimizations don't
eraseFromParent() the instruction, which SimplifyLibCalls violates. This change
adds a new callback to SimplifyLibCalls to let clients specify their own hander
for erasing actions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52729
llvm-svn: 344251
The ARM64 elf emitter would omit printing data
symbol for zero filled constant data. This patch
overrides the emitFill method as to enforce that
the symbol is correctly printed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53132
llvm-svn: 344248
This commit modifies an existing IR verifier check that
assumes all functions will be located in the default address
space 0.
Rather than using the default paramater value getPointerTo(AddrSpace=0),
explicitly specify the program memory address space from the data layout.
This only affects targets that specify a nonzero address space
in their data layouts. The only in-tree target that does this
is AVR.
llvm-svn: 344243
This is the umin alternative to the umax code from rL344237. We use
DeMorgans law on the umax case to bring us to the same thing on umin,
but using countLeadingOnes, not countLeadingZeros.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53036
llvm-svn: 344239
Use the demanded bits of umax(A,C) to prove we can just use A so long as the
lowest non-zero bit of DemandMask is higher than the highest non-zero bit of C
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53033
llvm-svn: 344237
We assign indices sequentially for seen instructions, so we can just use
a vector and push back the seen instructions. No need for using a
DenseMap.
Reviewers: hsaito, rengolin, nadav, dcaballe
Reviewed By: rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53089
llvm-svn: 344233