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8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Oliver Stannard
930aaa18e9 [ARM] Generate consistent frame records for Thumb2
There is not an official documented ABI for frame pointers in Thumb2,
but we should try to emit something which is useful.

We use r7 as the frame pointer for Thumb code, which currently means
that if a function needs to save a high register (r8-r11), it will get
pushed to the stack between the frame pointer (r7) and link register
(r14). This means that while a stack unwinder can follow the chain of
frame pointers up the stack, it cannot know the offset to lr, so does
not know which functions correspond to the stack frames.

To fix this, we need to push the callee-saved registers in two batches,
with the first push saving the low registers, fp and lr, and the second
push saving the high registers. This is already implemented, but
previously only used for iOS. This patch turns it on for all Thumb2
targets when frame pointers are required by the ABI, and the frame
pointer is r7 (Windows uses r11, so this isn't a problem there). If
frame pointer elimination is enabled we still emit a single push/pop
even if we need a frame pointer for other reasons, to avoid increasing
code size.

We must also ensure that lr is pushed to the stack when using a frame
pointer, so that we end up with a complete frame record. Situations that
could cause this were rare, because we already push lr in most
situations so that we can return using the pop instruction.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23516

llvm-svn: 279506
2016-08-23 09:19:22 +00:00
Tim Northover
3173845201 ARM: stop emitting blx instructions for most calls on MachO.
I'm really not sure why we were in the first place, it's the linker's job to
convert between BL/BLX as necessary. Even worse, using BLX left Thumb calls
that could be locally resolved completely unencodable since all offsets to BLX
are multiples of 4.

rdar://26182344

llvm-svn: 269101
2016-05-10 19:17:47 +00:00
Cong Hou
5d51a489ae Replace all weight-based interfaces in MBB with probability-based interfaces, and update all uses of old interfaces.
(This is the second attempt to submit this patch. The first caused two assertion
 failures and was reverted. See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25687)

The patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D13745 is broken into four parts:

1. New interfaces without functional changes (http://reviews.llvm.org/D13908).
2. Use new interfaces in SelectionDAG, while in other passes treat probabilities
as weights (http://reviews.llvm.org/D14361).
3. Use new interfaces in all other passes.
4. Remove old interfaces.

This patch is 3+4 above. In this patch, MBB won't provide weight-based
interfaces any more, which are totally replaced by probability-based ones.
The interface addSuccessor() is redesigned so that the default probability is
unknown. We allow unknown probabilities but don't allow using it together
with known probabilities in successor list. That is to say, we either have a
list of successors with all known probabilities, or all unknown
probabilities. In the latter case, we assume each successor has 1/N
probability where N is the number of successors. An assertion checks if the
user is attempting to add a successor with the disallowed mixed use as stated
above. This can help us catch many misuses.

All uses of weight-based interfaces are now updated to use probability-based
ones.


Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14973

llvm-svn: 254377
2015-12-01 05:29:22 +00:00
Hans Wennborg
6d0b969988 Revert r254348: "Replace all weight-based interfaces in MBB with probability-based interfaces, and update all uses of old interfaces."
and the follow-up r254356: "Fix a bug in MachineBlockPlacement that may cause assertion failure during BranchProbability construction."

Asserts were firing in Chromium builds. See PR25687.

llvm-svn: 254366
2015-12-01 03:49:42 +00:00
Cong Hou
b228d0caa6 Replace all weight-based interfaces in MBB with probability-based interfaces, and update all uses of old interfaces.
The patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D13745 is broken into four parts:

1. New interfaces without functional changes (http://reviews.llvm.org/D13908).
2. Use new interfaces in SelectionDAG, while in other passes treat probabilities
as weights (http://reviews.llvm.org/D14361).
3. Use new interfaces in all other passes.
4. Remove old interfaces.

This patch is 3+4 above. In this patch, MBB won't provide weight-based
interfaces any more, which are totally replaced by probability-based ones.
The interface addSuccessor() is redesigned so that the default probability is
unknown. We allow unknown probabilities but don't allow using it together
with known probabilities in successor list. That is to say, we either have a
list of successors with all known probabilities, or all unknown
probabilities. In the latter case, we assume each successor has 1/N
probability where N is the number of successors. An assertion checks if the
user is attempting to add a successor with the disallowed mixed use as stated
above. This can help us catch many misuses.

All uses of weight-based interfaces are now updated to use probability-based
ones.


Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14973

llvm-svn: 254348
2015-12-01 00:02:51 +00:00
Cong Hou
5747eb82f8 Let SelectionDAG start to use probability-based interface to add successors.
The patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D13745 is broken into four parts:

1. New interfaces without functional changes.
2. Use new interfaces in SelectionDAG, while in other passes treat probabilities
as weights.
3. Use new interfaces in all other passes.
4. Remove old interfaces.

This the second patch above. In this patch SelectionDAG starts to use
probability-based interfaces in MBB to add successors but other MC passes are
still using weight-based interfaces. Therefore, we need to maintain correct
weight list in MBB even when probability-based interfaces are used. This is
done by updating weight list in probability-based interfaces by treating the
numerator of probabilities as weights. This change affects many test cases
that check successor weight values. I will update those test cases once this
patch looks good to you.


Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14361

llvm-svn: 253965
2015-11-24 08:51:23 +00:00
Cong Hou
502353740b Update edge weights properly when merging blocks in if-conversion.
In if-conversion, there is a utility function MergeBlocks() that is used to merge blocks. However, when new edges are built in this function the edge weight is either not provided or not updated properly, leading to a modified CFG with incorrect edge weights. This patch corrects this issue.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12513

llvm-svn: 248030
2015-09-18 20:22:41 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha
3337019a5f [CodeGen][IfCvt] Don't re-ifcvt blocks with unanalyzable terminators.
If we couldn't analyze its terminator (i.e., it's an indirectbr, or some
other weirdness), we can't safely re-if-convert a predicated block,
because we can't tell whether the predicated terminator can
fallthrough (it does).

Currently, we would completely ignore the fallthrough successor. In
the added testcase, this means we used to generate:

    ...
  @ %entry:
    cmp   r5, #21
    ittt  ne
  @ %cc1f:
    cmpne r7, #42
  @ %cc2t:
    strne.w       r5, [r8]
    movne pc, r10
  @ %cc1t:
    ...

Whereas the successor of %cc1f was originally %bb1.
With the fix, we get the correct:

    ...
  @ %entry:
    cmp   r5, #21
    itt   eq
  @ %cc1t:
    streq.w       r5, [r11]
    moveq pc, r0
  @ %cc1f:
    cmp   r7, #42
    itt   ne
  @ %cc2t:
    strne.w       r5, [r8]
    movne pc, r10
  @ %bb1:
    ...

rdar://20192768
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8509

llvm-svn: 232872
2015-03-21 01:23:15 +00:00