loops. This optimization is not turned on by default yet, but may be run
with the opt tool's -loop-reduce flag. There are many FIXMEs listed in the
code that will make it far more applicable to a wide range of code, but you
have to start somewhere :)
This limited version currently triggers on the following tests in the
MultiSource directory:
pcompress2: 7 times
cfrac: 5 times
anagram: 2 times
ks: 6 times
yacr2: 2 times
llvm-svn: 17134
change hacks off 10K of bytecode from perlbmk (.5%) even though the front-end
is not generating them yet and we are not optimizing the resultant code.
This isn't too bad.
llvm-svn: 17111
exercise that I'm not interested in tackling right now. Just punt and treat them
like unwind's.
This 'fixes' test/Regression/Transforms/ADCE/unreachable-function.ll
llvm-svn: 17106
unneccesary. This allows us to delete several hundred phi nodes of the
form PHI(x,x,x,undef) from 253.perlbmk and probably other programs as well.
This implements Mem2Reg/UndefValuesMerge.ll
llvm-svn: 17098
pointer recurrences into expressions from this:
%P_addr.0.i.0 = phi sbyte* [ getelementptr ([8 x sbyte]* %.str_1, int 0, int 0), %entry ], [ %inc.0.i, %no_exit.i ]
%inc.0.i = getelementptr sbyte* %P_addr.0.i.0, int 1 ; <sbyte*> [#uses=2]
into this:
%inc.0.i = getelementptr sbyte* getelementptr ([8 x sbyte]* %.str_1, int 0, int 0), int %inc.0.i.rec
Actually create something nice, like this:
%inc.0.i = getelementptr [8 x sbyte]* %.str_1, int 0, int %inc.0.i.rec
llvm-svn: 16924
First, it allows SRA of globals that have embedded arrays, implementing
GlobalOpt/globalsra-partial.llx. This comes up infrequently, but does allow,
for example, deleting several stores to dead parts of globals in dhrystone.
Second, this implements GlobalOpt/malloc-promote-*.llx, which is the
following nifty transformation:
Basically if a global pointer is initialized with malloc, and we can tell
that the program won't notice, we transform this:
struct foo *FooPtr;
...
FooPtr = malloc(sizeof(struct foo));
...
FooPtr->A FooPtr->B
Into:
struct foo FooPtrBody;
...
FooPtrBody.A FooPtrBody.B
This comes up occasionally, for example, the 'disp' global in 183.equake (where
the xform speeds the CBE version of the program up from 56.16s to 52.40s (7%)
on apoc), and the 'desired_accept', 'fixLRBT', 'macroArray', & 'key_queue'
globals in 300.twolf (speeding it up from 22.29s to 21.55s (3.4%)).
The nice thing about this xform is that it exposes the resulting global to
global variable optimization and makes alias analysis easier in addition to
eliminating a few loads.
llvm-svn: 16916
still optimize away all of the indirect calls and loads, etc from it.
This turns code like this:
if (G != 0)
G();
into
if (G != 0)
ActualCallee();
This triggers a couple of times in gcc and libstdc++.
llvm-svn: 16901
stored to, but are stored at variable indexes. This occurs at least in
176.gcc, but probably others, and we should handle it for completeness.
llvm-svn: 16876
has a large number of users. Instead, just keep track of whether we're
making changes as we do so.
This patch has no functionlity changes.
llvm-svn: 16874
we know that all uses of the global will trap if the pointer contained is
null. In this case, we forward substitute the stored value to any uses.
This has the effect of devirtualizing trivial globals in trivial cases. For
example, 164.gzip contains this:
gzip.h:extern int (*read_buf) OF((char *buf, unsigned size));
bits.c: read_buf = file_read;
deflate.c: lookahead = read_buf((char*)window,
deflate.c: n = read_buf((char*)window+strstart+lookahead, more);
Since read_buf has to point to file_read at every use, we just replace
the calls through read_buf with a direct call to file_read.
This occurs in several benchmarks, including 176.gcc and 164.gzip. Direct
calls are good and stuff.
llvm-svn: 16871
* Do not lead dangling dead constants prevent optimization
* Iterate global optimization while we're making progress.
These changes allow us to be more aggressive, handling cases like
GlobalOpt/iterate.llx without a problem (turning it into 'ret int 0').
llvm-svn: 16857
optimizations to trigger much more often. This allows the elimination of
several dozen more global variables in Programs/External. Note that we only
do this for non-constant globals: constant globals will already be optimized
out if the accesses to them permit it.
This implements Transforms/GlobalOpt/globalsra.llx
llvm-svn: 16842
* Instead of handling dead functions specially, just nuke them.
* Be more aggressive about cleaning up after constification, in
particular, handle getelementptr instructions and constantexprs.
* Be a little bit more structured about how we process globals.
*** Delete globals that are only stored to, and never read. These are
clearly not useful, so they should go. This implements deadglobal.llx
This last one triggers quite a few times. In particular, 2208 in the
external tests, 1865 of which are in 252.eon. This shrinks eon from
1995094 to 1732341 bytes of bytecode.
llvm-svn: 16802
simplifications of the resultant program to avoid making later passes
do it all.
This allows us to constify globals that just have the same constant that
they are initialized stored into them.
Suprisingly this comes up ALL of the freaking time, dozens of times in
SPEC, 30 times in vortex alone.
For example, on 256.bzip2, it allows us to constify these two globals:
%smallMode = internal global ubyte 0 ; <ubyte*> [#uses=8]
%verbosity = internal global int 0 ; <int*> [#uses=49]
Which (with later optimizations) results in the bytecode file shrinking
from 82286 to 69686 bytes! Lets hear it for IPO :)
For the record, it's nuking lots of "if (verbosity > 2) { do lots of stuff }"
code.
llvm-svn: 16793
an instruction if it can be hoisted to a common dominator of the block.
This implements: test/Regression/Transforms/TailDup/MergeTest.ll
llvm-svn: 16758
* SubOne/AddOne functions always return ConstantInt, declare them as such
* Pull code for handling setcc X, cst, where cst is at the end of the range,
or cc is LE or GE up earlier in visitSetCondInst. This reduces #iterations
in some cases.
* Fold: (div X, C1) op C2 -> range check, implementing div.ll:test6 - test9.
llvm-svn: 16588
This takes something like this:
%A = phi int [ 3, %cond_false.0 ], [ 2, %endif.0.i ], [ 2, %endif.1.i ]
%B = div int %tmp.243, 4
and turns it into:
%A = phi int [ 3/4, %cond_false.0 ], [ 2/4, %endif.0.i ], [ 2/4, %endif.1.i ]
which is later simplified (in this case) into %A = 0.
This triggers thousands of times in spec, for example, 269 times in 176.gcc.
This is tested by InstCombine/add.ll:test23 and set.ll:test18.
llvm-svn: 16582
Instcombine (setcc (truncate X), C1).
This occurs THOUSANDS of times in many benchmarks. Particularlly common
seem to be things like (seteq (cast bool X to int), int 0)
This turns it into (seteq bool %X, false), which then becomes (not %X).
llvm-svn: 16567
This is important for several reasons:
1. Benchmarks have lots of code that looks like this (perlbmk in particular):
%tmp.2.i = setne int %tmp.0.i, 128 ; <bool> [#uses=1]
%tmp.6343 = seteq int %tmp.0.i, 1 ; <bool> [#uses=1]
%tmp.63 = and bool %tmp.2.i, %tmp.6343 ; <bool> [#uses=1]
we now fold away the setne, a clear improvement.
2. In the more important cases, such as (X >= 10) & (X < 20), we now produce
smaller code: (X-10) < 10.
3. Perhaps the nicest effect of this patch is that it really helps out the
code generators. In particular, for a 'range test' like the above,
instead of generating this on X86 (the difference on PPC is even more
pronounced):
cmp %EAX, 50
setge %CL
cmp %EAX, 100
setl %AL
and %CL, %AL
cmp %CL, 0
we now generate this:
add %EAX, -50
cmp %EAX, 50
Furthermore, this causes setcc's to be folded into branches more often.
These combinations trigger dozens of times in the spec benchmarks, particularly
in 176.gcc, 186.crafty, 253.perlbmk, 254.gap, & 099.go.
llvm-svn: 16559
Implement (setcc (shl X, C1), C2) folding.
The second one occurs several dozen times in spec. The first was added
just in case. :)
These are tested by shift.ll:test2[12], and div.ll:test5
llvm-svn: 16549
This latent bug was exposed by recent changes, and is tested as:
llvm/test/Regression/Transforms/InstCombine/2004-09-28-BadShiftAndSetCC.llx
llvm-svn: 16546
triggers often, for example:
6x in povray, 1x in gzip, 279x in gcc, 1x in crafty, 8x in eon, 11x in perlbmk,
362x in gap, 4x in vortex, 14 in m88ksim, 211x in 126.gcc, 1x in compress,
11x in ijpeg, and 4x in 147.vortex.
llvm-svn: 16521
whose addresses where used by trivial phi nodes and select instructions. This
is now performed by the instcombine pass, which is more powerful, is much
simpler, and is faster. This allows the deletion of a bunch of code, two
FIXME's and two gotos.
llvm-svn: 16406
a function being deleted. Due to optimizations done while inlining, there
can be edges from the external call node to a function node that were not
apparent any longer.
This fixes the compiler crash while compiling 175.vpr
llvm-svn: 16399
Move include/Config and include/Support into include/llvm/Config,
include/llvm/ADT and include/llvm/Support. From here on out, all LLVM
public header files must be under include/llvm/.
llvm-svn: 16137
block (common in a switch), make sure to remove extra edges in successor
blocks. This fixes CodeExtractor/2004-08-12-BlockExtractPHI.ll and should
be pulled into LLVM 1.3 (though the regression test need not be, as that
would require pulling in the LoopExtract.cpp changes).
llvm-svn: 15717
instructions in the body of the function (not the entry block). This fixes
test/Programs/SingleSource/Regression/C/2004-08-12-InlinerAndAllocas.c
and test/Programs/External/SPEC/CINT2000/176.gcc on zion.
This should obviously be pulled into 1.3.
llvm-svn: 15684
dangling constant users were removed from a function, causing it to be dead,
we never removed the call graph edge from the external node to the function.
In most cases, this didn't cause a problem (by luck). This should definitely
go into 1.3
llvm-svn: 15570
1. Fix a REALLY nasty cyclic replacement issue that Anshu discovered, causing
nondeterminstic crashes and memory corruption.
2. For performance, don't go inserting constantexpr casts of GV pointers.
This should definitely go into 1.3
llvm-svn: 15568
assumed that a constant on the RHS of a multiplication was either an
IntConstant or an FPConstant. It checked for an IntConstant and then,
if it did not find one, did a hard cast to an FPConstant. That code
would crash if the RHS were a ConstantExpr that was neither an
IntConstant nor an FPConstant. This version replaces the hard cast
with a dyn_cast. It performs the same way for IntConstants and
FPConstants but does nothing, instead of crashing, for constant
expressions.
The regression test for this change is 2004-07-27-ConstantExprMul.ll.
llvm-svn: 15291
a bug in DSE).
* Delete dead operand uses iteratively instead of recursively, using a
SetVector.
* Defer deletion of dead operand uses until the end of processing, which means
we don't have to bother with updating the AliasSetTracker. This speeds up
DSE substantially.
llvm-svn: 15204
* Test for whether bits are shifted out during the optzn.
If so, the fold is illegal, though it can be handled explicitly for setne/seteq
This fixes the miscompilation of 254.gap last night, which was a latent bug
exposed by other optimizer improvements.
llvm-svn: 15085
actually care about. Someday when the cast instruction is gone, we can do
better here, but this will do for now. This implements
instcombine/cast.ll:test17/18 as well.
llvm-svn: 15018
This eliminates an N*N*logN algorithm from the loop simplify pass, replacing
it with a much simpler and faster alternative. In a debug build, this reduces
gccas time on eon from 85s to 42s.
llvm-svn: 14851
"load (cast foo)". This allows us to compile C++ code like this:
class Bclass {
public: virtual int operator()() { return 666; }
};
class Dclass: public Bclass {
public: virtual int operator()() { return 667; }
} ;
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
Dclass x;
return x();
}
Into this:
int %main(int %argc, sbyte** %argv) {
entry:
call void %__main( )
ret int 667
}
Instead of this:
int %main(int %argc, sbyte** %argv) {
entry:
%x = alloca "struct.std::bad_typeid" ; <"struct.std::bad_typeid"*> [#uses=3]
call void %__main( )
%tmp.1.i.i = getelementptr "struct.std::bad_typeid"* %x, uint 0, uint 0, uint 0 ; <int (...)***> [#uses=1]
store int (...)** getelementptr ([3 x int (...)*]* %vtable for Bclass, int 0, long 2), int (...)*** %tmp.1.i.i
%tmp.3.i = getelementptr "struct.std::bad_typeid"* %x, int 0, uint 0, uint 0 ; <int (...)***> [#uses=1]
store int (...)** getelementptr ([3 x int (...)*]* %vtable for Dclass, int 0, long 2), int (...)*** %tmp.3.i
%tmp.5 = load int ("struct.std::bad_typeid"*)** cast (int (...)** getelementptr ([3 x int (...)*]* %vtable for Dclass, int 0, long 2) to int
("struct.std::bad_typeid"*)**) ; <int ("struct.std::bad_typeid"*)*> [#uses=1]
%tmp.6 = call int %tmp.5( "struct.std::bad_typeid"* %x ) ; <int> [#uses=1]
ret int %tmp.6
ret int 0
}
In order words, we now resolve the virtual function call.
llvm-svn: 14783
Don't touch GEPs for which DecomposeArrayRef is not going to do anything
special (e.g., < 2 indices, or 2 indices and the last one is a constant.)
llvm-svn: 14647
since May 1st. In this code, the pred iterator was being invalidated sometimes
causing the wrong entries to be added to PHI nodes.
The fix for this is to defererence and safe the *PI value before we hack on
branch instructions, which changes use/def chains, which SOMETIMES invalidates
the iterator.
llvm-svn: 14278
non-deterministic things like the ordering of blocks in the dominance
frontier of a BB. Unfortunately, I don't know of a better way to solve
this problem than to explicitly sort the BB's in function-order before
processing them. This is guaranteed to slow the pass down a bit, but
is absolutely necessary to get usable diffs between two different tools
executing the mem2reg or scalarrepl pass.
Before this, bazillions of spurious diff failures occurred all over the
place due to the different order of processing PHIs:
- %tmp.111 = getelementptr %struct.Connector_struct* %upcon.0.0, uint 0, uint 0
+ %tmp.111 = getelementptr %struct.Connector_struct* %upcon.0.1, uint 0, uint 0
Now, the diffs match.
llvm-svn: 14244
nondeterministic results that depend on where these objects land in memory.
Instead, sort by the value of the constant, which is stable.
Before this patch, the -simplifycfg pass run from two different compilers
could cause different code to be generated, though it was semantically the
same:
@@ -12258,8 +12258,8 @@
%s_addr.1 = phi sbyte* [ %s, %entry ], [ %inc.0, %no_exit ] ; <sbyte*> [#uses=5]
%tmp.1 = load sbyte* %s_addr.1 ; <sbyte> [#uses=1]
switch sbyte %tmp.1, label %no_exit [
- sbyte 0, label %loopexit
sbyte 46, label %loopexit
+ sbyte 0, label %loopexit
]
We need to stomp all of this stuff out.
llvm-svn: 14243
is write an autoconf macro that checks whether __isnan or isnan actually works
**using the C++ compiler after #include <cmath>**, instead of doing it the easy
way with AC_CHECK_FUNCS().
llvm-svn: 14171
186.crafty, fhourstones and 132.ijpeg.
Bugpoint makes really nasty miscompilations embarassingly easy to find. It
narrowed it down to the instcombiner and this testcase (from fhourstones):
bool %l7153_l4706_htstat_loopentry_2E_4_no_exit_2E_4(int* %i, [32 x int]* %works, int* %tmp.98.out) {
newFuncRoot:
%tmp.96 = load int* %i ; <int> [#uses=1]
%tmp.97 = getelementptr [32 x int]* %works, long 0, int %tmp.96 ; <int*> [#uses=1]
%tmp.98 = load int* %tmp.97 ; <int> [#uses=2]
%tmp.99 = load int* %i ; <int> [#uses=1]
%tmp.100 = and int %tmp.99, 7 ; <int> [#uses=1]
%tmp.101 = seteq int %tmp.100, 7 ; <bool> [#uses=2]
%tmp.102 = cast bool %tmp.101 to int ; <int> [#uses=0]
br bool %tmp.101, label %codeRepl4.exitStub, label %codeRepl3.exitStub
codeRepl4.exitStub: ; preds = %newFuncRoot
store int %tmp.98, int* %tmp.98.out
ret bool true
codeRepl3.exitStub: ; preds = %newFuncRoot
store int %tmp.98, int* %tmp.98.out
ret bool false
}
... which only has one combination performed on it:
$ llvm-as < t.ll | opt -instcombine -debug | llvm-dis
IC: Old = %tmp.101 = seteq int %tmp.100, 7 ; <bool> [#uses=1]
New = setne int %tmp.100, 0 ; <bool>:<badref> [#uses=0]
IC: MOD = br bool %tmp.101, label %codeRepl3.exitStub, label %codeRepl4.exitStub
IC: MOD = %tmp.97 = getelementptr [32 x int]* %works, uint 0, int %tmp.96 ; <int*> [#uses=1]
It doesn't get much better than this. :)
llvm-svn: 14109
collapse this:
bool %le(int %A, int %B) {
%c1 = setgt int %A, %B
%tmp = select bool %c1, int 1, int 0
%c2 = setlt int %A, %B
%result = select bool %c2, int -1, int %tmp
%c3 = setle int %result, 0
ret bool %c3
}
into:
bool %le(int %A, int %B) {
%c3 = setle int %A, %B ; <bool> [#uses=1]
ret bool %c3
}
which is handy, because the Java FE makes these sequences all over the place.
This is tested as: test/Regression/Transforms/InstCombine/JavaCompare.ll
llvm-svn: 14086
This code hadn't been updated after the "structs with more than 256 elements"
related changes to the GEP instruction. Also it was not handling the
ConstantAggregateZero class.
Now it does!
llvm-svn: 13834
Add support for acos/asin/atan. 188.ammp contains three calls to acos with
constant arguments. Constant folding it allows elimination of those 3 calls
and three FP divisions of the results.
llvm-svn: 13821
into (X & (C2 << C1)) != (C3 << C1), where the shift may be either left or
right and the compare may be any one.
This triggers 1546 times in 176.gcc alone, as it is a common pattern that
occurs for bitfield accesses.
llvm-svn: 13740