* MemCpyOptimization can only be optimized if the 3rd and 4th arguments are
constants and we weren't checking for that.
* The result of llvm.memcpy (and llvm.memmove) is void* not sbyte*, put in
a cast.
llvm-svn: 21570
* Have the SimplifyLibCalls pass acquire the TargetData and pass it down to
the optimization classes so they can use it to make better choices for
the signatures of functions, etc.
* Rearrange the code a little so the utility functions are closer to their
usage and keep the core of the pass near the top of the files.
* Adjust the StrLen pass to get/use the correct prototype depending on the
TargetData::getIntPtrType() result. The result of strlen is size_t which
could be either uint or ulong depending on the platform.
* Clean up some coding nits (cast vs. dyn_cast, remove redundant items from
a switch, etc.)
* Implement the MemMoveOptimization as a twin of MemCpyOptimization (they
only differ in name).
llvm-svn: 21569
named getConstantStringLength. This is the common part of StrCpy and
StrLen optimizations and probably several others, yet to be written. It
performs all the validity checks for looking at constant arrays that are
supposed to be null-terminated strings and then computes the actual
length of the string.
* Implement the MemCpyOptimization class. This just turns memcpy of 1, 2, 4
and 8 byte data blocks that are properly aligned on those boundaries into
a load and a store. Much more could be done here but alignment
restrictions and lack of knowledge of the target instruction set prevent
use from doing significantly more. That will have to be delegated to the
code generators as they lower llvm.memcpy calls.
llvm-svn: 21562
* Change signatures of OptimizeCall and ValidateCalledFunction so they are
non-const, allowing the optimization object to be modified. This is in
support of caching things used across multiple calls.
* Provide two functions for constructing and caching function types
* Modify the StrCatOptimization to cache Function objects for strlen and
llvm.memcpy so it doesn't regenerate them on each call site. Make sure
these are invalidated each time we start the pass.
* Handle both a GEP Instruction and a GEP ConstantExpr
* Add additional checks to make sure we really are dealing with an arary of
sbyte and that all the element initializers are ConstantInt or
ConstantExpr that reduce to ConstantInt.
* Make sure the GlobalVariable is constant!
* Don't use ConstantArray::getString as it can fail and it doesn't give us
the right thing. We must check for null bytes in the middle of the array.
* Use llvm.memcpy instead of memcpy so we can factor alignment into it.
* Don't use void* types in signatures, replace with sbyte* instead.
llvm-svn: 21555
* Don't use std::string for the function names, const char* will suffice
* Allow each CallOptimizer to validate the function signature before
doing anything
* Repeatedly loop over the functions until an iteration produces
no more optimizations. This allows one optimization to insert a
call that is optimized by another optimization.
* Implement the ConstantArray portion of the StrCatOptimization
* Provide a template for the MemCpyOptimization
* Make ExitInMainOptimization split the block, not delete everything
after the return instruction.
(This covers revision 1.3 and 1.4, as the 1.3 comments were botched)
llvm-svn: 21548
* Fix comments at top of file
* Change algorithm for running the call optimizations from n*n to something
closer to n.
* Use a hash_map to store and lookup the optimizations since there will
eventually (or potentially) be a large number of them. This gets lookup
based on the name of the function to O(1). Each CallOptimizer now has a
std::string member named func_name that tracks the name of the function
that it applies to. It is this string that is entered into the hash_map
for fast comparison against the function names encountered in the module.
* Cleanup some style issues pertaining to iterator invalidation
* Don't pass the Function pointer to the OptimizeCall function because if
the optimization needs it, it can get it from the CallInst passed in.
* Add the skeleton for a new CallOptimizer, StrCatOptimizer which will
eventually replace strcat's of constant strings with direct copies.
llvm-svn: 21526
calls. The pass visits all external functions in the module and determines
if such function calls can be optimized. The optimizations are specific to
the library calls involved. This initial version only optimizes calls to
exit(3) when they occur in main(): it changes them to ret instructions.
llvm-svn: 21522
in SPEC, the subsequent optimziations that we are after don't play with
with FP values, so disable this xform for them. Really we just don't want
stuff like:
double G; (always 0 or 412312.312)
= G;
turning into:
bool G_b;
= G_b ? 412312.312 : 0;
We'd rather just do the load.
-Chris
llvm-svn: 18819
down to actually BE a bool. This allows simple value range propagation
stuff work harder, deleting comparisons in bzip2 in some hot loops.
This implements GlobalOpt/integer-bool.ll, which is the essence of the
loop condition distilled into a testcase.
llvm-svn: 18817
in scary and unknown ways before we promote it. This fixes the miscompilation
of 188.ammp that has been plauging us since a globalopt patch went in.
Thanks a ton to Tanya for helping me diagnose the problem!
llvm-svn: 18418
value. This allows us to turn more globals into constants and eliminate them.
This patch implements GlobalOpt/load-store-global.llx.
Note that this patch speeds up 255.vortex from:
Output/255.vortex.out-cbe.time:program 7.640000
Output/255.vortex.out-llc.time:program 9.810000
to:
Output/255.vortex.out-cbe.time:program 7.250000
Output/255.vortex.out-llc.time:program 9.490000
Which isn't bad at all!
llvm-svn: 17746
constant value. This makes the return value dead and allows for
simplification in the caller.
This implements IPConstantProp/return-constant.ll
This triggers several dozen times throughout SPEC.
llvm-svn: 17730
argument pointers. This is only valid to do if the function already
unconditionally loaded an argument or if the pointer passed in is known
to be valid. Make sure to do the required checks.
This fixed ArgumentPromotion/control-flow.ll and the Burg program.
llvm-svn: 17718
This allows to elimination of a bunch of global pool descriptor args from
programs being pool allocated (and is also generally useful!)
llvm-svn: 17657