Perform DSOLocal propagation within summary list of every GV. This
avoids the repeated query of this information during function
importing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96398
As of binutils 2.36, GNU strip calls chown(2) for "sudo strip foo" and
"sudo strip foo -o foo", but no "sudo strip foo -o bar" or "sudo strip
foo -o ./foo". In other words, while "sudo strip foo -o bar" creates a
new file bar with root access, "sudo strip foo" will keep the owner and
group of foo unchanged. Currently llvm-objcopy and llvm-strip behave
differently, always changing the owner and gropu to root. The
discrepancy prevents Chrome OS from migrating to llvm-objcopy and
llvm-strip as they change file ownership and cause intended users/groups
to lose access when invoked by sudo with the following sequence
(recommended in man page of GNU strip).
1.<Link the executable as normal.>
1.<Copy "foo" to "foo.full">
1.<Run "strip --strip-debug foo">
1.<Run "objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.full foo">
This patch makes llvm-objcopy and llvm-strip follow GNU's behavior.
Link: crbug.com/1108880
Rather than storing the query depth in AAResults, store it in AAQI.
This makes more sense, as it is a property of the query. This
sidesteps the issue of D94363, fixing slightly inaccurate AA
statistics. Additionally, I plan to use the Depth from BasicAA in
the future, where fetching it from AAResults would be unreliable.
This change is not quite as straightforward as it seems, because
we need to preserve the depth when creating a new AAQI for recursive
queries across phis. I'm adding a new method for this, as we may
need to preserve additional information here in the future.
This combine tries to do inter-block hoisting of extends of G_PHIs, into the
originating blocks of the phi's incoming value. The idea is to expose further
optimization opportunities that are normally obscured by the PHI.
Some basic heuristics, and a target hook for AArch64 is added, to allow tuning.
E.g. if the extend is used by a G_PTR_ADD, it doesn't perform this combine
since it may be folded into the addressing mode during selection.
There are very minor code size improvements on AArch64 -Os, but the real benefit
is that it unlocks optimizations like AArch64 conditional compares on some
benchmarks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95703
This patch intended to provide additional interface to LLVMsymbolizer
such that they work directly on object files. There is an existing
method - symbolizecode which takes an object file, this patch provides
similar overloads for symbolizeInlinedCode, symbolizeData,
symbolizeFrame. This can be useful for clients who already have a
in-memory object files to symbolize for.
Patch By: pvellien (praveen velliengiri)
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95232
This allows for suspend point specific resume function types.
Return values from a suspend point can therefore be modelled as
arguments to the resume function. Allowing for directly passed return
types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96136
This patch adds a pass to replace calls to vector intrinsics (i.e., LLVM
intrinsics operating on vector operands) with calls to a vector library.
Currently, calls to LLVM intrinsics are only replaced with calls to vector
libraries when scalar calls to intrinsics are vectorized by the Loop- or
SLP-Vectorizer.
With this pass, it is now possible to replace calls to LLVM intrinsics
already operating on vector operands, e.g., if such code was generated
by MLIR. For the replacement, information from the TargetLibraryInfo,
e.g., as specified via -vector-library is used.
This is a re-try of the original commit 2303e93e66 that was reverted
due to pass manager problems. Other minor changes have also been made.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95373
explicitly emitting retainRV or claimRV calls in the IR
Background:
This fixes a longstanding problem where llvm breaks ARC's autorelease
optimization (see the link below) by separating calls from the marker
instructions or retainRV/claimRV calls. The backend changes are in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92569.
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AutomaticReferenceCounting.html#arc-runtime-objc-autoreleasereturnvalue
What this patch does to fix the problem:
- The front-end adds operand bundle "clang.arc.attachedcall" to calls,
which indicates the call is implicitly followed by a marker
instruction and an implicit retainRV/claimRV call that consumes the
call result. In addition, it emits a call to
@llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use, which consumes the call result, to
prevent the middle-end passes from changing the return type of the
called function. This is currently done only when the target is arm64
and the optimization level is higher than -O0.
- ARC optimizer temporarily emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the calls
with the operand bundle in the IR and removes the inserted calls after
processing the function.
- ARC contract pass emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the call with the
operand bundle. It doesn't remove the operand bundle on the call since
the backend needs it to emit the marker instruction. The retainRV and
claimRV calls are emitted late in the pipeline to prevent optimization
passes from transforming the IR in a way that makes it harder for the
ARC middle-end passes to figure out the def-use relationship between
the call and the retainRV/claimRV calls (which is the cause of
PR31925).
- The function inliner removes an autoreleaseRV call in the callee if
nothing in the callee prevents it from being paired up with the
retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. It then inserts a release call if
claimRV is attached to the call since autoreleaseRV+claimRV is
equivalent to a release. If it cannot find an autoreleaseRV call, it
tries to transfer the operand bundle to a function call in the callee.
This is important since the ARC optimizer can remove the autoreleaseRV
returning the callee result, which makes it impossible to pair it up
with the retainRV/claimRV call in the caller. If that fails, it simply
emits a retain call in the IR if retainRV is attached to the call and
does nothing if claimRV is attached to it.
- SCCP refrains from replacing the return value of a call with a
constant value if the call has the operand bundle. This ensures the
call always has at least one user (the call to
@llvm.objc.clang.arc.noop.use).
- This patch also fixes a bug in replaceUsesOfNonProtoConstant where
multiple operand bundles of the same kind were being added to a call.
Future work:
- Use the operand bundle on x86-64.
- Fix the auto upgrader to convert call+retainRV/claimRV pairs into
calls with the operand bundles.
rdar://71443534
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808
The vector reduction intrinsics started life as experimental ops, so backend support
was lacking. As part of promoting them to 1st-class intrinsics, however, codegen
support was added/improved:
D58015
D90247
So I think it is safe to now remove this complication from IR.
Note that we still have an IR-level codegen expansion pass for these as discussed
in D95690. Removing that is another step in simplifying the logic. Also note that
x86 was already unconditionally forming reductions in IR, so there should be no
difference for x86.
I spot checked a couple of the tests here by running them through opt+llc and did
not see any asm diffs.
If we do find functional differences for other targets, it should be possible
to (at least temporarily) restore the shuffle IR with the ExpandReductions IR
pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96552
This patch changes the VecDesc struct to use ElementCount
instead of an unsigned VF value, in preparation for
future work that adds support for vectorized versions of
math functions using scalable vectors. Since all I'm doing
in this patch is switching the type I believe it's a
non-functional change. I changed getWidestVF to now return
both the widest fixed-width and scalable VF values, but
currently the widest scalable value will be zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96011
This fixes an overly restrictive assumption that the vector is a FixedVectorType,
in code that tries to calculate the cost of a cast operation when splitting
a too-wide vector. The algorithm works the same for scalable vectors, so this
patch removes the cast<FixedVectorType>.
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96253
COST(zext (<4 x i32> load(...) to <4 x i64>)) != 0 when
<4 x i64> is an illegal result type that requires splitting
of the operation.
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96250
Functions are currently processed by the sample profiler loader in a top-down order defined by the static call graph. The order is being adjusted to be a top-down order based on the input context-sensitive profile. One benefit is that the processing order of caller and callee in one SCC would follow the context order in the profile to favor more inlining. Another benefit is that the processing order of caller and callee through an indirect call (which is not on the static call graph) can be honored which in turn allows for more inlining.
The profile top-down order for SCC is also extended to support non-CS profiles.
Two switches `-mllvm -use-profile-indirect-call-edges` and `-mllvm -use-profile-top-down-order` are being introduced.
Reviewed By: wmi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95988
This reverts commit b7d870eae7fdadcf10d0f177faa7409c2e37d776 and the
subsequent fix "[Polly] Fix build after AssumptionCache change (D96168)"
(commit e6810cab09fcbc87b6e5e4d226de0810e2f2ea38).
It caused indeterminism in the output, such that e.g. the
polly-x86_64-linux buildbot failed accasionally.
In addition to wall time etc. this should allow us to get less noisy
values for time measurements.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96049
This will be needed in the loop-vectorizer where the minimum VF
requested may be a scalable VF. getMinimumVF now takes an additional
operand 'IsScalableVF' that indicates whether a scalable VF is required.
Reviewed By: kparzysz, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96020
Rename the `RF_MoveDistinctMDs` flag passed into `MapValue` and
`MapMetadata` to `RF_ReuseAndMutateDistinctMDs` in order to more
precisely describe its effect and clarify the header documentation.
Found this while helping to investigate PR48841, which pointed out an
unsound use of the flag in `CloneModule()`. For now I've just added a
FIXME there, but I'm hopeful that the new (more precise) name will
prevent other similar errors.
The IR/MIR pseudo probe intrinsics don't get materialized into real machine instructions and therefore they don't incur runtime cost directly. However, they come with indirect cost by blocking certain optimizations. Some of the blocking are intentional (such as blocking code merge) for better counts quality while the others are accidental. This change unblocks perf-critical optimizations that do not affect counts quality. They include:
1. IR InstCombine, sinking load operation to shorten lifetimes.
2. MIR LiveRangeShrink, similar to #1
3. MIR TwoAddressInstructionPass, i.e, opeq transform
4. MIR function argument copy elision
5. IR stack protection. (though not perf-critical but nice to have).
Reviewed By: wmi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95982
It seems nicer to list passes given a flag rather than displaying all
passes in opt --help.
This is awkwardly structured because a PassBuilder is required, but
reusing the PassBuilder in runPassPipeline() doesn't work because we
read the input IR before getting to runPassPipeline(). So printing the
list of passes needs to happen before reading the input IR. If we remove
the legacy PM code in main() and move everything from NewPMDriver.cpp
into opt.cpp, we can create the PassBuilder before reading IR and check
if we should print the list of passes and exit. But until then this hack
seems fine.
Compared to the legacy PM, the new PM passes are lacking descriptions.
We'll need to figure out a way to add descriptions if we think this is
important.
Also, this only works for passes specified in PassRegistry.def. If we
want to print other custom registered passes, we'll need a different
mechanism.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96101
Originally landed in ddc2f1e3fb4 and reverted in d32deaab4d because of
a Generic test objecting. That was fixed up in 013613964fd9. Original
landing commit message follows:
[DWARF] Location-less inlined variables should not have DW_TAG_variable
Discussed in this thread:
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-January/148139.html
DwarfDebug::collectEntityInfo accidentally distinguishes between variable
locations that never have a location specified, and variable locations that
have an empty location specified. The latter leads to the creation of an
empty variable referring to the abstract origin.
Fix this by seeking a non-empty location before producing a concrete
entity, to guarantee a DW_AT_location will be produced. Other loops in
collectEntityInfo and endFunctionImpl take care of examining the
retainedNodes collection and ensuring optimised-out variables are created.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95617
glibc deprecates `mallinfo` in the latest version of 2.33. This patch replaces the usage of `mallinfo` with the new `mallinfo2` when it's available.
Reviewed By: lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96359
This was taking the calling convention from the parent function,
instead of the callee. Avoids regressions in a future patch when the
caller and callee have different type breakdowns.
For some reason AArch64's lowerFormalArguments seems to intentionally
ignore the parent isVarArg.
Instcombine will convert the nonnull and alignment assumption that use the boolean condtion
to an assumption that uses the operand bundles when knowledge retention is enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82703
The current support only printed coredump notes, but most binaries also
contain notes. This change adds names for four FreeBSD-specific notes and
pretty-prints three of them:
NT_FREEBSD_ABI_TAG:
This note holds a 32-bit (decimal) integer containing the value of the
__FreeBSD_version macro, which is defined in crt1.o and will hold a value
such as 1300076 for a binary build on a FreeBSD 13 system.
NT_FREEBSD_ARCH_TAG:
A string containing the value of the build-time MACHINE_ARCH
NT_FREEBSD_FEATURE_CTL: A 32-bit flag that indicates to the kernel that
the binary wants certain bevahiour. Examples include setting
NT_FREEBSD_FCTL_ASLR_DISABLE which tells the kernel to disable ASLR.
After this change llvm-readobj also no longer decodes coredump-only
FreeBSD notes in non-coredump files. I've also converted the
note-freebsd.s test to use yaml2obj instead of llvm-mc.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74393
This reverts commit 4a64d8fe392449b205e59031aad5424968cf7446.
Makes clang crash when buildling trivial iOS programs, see comment
after https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808#2551401
As of commit 284f2bffc9bc5, the DAG Combiner gets rid of the masking of the
input to this node if the mask only keeps the bottom 16 bits. This is because
the underlying library function does not use the high order bits. However, on
PowerPC's ELFv2 ABI, it is the caller that is responsible for clearing the bits
from the register. Therefore, the library implementation of __gnu_h2f_ieee will
return an incorrect result if the bits aren't cleared.
This combine is desired for ARM (and possibly other targets) so this patch adds
a query to Target Lowering to check if this zeroing needs to be kept.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49092
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96283
References to functions are in program memory and need a `pm()` fixup. This should fix trait objects for Rust on AVR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87631
Patch by Alex Mikhalev.
This patch implements generation of remaining codegen options and tests it by performing parse-generate-parse round trip.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96056
This reverts commit 502a67dd7f23901834e05071ab253889f671b5d9.
This expose a failure in test-suite build on PowerPC,
revert to unblock buildbot first,
Dave will re-commit in https://reviews.llvm.org/D96287.
Thanks Dave.
On AArch64 (which seems to be the only target that supports it), this
attribute allows codegen to avoid saving/restoring the value in x0
across a call.
Gives a 0.1% geomean -Os code size improvement on CTMark.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96099
Summary:
Introduce base classes that hold a textual represent of the IR
based on basic blocks and a base class for comparing this
representation. A new change printer is introduced that uses these
classes to save and compare representations of the IR before and after
each pass. It only reports when changes are made by a pass (similar to
-print-changed) except that the changes are shown in a patch-like format
with those lines that are removed shown in red prefixed with '-' and those
added shown in green with '+'. This functionality was introduced in my
tutorial at the 2020 virtual developer's meeting.
Author: Jamie Schmeiser <schmeise@ca.ibm.com>
Reviewed By: aeubanks (Arthur Eubanks)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91890
Different targets might handle branch performance differently, so this patch allows for
targets to specify the TailDuplicateSize threshold. Said threshold defines how small a branch
can be and still be duplicated to generate straight-line code instead.
This patch also specifies said override values for the AArch64 subtarget.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95631
When running the tests on PowerPC and x86, the lit test GlobalISel/trunc.ll fails at the memory sanitize step. This seems to be due to wrong invalid logic (which matches even if it shouldn't) and likely missing variable initialisation."
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95878
These headers can be in a Clang module like the rest. This also fixes the
modules build that is currently struggling with these headers being textually
included in several other modules.