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783 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Hal Finkel
79a33a00d6 PPC: Add base-pointer support to builtin setjmp/longjmp
First, this changes the base-pointer implementation to remove an unnecessary
complication (and one that is incompatible with how builtin SjLj is
implemented): instead of using r31 as the base pointer when it is not needed as
a frame pointer, now the base pointer will always be r30 when needed.

Second, we introduce another pseudo register, BP, which is used just like the FP
pseudo register to refer to the base register before we know for certain what
register it will be.

Third, we now save BP into the jmp_buf, and restore r30 from that slot in
longjmp.  If the function that called setjmp did not use a base pointer, then
r30 will be overwritten by the setjmp-calling-function's restore code. FP
restoration (which is restored into r31) works the same way.

llvm-svn: 186545
2013-07-17 23:50:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel
149f358122 PPC: Add CTR-register clobber to builtin setjmp
Because the builtin longjmp implementation uses a CTR-based indirect jump, when
the control flow arrives at the builtin setjmp call, the CTR register has
necessarily been clobbered. Correspondingly, this adds CTR to the list of
implicit definitions of the builtin setjmp pseudo instruction.

We don't need to add CTR to the implicit definitions of builtin longjmp
because, even though it does clobber the CTR register, the control flow cannot
return to inside the loop unless there is also a builtin setjmp call.

llvm-svn: 186488
2013-07-17 05:35:44 +00:00
Hal Finkel
e625744d86 PPC: Implement base pointer and stack realignment
This builds on some frame-lowering code that has existed since 2005 (r24224)
but was disabled in 2008 (r48188) because it needed base pointer support to
function correctly. This implementation follows the strategy suggested by Dale
Johannesen in r48188 where the following comment was added:

  This does not currently work, because the delta between old and new stack
  pointers is added to offsets that reference incoming parameters after the
  prolog is generated, and the code that does that doesn't handle a variable
  delta.  You don't want to do that anyway; a better approach is to reserve
  another register that retains to the incoming stack pointer, and reference
  parameters relative to that.

And now we do exactly that. If we don't need a frame pointer, then we use r31
as a base pointer. If we do need a frame pointer, then we use r30 as a base
pointer. The base pointer retains the value of the stack pointer before it was
decremented in the prologue. We then use the base pointer to resolve all
negative frame indicies. The basic scheme follows that for base pointers in the
X86 backend.

We use a base pointer when we need to dynamically realign the incoming stack
pointer. This currently applies only to static objects (dynamic allocas with
large alignments, and base-pointer support in SjLj lowering will come in future
commits).

llvm-svn: 186478
2013-07-17 00:45:52 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
c1b627a527 [APFloat] PR16573: Avoid losing mantissa bits in ppc_fp128 to double truncation
When truncating to a format with fewer mantissa bits, APFloat::convert
will perform a right shift of the mantissa by the difference of the
precision of the two formats.  Usually, this will result in just the
mantissa bits needed for the target format.

One special situation is if the input number is denormal.  In this case,
the right shift may discard significant bits.  This is usually not a
problem, since truncating a denormal usually results in zero (underflow)
after normalization anyway, since the result format's exponent range is
usually smaller than the target format's.

However, there is one case where the latter property does not hold:
when truncating from ppc_fp128 to double.  In particular, truncating
a ppc_fp128 whose first double of the pair is denormal should result
in just that first double, not zero.  The current code however
performs an excessive right shift, resulting in lost result bits.
This is then caught in the APFloat::normalize call performed by
APFloat::convert and causes an assertion failure.

This patch checks for the scenario of truncating a denormal, and
attempts to (possibly partially) replace the initial mantissa
right shift by decrementing the exponent, if doing so will still
result in a valid *target format* exponent.


Index: test/CodeGen/PowerPC/pr16573.ll
===================================================================
--- test/CodeGen/PowerPC/pr16573.ll	(revision 0)
+++ test/CodeGen/PowerPC/pr16573.ll	(revision 0)
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+; RUN: llc < %s | FileCheck %s
+
+target triple = "powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu"
+
+define double @test() {
+  %1 = fptrunc ppc_fp128 0xM818F2887B9295809800000000032D000 to double
+  ret double %1
+}
+
+; CHECK: .quad -9111018957755033591
+
Index: lib/Support/APFloat.cpp
===================================================================
--- lib/Support/APFloat.cpp	(revision 185817)
+++ lib/Support/APFloat.cpp	(working copy)
@@ -1956,6 +1956,23 @@
     X86SpecialNan = true;
   }
 
+  // If this is a truncation of a denormal number, and the target semantics
+  // has larger exponent range than the source semantics (this can happen
+  // when truncating from PowerPC double-double to double format), the
+  // right shift could lose result mantissa bits.  Adjust exponent instead
+  // of performing excessive shift.
+  if (shift < 0 && isFiniteNonZero()) {
+    int exponentChange = significandMSB() + 1 - fromSemantics.precision;
+    if (exponent + exponentChange < toSemantics.minExponent)
+      exponentChange = toSemantics.minExponent - exponent;
+    if (exponentChange < shift)
+      exponentChange = shift;
+    if (exponentChange < 0) {
+      shift -= exponentChange;
+      exponent += exponentChange;
+    }
+  }
+
   // If this is a truncation, perform the shift before we narrow the storage.
   if (shift < 0 && (isFiniteNonZero() || category==fcNaN))
     lostFraction = shiftRight(significandParts(), oldPartCount, -shift);

llvm-svn: 186409
2013-07-16 13:03:25 +00:00
Hal Finkel
608dbe4a4d Fix register subclass handling in PPCInstrInfo::insertSelect
PPCInstrInfo::insertSelect and PPCInstrInfo::canInsertSelect were computing the
common subclass of the true and false inputs, and then selecting either the
32-bit or the 64-bit isel variant based on the result of calling
PPC::GPRCRegClass.hasSubClassEq(RC) and PPC::G8RCRegClass.hasSubClassEq(RC)
(where RC is the common subclass). Unfortunately, this is not quite right: if
we have something like this:

  %vreg8<def> = SELECT_CC_I8 %vreg4<kill>, %vreg7<kill>, %vreg6<kill>, 76;
    G8RC_and_G8RC_NOX0:%vreg8 CRRC:%vreg4 G8RC_NOX0:%vreg7,%vreg6

then the common subclass of G8RC_and_G8RC_NOX0 and G8RC_NOX0 is G8RC_NOX0, and
G8RC_NOX0 is not a subclass of G8RC (because it also contains the ZERO8
pseudo-register). As a result, we also need to check the common subclass
against GPRC_NOR0 and G8RC_NOX0 explicitly.

This had not been a problem for clients of insertSelect that called
canInsertSelect first (because it had a compensating mistake), but insertSelect
is also used by the PPC pseudo-instruction expander, and this error was causing
a problem in that context.

This problem was found by csmith.

llvm-svn: 186343
2013-07-15 20:22:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel
d34cb3e70c Remove invalid assert in DAGTypeLegalizer::RemapValue
There is a comment at the top of DAGTypeLegalizer::PerformExpensiveChecks
which, in part, says:

  // Note that these invariants may not hold momentarily when processing a node:
  // the node being processed may be put in a map before being marked Processed.

Unfortunately, this assert would be valid only if the above-mentioned invariant
held unconditionally. This was causing llc to assert when, in fact,
everything was fine.

Thanks to Richard Sandiford for investigating this issue!

Fixes PR16562.

llvm-svn: 186338
2013-07-15 18:57:05 +00:00
Stephen Lin
7e501cf4c3 Mass update to CodeGen tests to use CHECK-LABEL for labels corresponding to function definitions for more informative error messages. No functionality change and all updated tests passed locally.
This update was done with the following bash script:

  find test/CodeGen -name "*.ll" | \
  while read NAME; do
    echo "$NAME"
    if ! grep -q "^; *RUN: *llc.*debug" $NAME; then
      TEMP=`mktemp -t temp`
      cp $NAME $TEMP
      sed -n "s/^define [^@]*@\([A-Za-z0-9_]*\)(.*$/\1/p" < $NAME | \
      while read FUNC; do
        sed -i '' "s/;\(.*\)\([A-Za-z0-9_-]*\):\( *\)$FUNC: *\$/;\1\2-LABEL:\3$FUNC:/g" $TEMP
      done
      sed -i '' "s/;\(.*\)-LABEL-LABEL:/;\1-LABEL:/" $TEMP
      sed -i '' "s/;\(.*\)-NEXT-LABEL:/;\1-NEXT:/" $TEMP
      sed -i '' "s/;\(.*\)-NOT-LABEL:/;\1-NOT:/" $TEMP
      sed -i '' "s/;\(.*\)-DAG-LABEL:/;\1-DAG:/" $TEMP
      mv $TEMP $NAME
    fi
  done

llvm-svn: 186280
2013-07-14 06:24:09 +00:00
Stephen Lin
ece45b5ee9 Convert Windows to Unix line endings, no functionality change.
llvm-svn: 186264
2013-07-13 22:08:55 +00:00
Stephen Lin
3ae734a60c Convert CodeGen/*/*.ll tests to use the new CHECK-LABEL for easier debugging. No functionality change and all tests pass after conversion.
This was done with the following sed invocation to catch label lines demarking function boundaries:
    sed -i '' "s/^;\( *\)\([A-Z0-9_]*\):\( *\)test\([A-Za-z0-9_-]*\):\( *\)$/;\1\2-LABEL:\3test\4:\5/g" test/CodeGen/*/*.ll
which was written conservatively to avoid false positives rather than false negatives. I scanned through all the changes and everything looks correct.

llvm-svn: 186258
2013-07-13 20:38:47 +00:00
Stephen Lin
c6bb3a6cda Start using CHECK-LABEL in some tests.
llvm-svn: 186163
2013-07-12 14:54:12 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f153e34eee PPC: Add some missing V_SET0 patterns
We had patterns to match v4i32 immAllZerosV -> V_SET0, but not patterns for
v8i16 (which occurs in the test case) or v16i8. The same was true for
V_SETALLONES (so I added the associated patterns for those as well).

Another bug found by llvm-stress.

llvm-svn: 186108
2013-07-11 17:43:32 +00:00
Hal Finkel
adac2cbb4a PPCDAGToDAGISel::isRunOfOnes should return false on zero
This fixes a bug (found by csmith) at -O0 where we attempt to create a RLWIMI
with an out-of-range operand. Most uses of the isRunOfOnes function are guarded
by a condition that the value is not zero. This was not true in two places, and
in both places a zero input would result in an out-of-rage MB value (= 32).

To fix this, isRunOfOnes returns false on a zero input (and I've remove one
now-redundant guard).

llvm-svn: 186101
2013-07-11 16:31:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel
38ec4d9a41 RegScavenger should not exclude undef uses
When computing currently-live registers, the register scavenger excludes undef
uses. As a result, undef uses are ignored when computing the restore points of
registers spilled into the emergency slots. While the register scavenger
normally excludes from consideration, when scavenging, registers used by the
current instruction, we need to not exclude undef uses. Otherwise, we might end
up requiring more emergency spill slots than we have (in the case where the
undef use *is* the currently-spilled register).

Another bug found by llvm-stress.

llvm-svn: 186067
2013-07-11 05:55:57 +00:00
Hal Finkel
560c3b2ad4 WidenVecRes_BUILD_VECTOR must use the first operand's type
Because integer BUILD_VECTOR operands may have a larger type than the result's
vector element type, and all operands must have the same type, when widening a
BUILD_VECTOR node by adding UNDEFs, we cannot use the vector element type, but
rather must use the type of the existing operands.

Another bug found by llvm-stress.

llvm-svn: 185960
2013-07-09 18:55:10 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
2499045a19 [PowerPC] Better fix for PR16556.
A more complete example of the bug in PR16556 was recently provided,
showing that the previous fix was not sufficient.  The previous fix is
reverted herein.

The real problem is that ReplaceNodeResults() uses LowerFP_TO_INT as
custom lowering for FP_TO_SINT during type legalization, without
checking whether the input type is handled by that routine.
LowerFP_TO_INT requires the input to be f32 or f64, so we fail when
the input is ppcf128.

I'm leaving the test case from the initial fix (r185821) in place, and
adding the new test as another crash-only check.

llvm-svn: 185959
2013-07-09 18:50:20 +00:00
Stephen Lin
30b326010c AArch64/PowerPC/SystemZ/X86: This patch fixes the interface, usage, and all
in-tree implementations of TargetLoweringBase::isFMAFasterThanMulAndAdd in
order to resolve the following issues with fmuladd (i.e. optional FMA)
intrinsics:

1. On X86(-64) targets, ISD::FMA nodes are formed when lowering fmuladd
intrinsics even if the subtarget does not support FMA instructions, leading
to laughably bad code generation in some situations.

2. On AArch64 targets, ISD::FMA nodes are formed for operations on fp128,
resulting in a call to a software fp128 FMA implementation.

3. On PowerPC targets, FMAs are not generated from fmuladd intrinsics on types
like v2f32, v8f32, v4f64, etc., even though they promote, split, scalarize,
etc. to types that support hardware FMAs.

The function has also been slightly renamed for consistency and to force a
merge/build conflict for any out-of-tree target implementing it. To resolve,
see comments and fixed in-tree examples.

llvm-svn: 185956
2013-07-09 18:16:56 +00:00
Hal Finkel
9cb3ba300f Don't crash in SE dealing with ashr x, -1
ScalarEvolution::getSignedRange uses ComputeNumSignBits from ValueTracking on
ashr instructions. ComputeNumSignBits can return zero, but this case was not
handled correctly by the code in getSignedRange which was calling:
  APInt::getSignedMinValue(BitWidth).ashr(NS - 1)
with NS = 0, resulting in an assertion failure in APInt::ashr.

Now, we just return the conservative result (as with NS == 1).

Another bug found by llvm-stress.

llvm-svn: 185955
2013-07-09 18:16:16 +00:00
Hal Finkel
984c244d8d DAGCombine tryFoldToZero cannot create illegal types after type legalization
When folding sub x, x (and other similar constructs), where x is a vector, the
result is a vector of zeros. After type legalization, make sure that the input
zero elements have a legal type. This type may be larger than the result's
vector element type.

This was another bug found by llvm-stress.

llvm-svn: 185949
2013-07-09 17:02:45 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
b664c03f18 [PowerPC] Revert r185476 and fix up TLS variant kinds
In the commit message to r185476 I wrote:

>The PowerPC-specific modifiers VK_PPC_TLSGD and VK_PPC_TLSLD
>correspond exactly to the generic modifiers VK_TLSGD and VK_TLSLD.
>This causes some confusion with the asm parser, since VK_PPC_TLSGD
>is output as @tlsgd, which is then read back in as VK_TLSGD.
>
>To avoid this confusion, this patch removes the PowerPC-specific
>modifiers and uses the generic modifiers throughout.  (The only
>drawback is that the generic modifiers are printed in upper case
>while the usual convention on PowerPC is to use lower-case modifiers.
>But this is just a cosmetic issue.)

This was unfortunately incorrect, there is is fact another,
serious drawback to using the default VK_TLSLD/VK_TLSGD
variant kinds: using these causes ELFObjectWriter::RelocNeedsGOT
to return true, which in turn causes the ELFObjectWriter to emit
an undefined reference to _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_.

This is a problem on powerpc64, because it uses the TOC instead
of the GOT, and the linker does not provide _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_,
so the symbol remains undefined.  This means shared libraries
using TLS built with the integrated assembler are currently
broken.

While the whole RelocNeedsGOT / _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ situation
probably ought to be properly fixed at some point, for now I'm
simply reverting the r185476 commit.  Now this in turn exposes
the breakage of handling @tlsgd/@tlsld in the asm parser that
this check-in was originally intended to fix.

To avoid this regression, I'm also adding a different fix for
this problem: while common code now parses @tlsgd as VK_TLSGD,
a special hack in the asm parser translates this code to the
platform-specific VK_PPC_TLSGD that the back-end now expects.
While this is not really pretty, it's self-contained and
shouldn't hurt anything else for now.  One the underlying
problem is fixed, this hack can be reverted again.

llvm-svn: 185945
2013-07-09 16:41:09 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f972e31b6c PPC: Allocate RS spill slot for unaligned i64 load/store
This fixes another bug found by llvm-stress!

If we happen to be doing an i64 load or store into a stack slot that has less
than a 4-byte alignment, then the frame-index elimination may need to use an
indexed load or store instruction (because the offset may not be a multiple of
4, a requirement of the STD/LD instructions). The extra register needed to hold
the offset comes from the register scavenger, and it is possible that the
scavenger will need to use an emergency spill slot. As a result, we need to
make sure that a spill slot is allocated when doing an i64 load/store into a
less-than-4-byte-aligned stack slot.

Because test cases for things like this tend to be fairly fragile, I've
concatenated a few small bugpoint-reduced test cases together to form the
regression test.

llvm-svn: 185907
2013-07-09 06:34:51 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
cb20efc341 [PowerPC] Always use "assembler dialect" 1
A setting in MCAsmInfo defines the "assembler dialect" to use.  This is used
by common code to choose between alternatives in a multi-alternative GNU
inline asm statement like the following:

  __asm__ ("{sfe|subfe} %0,%1,%2" : "=r" (out) : "r" (in1), "r" (in2));

The meaning of these dialects is platform specific, and GCC defines those
for PowerPC to use dialect 0 for old-style (POWER) mnemonics and 1 for
new-style (PowerPC) mnemonics, like in the example above.

To be compatible with inline asm used with GCC, LLVM ought to do the same.
Specifically, this means we should always use assembler dialect 1 since
old-style mnemonics really aren't supported on any current platform.

However, the current LLVM back-end uses:
  AssemblerDialect = 1;           // New-Style mnemonics.
in PPCMCAsmInfoDarwin, and
  AssemblerDialect = 0;           // Old-Style mnemonics.
in PPCLinuxMCAsmInfo.

The Linux setting really isn't correct, we should be using new-style
mnemonics everywhere.  This is changed by this commit.

Unfortunately, the setting of this variable is overloaded in the back-end
to decide whether or not we are on a Darwin target.  This is done in
PPCInstPrinter (the "SyntaxVariant" is initialized from the MCAsmInfo
AssemblerDialect setting), and also in PPCMCExpr.  Setting AssemblerDialect
to 1 for both Darwin and Linux no longer allows us to make this distinction.

Instead, this patch uses the MCSubtargetInfo passed to createPPCMCInstPrinter
to distinguish Darwin targets, and ignores the SyntaxVariant parameter.
As to PPCMCExpr, this patch adds an explicit isDarwin argument that needs
to be passed in by the caller when creating a target MCExpr.  (To do so
this patch implicitly also reverts commit 184441.)

llvm-svn: 185858
2013-07-08 20:20:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c4d29e61ee PPC: Mark vector CC action for SETO and SETONE as Expand
Another bug found by llvm-stress! This fixes hitting
  llvm_unreachable("Invalid integer vector compare condition");
at the end of getVCmpInst in PPCISelDAGToDAG.

llvm-svn: 185855
2013-07-08 20:00:03 +00:00
Hal Finkel
059614de7f PPC: Mark vector FREM as Expand by default
Another bug found by llvm-stress! This fixes crashing with:
  LLVM ERROR: Cannot select: v4f32 = frem ...

llvm-svn: 185840
2013-07-08 17:30:25 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
58913550ff [PowerPC] Fix PR16556 (handle undef ppcf128 in LowerFP_TO_INT).
PPCTargetLowering::LowerFP_TO_INT() expects its source operand to be
either an f32 or f64, but this is not checked.  A long double
(ppcf128) operand will normally be custom-lowered to a conversion to
f64 in this context.  However, this isn't the case for an UNDEF node.

This patch recognizes a ppcf128 as a legal source operand for
FP_TO_INT only if it's an undef, in which case it creates an undef of
the target type.

At some point we might want to do a wholesale custom lowering of
ISD::UNDEF when the type is ppcf128, but it's not really clear that's
a great idea, and probably more work than it's worth for a situation
that only arises in the case of a programming error.  At this point I
think simple is best.

The test case comes from PR16556, and is a crash-test only.

llvm-svn: 185821
2013-07-08 14:22:45 +00:00
Hal Finkel
b21ca286dc Fix PromoteIntRes_BUILD_VECTOR crash with i1 vectors
This fixes a bug (found by llvm-stress) in
DAGTypeLegalizer::PromoteIntRes_BUILD_VECTOR where it assumed that the result
type would always be larger than the original operands. This is not always
true, however, with boolean vectors. For example, promoting a node of type v8i1
(where the operands will be of type i32, the type to which i1 is promoted) will
yield a node with a result vector element type of i16 (and operands of type
i32). As a result, we cannot blindly assume that we can ANY_EXTEND the operands
to the result type.

llvm-svn: 185794
2013-07-08 06:16:58 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
a5490843a1 [PowerPC] Use mtocrf when available
Just as with mfocrf, it is also preferable to use mtocrf instead of
mtcrf when only a single CR register is to be written.

Current code however always emits mtcrf.  This probably does not matter
when using an external assembler, since the GNU assembler will in fact
automatically replace mtcrf with mtocrf when possible.  It does create
inefficient code with the integrated assembler, however.

To fix this, this patch adds MTOCRF/MTOCRF8 instruction patterns and
uses those instead of MTCRF/MTCRF8 everything.  Just as done in the
MFOCRF patch committed as 185556, these patterns will be converted
back to MTCRF if MTOCRF is not available on the machine.

As a side effect, this allows to modify the MTCRF pattern to accept
the full range of mask operands for the benefit of the asm parser.

llvm-svn: 185561
2013-07-03 17:59:07 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
042ff673b7 [PowerPC] Remove VK_PPC_TLSGD and VK_PPC_TLSLD
The PowerPC-specific modifiers VK_PPC_TLSGD and VK_PPC_TLSLD
correspond exactly to the generic modifiers VK_TLSGD and VK_TLSLD.
This causes some confusion with the asm parser, since VK_PPC_TLSGD
is output as @tlsgd, which is then read back in as VK_TLSGD.

To avoid this confusion, this patch removes the PowerPC-specific
modifiers and uses the generic modifiers throughout.  (The only
drawback is that the generic modifiers are printed in upper case
while the usual convention on PowerPC is to use lower-case modifiers.
But this is just a cosmetic issue.)

llvm-svn: 185476
2013-07-02 21:29:06 +00:00
Hal Finkel
4eba1c5685 Cleanup PPC Altivec registers in CSR lists and improve VRSAVE handling
There are a couple of (small) related changes here:

1. The printed name of the VRSAVE register has been changed from VRsave to
vrsave in order to match the name accepted by GNU binutils.

2. Support for parsing vrsave has been added to the asm parser (it seems that
there was no test case specifically covering this code, so I've added one).

3. The list of Altivec registers, which was common to all calling conventions,
has been separated out. This allows us to define the base CSR lists, and then
lists for each ABI with Altivec included. This allows SjLj, for example, to
work correctly on non-Altivec targets without using unnatural definitions of
the NoRegs CSR list.

4. VRSAVE is now always reserved on non-Darwin targets and all Altivec
registers are reserved when Altivec is disabled.

With these changes, it is now possible to compile a function containing
__builtin_unwind_init() on Linux/PPC64 with debugging information. This did not
work previously because GNU binutils assumes that all .cfi_offset offsets will
be 8-byte aligned on PPC64 (and errors out if you provide a non-8-byte-aligned
offset). This is not true for the vrsave register, however, because this
register is used only on Darwin, GCC does not bother printing a .cfi_offset
entry for it (even though there is a slot in the stack frame for it as
specified by the ABI). This change allows us to do the same: we will also not
print .cfi_offset directives for vrsave.

llvm-svn: 185409
2013-07-02 03:39:34 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
4e099704b5 Index: test/CodeGen/PowerPC/reloc-align.ll
===================================================================
--- test/CodeGen/PowerPC/reloc-align.ll	(revision 0)
+++ test/CodeGen/PowerPC/reloc-align.ll	(revision 0)
@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
+; RUN: llc -mcpu=pwr7 -O1 < %s | FileCheck %s
+
+; This test verifies that the peephole optimization of address accesses
+; does not produce a load or store with a relocation that can't be
+; satisfied for a given instruction encoding.  Reduced from a test supplied
+; by Hal Finkel.
+
+target datalayout = "E-p:64:64:64-i1:8:8-i8:8:8-i16:16:16-i32:32:32-i64:64:64-f32:32:32-f64:64:64-f128:128:128-v128:128:128-n32:64"
+target triple = "powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu"
+
+%struct.S1 = type { [8 x i8] }
+
+@main.l_1554 = internal global { i8, i8, i8, i8, i8, i8, i8, i8 } { i8 -1, i8 -6, i8 57, i8 62, i8 -48, i8 0, i8 58, i8 80 }, align 1
+
+; Function Attrs: nounwind readonly
+define signext i32 @main() #0 {
+entry:
+  %call = tail call fastcc signext i32 @func_90(%struct.S1* byval bitcast ({ i8, i8, i8, i8, i8, i8, i8, i8 }* @main.l_1554 to %struct.S1*))
+; CHECK-NOT: ld {{[0-9]+}}, main.l_1554@toc@l
+  ret i32 %call
+}
+
+; Function Attrs: nounwind readonly
+define internal fastcc signext i32 @func_90(%struct.S1* byval nocapture %p_91) #0 {
+entry:
+  %0 = bitcast %struct.S1* %p_91 to i64*
+  %bf.load = load i64* %0, align 1
+  %bf.shl = shl i64 %bf.load, 26
+  %bf.ashr = ashr i64 %bf.shl, 54
+  %bf.cast = trunc i64 %bf.ashr to i32
+  ret i32 %bf.cast
+}
+
+attributes #0 = { nounwind readonly "less-precise-fpmad"="false" "no-frame-pointer-elim"="true" "no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf"="true" "no-infs-fp-math"="false" "no-nans-fp-math"="false" "unsafe-fp-math"="false" "use-soft-float"="false" }
Index: lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCAsmPrinter.cpp
===================================================================
--- lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCAsmPrinter.cpp	(revision 185327)
+++ lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCAsmPrinter.cpp	(working copy)
@@ -679,7 +679,26 @@ void PPCAsmPrinter::EmitInstruction(const MachineI
       OutStreamer.EmitRawText(StringRef("\tmsync"));
       return;
     }
+    break;
+  case PPC::LD:
+  case PPC::STD:
+  case PPC::LWA: {
+    // Verify alignment is legal, so we don't create relocations
+    // that can't be supported.
+    // FIXME:  This test is currently disabled for Darwin.  The test
+    // suite shows a handful of test cases that fail this check for
+    // Darwin.  Those need to be investigated before this sanity test
+    // can be enabled for those subtargets.
+    if (!Subtarget.isDarwin()) {
+      unsigned OpNum = (MI->getOpcode() == PPC::STD) ? 2 : 1;
+      const MachineOperand &MO = MI->getOperand(OpNum);
+      if (MO.isGlobal() && MO.getGlobal()->getAlignment() < 4)
+        llvm_unreachable("Global must be word-aligned for LD, STD, LWA!");
+    }
+    // Now process the instruction normally.
+    break;
   }
+  }
 
   LowerPPCMachineInstrToMCInst(MI, TmpInst, *this);
   OutStreamer.EmitInstruction(TmpInst);
Index: lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelDAGToDAG.cpp
===================================================================
--- lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelDAGToDAG.cpp	(revision 185327)
+++ lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelDAGToDAG.cpp	(working copy)
@@ -1530,6 +1530,14 @@ void PPCDAGToDAGISel::PostprocessISelDAG() {
       if (GlobalAddressSDNode *GA = dyn_cast<GlobalAddressSDNode>(ImmOpnd)) {
         SDLoc dl(GA);
         const GlobalValue *GV = GA->getGlobal();
+        // We can't perform this optimization for data whose alignment
+        // is insufficient for the instruction encoding.
+        if (GV->getAlignment() < 4 &&
+            (StorageOpcode == PPC::LD || StorageOpcode == PPC::STD ||
+             StorageOpcode == PPC::LWA)) {
+          DEBUG(dbgs() << "Rejected this candidate for alignment.\n\n");
+          continue;
+        }
         ImmOpnd = CurDAG->getTargetGlobalAddress(GV, dl, MVT::i64, 0, Flags);
       } else if (ConstantPoolSDNode *CP =
                  dyn_cast<ConstantPoolSDNode>(ImmOpnd)) {

llvm-svn: 185380
2013-07-01 20:52:27 +00:00
Cameron Zwarich
7af5158621 Fix PR16508.
When phis get lowered, destination copies are inserted using an iterator that is
determined once for all phis in the block, which BuildMI interprets as a request
to insert an instruction directly before the iterator. In the case of a cyclic
phi, source copies may also be inserted directly before this iterator, which can
cause source copies to be inserted before destination copies. The fix is to keep
an iterator to the last phi and then advance it while lowering each phi in order
to insert destination copies directly after the phis.

llvm-svn: 185363
2013-07-01 19:42:46 +00:00
Hal Finkel
0b854b8c04 Don't form PPC CTR loops for over-sized exit counts
Although you can't generate this from C on PPC64, if you have a loop using a
64-bit counter on PPC32 then you can't form a CTR-based loop for it. This had
been cauing the PPCCTRLoops pass to assert.

Thanks to Joerg Sonnenberger for providing a test case!

llvm-svn: 185361
2013-07-01 19:34:59 +00:00
Hal Finkel
055ca2ecc9 PPC: Ignore spill/restore requests for VRSAVE (except on Darwin)
This fixes PR16418, which reports that a function calling
__builtin_unwind_init() asserts. The cause is that this generates a
spill/restore for VRSAVE, and we support that only on Darwin (because VRSAVE is
only really used on Darwin).

The test case checks only that we don't crash. We can add correctness checks
once someone verifies what behavior the function is supposed to have.

llvm-svn: 185235
2013-06-28 22:29:56 +00:00
Hal Finkel
49c072c532 Fix CodeGen/PowerPC/stack-protector.ll on OpenBSD
On OpenBSD, the stack-smash protection transform uses "__guard_local"
and "__stack_smash_handler" instead of "__stack_chk_guard" and
"__stack_chk_fail".  However, CodeGen/PowerPC/stack-protector.ll
doesn't specify a target OS, so on OpenBSD it fails.

Add -mtriple=ppc32-unknown-linux to make the test host-OS agnostic. While
there, convert to FileCheck.

Patch by Matthew Dempsky.

llvm-svn: 185206
2013-06-28 20:18:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7f9144ae20 Fix a PPC rlwimi instruction-selection bug
Under certain (evidently rare) circumstances, this code used to convert OR(a,
AND(x, y)) into OR(a, x). This was incorrect.

While there, I've added a comment to the code immediately above.

llvm-svn: 185201
2013-06-28 20:00:07 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
fac3a79629 [PowerPC] Disable fast-isel for existing -O0 tests for PowerPC.
This is a preliminary patch for fast instruction selection on
PowerPC.  Code generation can differ between DAG isel and fast isel.
Existing tests that specify -O0 were written to expect DAG isel.  Make
this explicit by adding -fast-isel=false to the tests.

In some cases specifying -fast-isel=false produces different code even
when there isn't a fast instruction selector specified.  This is
because TM.Options.EnableFastISel = 1 at -O0 whether or not a FastISel
object exists.  Thus disabling fast isel can actually produce less
conservative code.  Because of this, some of the expected code
generation in the -O0 tests needs to be adjusted.

In particular, handling of function arguments is less conservative
with -fast-isel=false (see isOnlyUsedInEntryBlock() in
SelectionDAGBuilder.cpp).  This results in fewer stack accesses and,
in some cases, reduced stack size as uselessly loaded values are no
longer stored back to spill locations in the stack.

No functional change with this patch; test case adjustments only.

llvm-svn: 183939
2013-06-13 20:23:34 +00:00
Hal Finkel
9c0ef0659d Disallow i64 div/rem in PPC32 counter loops
On PPC32, [su]div,rem on i64 types are transformed into runtime library
function calls. As a result, they are not allowed in counter-based loops (the
counter-loops verification pass caught this error; this change fixes PR16169).

llvm-svn: 183581
2013-06-07 22:16:19 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
5b34d5a3c7 Change how we iterate over relocations on ELF.
For COFF and MachO, sections semantically have relocations that apply to them.
That is not the case on ELF.

In relocatable objects (.o), a section with relocations in ELF has offsets to
another section where the relocations should be applied.

In dynamic objects and executables, relocations don't have an offset, they have
a virtual address. The section sh_info may or may not point to another section,
but that is not actually used for resolving the relocations.

This patch exposes that in the ObjectFile API. It has the following advantages:

* Most (all?) clients can handle this more efficiently. They will normally walk
all relocations, so doing an effort to iterate in a particular order doesn't
save time.

* llvm-readobj now prints relocations in the same way the native readelf does.

* probably most important, relocations that don't point to any section are now
visible. This is the case of relocations in the rela.dyn section. See the
updated relocation-executable.test for example.

llvm-svn: 182908
2013-05-30 03:05:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel
1f5ee2fefe Prefer to duplicate PPC Altivec loads when expanding unaligned loads
When expanding unaligned Altivec loads, we use the decremented offset trick to
prevent page faults. Unfortunately, if we have a sequence of consecutive
unaligned loads, this leads to suboptimal code generation because the 'extra'
load from the first unaligned load can be combined with the base load from the
second (but only if the decremented offset trick is not used for the first).
Search up and down the chain, through loads and token factors, looking for
consecutive loads, and if one is found, don't use the offset reduction trick.
These duplicate loads are later combined to yield the desired sequence (in the
future, we might want a more-powerful chain search, but that will require some
changes to allow the combiner routines to access the AA object).

This should complete the initial implementation of the optimized unaligned
Altivec load expansion. There is some refactoring that should be done, but
that will happen when the unaligned store expansion is added.

llvm-svn: 182719
2013-05-26 18:08:30 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f5d061cce9 PPC: Combine duplicate (offset) lvsl Altivec intrinsics
The lvsl permutation control instruction is a function only of the alignment of
the pointer operand (relative to the 16-byte natural alignment of Altivec
vectors). As a result, multiple lvsl intrinsics where the operands differ by a
multiple of 16 can be combined.

llvm-svn: 182708
2013-05-25 04:05:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel
b8fe2ab5cb PPC: Initial support for permutation-based unaligned Altivec loads
Altivec only directly supports aligned loads, but the loads have a strange
property: If given an unaligned address, they truncate the address to the next
lower aligned address, and load from there.  This property, along with an extra
load and some special-purpose permutation-control instructions that generate
the appropriate permutations from the original unaligned address, allow
efficient lowering of aligned loads. This code uses the trick explained in the
Apple Velocity Engine optimization overview document to prevent the needed
extra load from possibly causing a page fault if the original address happens
to be aligned.

As noted in the FIXMEs, there are several additional optimizations that can be
performed to reduce the cost of these loads even more. These will be
implemented in future commits.

llvm-svn: 182691
2013-05-24 23:00:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel
d4eb9291fa Check InlineAsm clobbers in PPCCTRLoops
We don't need to reject all inline asm as using the counter register (most does
not). Only those that explicitly clobber the counter register need to prevent
the transformation.

llvm-svn: 182191
2013-05-18 09:20:39 +00:00
Hal Finkel
4f0a332c93 Fix cpu on test CodeGen/PowerPC/ctrloop-fp64.ll
We need ppc instead of generic to override native features on ppc machines.

llvm-svn: 182049
2013-05-16 20:28:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel
80fddc9af7 Create an new preheader in PPCCTRLoops to avoid counter register clobbers
Some IR-level instructions (such as FP <-> i64 conversions) are not chained
w.r.t. the mtctr intrinsic and yet may become function calls that clobber the
counter register. At the selection-DAG level, these might be reordered with the
mtctr intrinsic causing miscompiles. To avoid this situation, if an existing
preheader has instructions that might use the counter register, create a new
preheader for the mtctr intrinsic. This extra block will be remerged with the
old preheader at the MI level, but will prevent unwanted reordering at the
selection-DAG level.

llvm-svn: 182045
2013-05-16 19:58:38 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
7b22c7a38a [PowerPC] Use true offset value in "memrix" machine operands
This is the second part of the change to always return "true"
offset values from getPreIndexedAddressParts, tackling the
case of "memrix" type operands.

This is about instructions like LD/STD that only have a 14-bit
field to encode immediate offsets, which are implicitly extended
by two zero bits by the machine, so that in effect we can access
16-bit offsets as long as they are a multiple of 4.

The PowerPC back end currently handles such instructions by
carrying the 14-bit value (as it will get encoded into the
actual machine instructions) in the machine operand fields
for such instructions.  This means that those values are
in fact not the true offset, but rather the offset divided
by 4 (and then truncated to an unsigned 14-bit value).

Like in the case fixed in r182012, this makes common code
operations on such offset values not work as expected.
Furthermore, there doesn't really appear to be any strong
reason why we should encode machine operands this way.

This patch therefore changes the encoding of "memrix" type
machine operands to simply contain the "true" offset value
as a signed immediate value, while enforcing the rules that
it must fit in a 16-bit signed value and must also be a
multiple of 4.

This change must be made simultaneously in all places that
access machine operands of this type.  However, just about
all those changes make the code simpler; in many cases we
can now just share the same code for memri and memrix
operands.

llvm-svn: 182032
2013-05-16 17:58:02 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7daa616e35 PPC32 cannot form counter loops around i64 FP conversions
On PPC32, i64 FP conversions are implemented using runtime calls (which clobber
the counter register). These must be excluded.

llvm-svn: 182023
2013-05-16 16:52:41 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
edb2d94d45 Use new CHECK-DAG support to stabilize CodeGen/PowerPC/recipest.ll
While testing some experimental code to add vector-scalar registers to
PowerPC, I noticed that a couple of independent instructions were
flipped by the scheduler.  The new CHECK-DAG support is perfect for
avoiding this problem.

llvm-svn: 182020
2013-05-16 16:15:18 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
08228b8354 [PowerPC] Report true displacement value from getPreIndexedAddressParts
DAGCombiner::CombineToPreIndexedLoadStore calls a target routine to
decompose a memory address into a base/offset pair.  It expects the
offset (if constant) to be the true displacement value in order to
perform optional additional optimizations; in particular, to convert
other uses of the original pointer into uses of the new base pointer
after pre-increment.

The PowerPC implementation of getPreIndexedAddressParts, however,
simply calls SelectAddressRegImm, which returns a TargetConstant.
This value is appropriate for encoding into the instruction, but
it is not always usable as true displacement value:

- Its type is always MVT::i32, even on 64-bit, where addresses
  ought to be i64 ... this causes the optimization to simply
  always fail on 64-bit due to this line in DAGCombiner:

      // FIXME: In some cases, we can be smarter about this.
      if (Op1.getValueType() != Offset.getValueType()) {

- Its value is truncated to an unsigned 16-bit value if negative.
  This causes the above opimization to generate wrong code.

This patch fixes both problems by simply returning the true
displacement value (in its original type).  This doesn't
affect any other user of the displacement.

llvm-svn: 182012
2013-05-16 14:53:05 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
0daf590030 Extend test to check the .cfi instructions.
I am about to refactor the calls to addFrameMove and some of the ppc
ones were not being tested.

llvm-svn: 182009
2013-05-16 14:30:09 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
554870d776 Extend test for better coverage.
Without this change nothing was covering this addFrameMove:

// For 64-bit SVR4 when we have spilled CRs, the spill location
// is SP+8, not a frame-relative slot.
if (Subtarget.isSVR4ABI()
    && Subtarget.isPPC64()
    && (PPC::CR2 <= Reg && Reg <= PPC::CR4)) {
  MachineLocation CSDst(PPC::X1, 8);
  MachineLocation CSSrc(PPC::CR2);
  MMI.addFrameMove(Label, CSDst, CSSrc);
  continue;
}

llvm-svn: 181976
2013-05-16 03:48:50 +00:00
Hal Finkel
91bd48d046 Implement PPC counter loops as a late IR-level pass
The old PPCCTRLoops pass, like the Hexagon pass version from which it was
derived, could only handle some simple loops in canonical form. We cannot
directly adapt the new Hexagon hardware loops pass, however, because the
Hexagon pass contains a fundamental assumption that non-constant-trip-count
loops will contain a guard, and this is not always true (the result being that
incorrect negative counts can be generated). With this commit, we replace the
pass with a late IR-level pass which makes use of SE to calculate the
backedge-taken counts and safely generate the loop-count expressions (including
any necessary max() parts). This IR level pass inserts custom intrinsics that
are lowered into the desired decrement-and-branch instructions.

The most fragile part of this new implementation is that interfering uses of
the counter register must be detected on the IR level (and, on PPC, this also
includes any indirect branches in addition to function calls). Also, to make
all of this work, we need a variant of the mtctr instruction that is marked
as having side effects. Without this, machine-code level CSE, DCE, etc.
illegally transform the resulting code. Hopefully, this can be improved
in the future.

This new pass is smaller than the original (and much smaller than the new
Hexagon hardware loops pass), and can handle many additional cases correctly.
In addition, the preheader-creation code has been copied from LoopSimplify, and
after we decide on where it belongs, this code will be refactored so that it
can be explicitly shared (making this implementation even smaller).

The new test-case files ctrloop-{le,lt,ne}.ll have been adapted from tests for
the new Hexagon pass. There are a few classes of loops that this pass does not
transform (noted by FIXMEs in the files), but these deficiencies can be
addressed within the SE infrastructure (thus helping many other passes as well).

llvm-svn: 181927
2013-05-15 21:37:41 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
8c1e12a2ff PPC32: Fix stack collision between FP and CR save areas.
The changes to CR spill handling missed a case for 32-bit PowerPC.
The code in PPCFrameLowering::processFunctionBeforeFrameFinalized()
checks whether CR spill has occurred using a flag in the function
info.  This flag is only set by storeRegToStackSlot and
loadRegFromStackSlot.  spillCalleeSavedRegisters does not call
storeRegToStackSlot, but instead produces MI directly.  Thus we don't
see the CR is spilled when assigning frame offsets, and the CR spill
ends up colliding with some other location (generally the FP slot).

This patch sets the flag in spillCalleeSavedRegisters for PPC32 so
that the CR spill is properly detected and gets its own slot in the
stack frame.

llvm-svn: 181800
2013-05-14 16:08:32 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
c7fd4630b3 PPC64: Constant initializers with dynamic relocations go in .data.rel.ro.
This fixes warning messages observed in the oggenc application test in
projects/test-suite.  Special handling is needed for the 64-bit
PowerPC SVR4 ABI when a constant is initialized with a pointer to a
function in a shared library.  Because a function address is
implemented as the address of a function descriptor, the use of copy
relocations can lead to problems with initialization.  GNU ld
therefore replaces copy relocations with dynamic relocations to be
resolved by the dynamic linker.  This means the constant cannot reside
in the read-only data section, but instead belongs in .data.rel.ro,
which is designed for constants containing dynamic relocations.

The implementation creates a class PPC64LinuxTargetObjectFile
inheriting from TargetLoweringObjectFileELF, which behaves like its
parent except to place constants of this sort into .data.rel.ro.

The test case is reduced from the oggenc application.

llvm-svn: 181723
2013-05-13 19:34:37 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
7f1a2b5212 Fix handling of anonymous aggregate parameters for powerpc*-apple-darwin8.
This fixes bug 15821 similarly to the powerpc64-linux fix for bug 14779.

Patch by David Fang.

llvm-svn: 181449
2013-05-08 17:22:33 +00:00
Hal Finkel
1636de8210 PPCInstrInfo::optimizeCompareInstr should not optimize FP compares
The floating-point record forms on PPC don't set the condition register bits
based on a comparison with zero (like the integer record forms do), but rather
based on the exception status bits.

llvm-svn: 181423
2013-05-08 12:16:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel
2ac40ae0d3 LocalStackSlotAllocation improvements
First, taking advantage of the fact that the virtual base registers are allocated in order of the local frame offsets, remove the quadratic register-searching behavior. Because of the ordering, we only need to check the last virtual base register created.

Second, store the frame index in the FrameRef structure, and get the frame index and the local offset from this structure at the top of the loop iteration. This allows us to de-nest the loops in insertFrameReferenceRegisters (and I think makes the code cleaner). I also moved the needsFrameBaseReg check into the first loop over instructions so that we don't bother pushing FrameRefs for instructions that don't want a virtual base register anyway.

Lastly, and this is the only functionality change, avoid the creation of single-use virtual base registers. These are currently not useful because, in general, they end up replacing what would be one r+r instruction with an add and a r+i instruction. Committing this removes the XFAIL in CodeGen/PowerPC/2007-09-07-LoadStoreIdxForms.ll

Jim has okayed this off-list.

llvm-svn: 180799
2013-04-30 20:04:37 +00:00
Manman Ren
0b37dd0efc TBAA: remove !tbaa from testing cases if not used.
This will make it easier to turn on struct-path aware TBAA since the metadata
format will change.

llvm-svn: 180796
2013-04-30 17:52:57 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
ef355ff0c1 Make all darwin ppc stubs local.
This fixes pr15763.
Patch by David Fang.

llvm-svn: 180657
2013-04-27 00:43:16 +00:00
Hal Finkel
9e44a50443 Fix PPC optimizeCompareInstr swapped-sub argument handling
When matching a compare with a subtract where the arguments of the compare are
swapped w.r.t. the arguments of the subtract, we need to negate the predicates
(or CR bit indices) of the users. This, however, is not the same as inverting
the predicate (negating LT -> GT, but inverting LT -> GE, for example). The ARM
backend seems to do this correctly, but when I adapted the code for the PPC
backend, I introduced an error in this logic.

Comparison optimization is now enabled again by default.

llvm-svn: 179899
2013-04-19 22:08:38 +00:00
Hal Finkel
b96e61374f Disable PPC comparison optimization by default
This seems to cause a stage-2 LLVM compile failure (by crashing TableGen); do
I'm disabling this for now.

llvm-svn: 179807
2013-04-18 22:54:25 +00:00
Hal Finkel
44190578df Implement optimizeCompareInstr for PPC
Many PPC instructions have a so-called 'record form' which stores to a specific
condition register the result of comparing the result of the instruction with
zero (always as a signed comparison). For integer operations on PPC64, this is
always a 64-bit comparison.

This implementation is derived from the implementation in the ARM backend;
there are some differences because PPC condition registers are allocatable
virtual registers (although the record forms always use a specific one), and we
look for a matching subtraction instruction after the compare (but before the
first use) in addition to before it.

llvm-svn: 179802
2013-04-18 22:15:08 +00:00
Hal Finkel
371be65604 Fix PPC64 CR spill location for callee-saved registers
This fixes an ABI bug for non-Darwin PPC64. For the callee-saved condition
registers, the spill location is specified relative to the stack pointer (SP +
8). However, this is not relative to the SP after the new stack frame is
established, but instead relative to the caller's stack pointer (it is stored
into the linkage area of the parent's stack frame).

So, like with the link register, we don't directly spill the CRs with other
callee-saved registers, but just mark them to be spilled during prologue
generation.

In practice, this reverts r179457 for PPC64 (but leaves it in place for PPC32).

llvm-svn: 179500
2013-04-15 02:07:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel
978a847acb Spill and restore PPC CR registers using the FP when we have one
For functions that need to spill CRs, and have dynamic stack allocations, the
value of the SP during the restore is not what it was during the save, and so
we need to use the FP in these cases (as for all of the other spills and
restores, but the CR restore has a special code path because its reserved slot,
like the link register, is specified directly relative to the adjusted SP).

llvm-svn: 179457
2013-04-13 08:09:20 +00:00
Nico Rieck
1162bb7a1d Replace coff-/elf-dump with llvm-readobj
llvm-svn: 179361
2013-04-12 04:06:46 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
4413e71a39 FileCheckize a bunch of tests.
llvm-svn: 179276
2013-04-11 12:32:23 +00:00
Hal Finkel
03d47320aa Manually remove successors in if conversion when CopyAndPredicateBlock is used
In the simple and triangle if-conversion cases, when CopyAndPredicateBlock is
used because the to-be-predicated block has other predecessors, we need to
explicitly remove the old copied block from the successors list. Normally if
conversion relies on TII->AnalyzeBranch combined with BB->CorrectExtraCFGEdges
to cleanup the successors list, but if the predicated block contained an
un-analyzable branch (such as a now-predicated return), then this will fail.

These extra successors were causing a problem on PPC because it was causing
later passes (such as PPCEarlyReturm) to leave dead return-only basic blocks in
the code.

llvm-svn: 179227
2013-04-10 22:05:25 +00:00
Hal Finkel
8b05494b58 Allow PPC B and BLR to be if-converted into some predicated forms
This enables us to form predicated branches (which are the same conditional
branches we had before) and also a larger set of predicated returns (including
instructions like bdnzlr which is a conditional return and loop-counter
decrement all in one).

At the moment, if conversion does not capture all possible opportunities. A
simple example is provided in early-ret2.ll, where if conversion forms one
predicated return, and then the PPCEarlyReturn pass picks up the other one. So,
at least for now, we'll keep both mechanisms.

llvm-svn: 179134
2013-04-09 22:58:37 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c72f2476a9 Use virtual base registers on PPC
On PowerPC, non-vector loads and stores have r+i forms; however, in functions
with large stack frames these were not being used to access slots far from the
stack pointer because such slots were out of range for the signed 16-bit
immediate offset field. This increases register pressure because we need a
separate register for each offset (when the r+r form is used). By enabling
virtual base registers, we can deal with large stack frames without unduly
increasing register pressure.

llvm-svn: 179105
2013-04-09 17:27:09 +00:00
Hal Finkel
68742d4f1f Convert test PowerPC/2007-09-07-LoadStoreIdxForms to FileCheck
llvm-svn: 179104
2013-04-09 17:26:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel
0daaa8e2de Generate PPC early conditional returns
PowerPC has a conditional branch to the link register (return) instruction: BCLR.
This should be used any time when we'd otherwise have a conditional branch to a
return. This adds a small pass, PPCEarlyReturn, which runs just prior to the
branch selection pass (and, importantly, after block placement) to generate
these conditional returns when possible. It will also eliminate unconditional
branches to returns (these happen rarely; most of the time these have already
been tail duplicated by the time PPCEarlyReturn is invoked). This is a nice
optimization for small functions that do not maintain a stack frame.

llvm-svn: 179026
2013-04-08 16:24:03 +00:00
Hal Finkel
9af1fa0d50 Cleanup and improve PPC fsel generation
First, we should not cheat: fsel-based lowering of select_cc is a
finite-math-only optimization (the ISA manual, section F.3 of v2.06, makes
this clear, as does a note in our own README).

This also adds fsel-based lowering of EQ and NE condition codes. As it turned
out, fsel generation was covered by a grand total of zero regression test
cases. I've added some test cases to cover the existing behavior (which is now
finite-math only), as well as the new EQ cases.

llvm-svn: 179000
2013-04-07 22:11:09 +00:00
Hal Finkel
6c65d3a736 Implement PPCInstrInfo::FoldImmediate
There are certain PPC instructions into which we can fold a zero immediate
operand. We can detect such cases by looking at the register class required
by the using operand (so long as it is not otherwise constrained).

llvm-svn: 178961
2013-04-06 19:30:30 +00:00
Hal Finkel
b556d850c9 Enable early if conversion on PPC
On cores for which we know the misprediction penalty, and we have
the isel instruction, we can profitably perform early if conversion.
This enables us to replace some small branch sequences with selects
and avoid the potential stalls from mispredicting the branches.

Enabling this feature required implementing canInsertSelect and
insertSelect in PPCInstrInfo; isel code in PPCISelLowering was
refactored to use these functions as well.

llvm-svn: 178926
2013-04-05 23:29:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel
1dc78e666b PPC: Improve code generation for mixed-precision reciprocal sqrt
The DAGCombine logic that recognized a/sqrt(b) and transformed it into
a multiplication by the reciprocal sqrt did not handle cases where the
sqrt and the division were separated by an fpext or fptrunc.

llvm-svn: 178801
2013-04-04 22:44:12 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
990515e4c4 Fix PR15632: No support for ppcf128 floating-point remainder on PowerPC.
For this we need to use a libcall.  Previously LLVM didn't implement
libcall support for frem, so I've added it in the usual
straightforward manner.  A test case from the bug report is included.

llvm-svn: 178639
2013-04-03 13:05:44 +00:00
Hal Finkel
0208f7c744 Use PPC reciprocal estimates with Newton iteration in fast-math mode
When unsafe FP math operations are enabled, we can use the fre[s] and
frsqrte[s] instructions, which generate reciprocal (sqrt) estimates, together
with some Newton iteration, in order to quickly generate floating-point
division and sqrt results. All of these instructions are separately optional,
and so each has its own feature flag (except for the Altivec instructions,
which are covered under the existing Altivec flag). Doing this is not only
faster than using the IEEE-compliant fdiv/fsqrt instructions, but allows these
computations to be pipelined with other computations in order to hide their
overall latency.

I've also added a couple of missing fnmsub patterns which turned out to be
missing (but are necessary for good code generation of the Newton iterations).
Altivec needs a similar fix, but that will probably be more complicated because
fneg is expanded for Altivec's v4f32.

llvm-svn: 178617
2013-04-03 04:01:11 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
c98ed219d3 Fix PR15630: Replace faulty stdcx. with stwcx.
When doing a partword atomic operation, a lwarx was being paired with
a stdcx. instead of a stwcx. when compiling for a 64-bit target.  The
target has nothing to do with it in this case; we always need a stwcx.

Thanks to Kai Nacke for reporting the problem.

llvm-svn: 178559
2013-04-02 18:37:08 +00:00
Hal Finkel
9191cdb5f2 Fix a bad assert in PPCTargetLowering
llvm-svn: 178489
2013-04-01 18:42:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel
9cd1e5e93c Add triple to test/CodeGen/PowerPC/stfiwx-2
llvm-svn: 178486
2013-04-01 18:18:44 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f184647a53 Add more PPC floating-point conversion instructions
The P7 and A2 have additional floating-point conversion instructions which
allow a direct two-instruction sequence (plus load/store) to convert from all
combinations (signed/unsigned i32/i64) <--> (float/double) (on previous cores,
only some combinations were directly available).

llvm-svn: 178480
2013-04-01 17:52:07 +00:00
Hal Finkel
55f144f923 Fix PowerPC/cttz.ll to specify a cpu (and use FileCheck)
llvm-svn: 178472
2013-04-01 16:31:56 +00:00
Hal Finkel
9eed3ac928 Add the PPC popcntw instruction
The popcntw instruction is available whenever the popcntd instruction is
available, and performs a separate popcnt on the lower and upper 32-bits.
Ignoring the high-order count, this can be used for the 32-bit input case
(saving on the explicit zero extension otherwise required to use popcntd).

llvm-svn: 178470
2013-04-01 15:58:15 +00:00
Hal Finkel
085f61160f Add the PPC lfiwax instruction
This instruction is available on modern PPC64 CPUs, and is now used
to improve the SINT_TO_FP lowering (by eliminating the need for the
separate sign extension instruction and decreasing the amount of
needed stack space).

llvm-svn: 178446
2013-03-31 10:12:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7bdfbd6570 Cleanup PPC(64) i32 -> float/double conversion
The existing SINT_TO_FP code for i32 -> float/double conversion was disabled
because it relied on broken EXTSW_32/STD_32 instruction definitions. The
original intent had been to enable these 64-bit instructions to be used on CPUs
that support them even in 32-bit mode.  Unfortunately, this form of lying to
the infrastructure was buggy (as explained in the FIXME comment) and had
therefore been disabled.

This re-enables this functionality, using regular DAG nodes, but only when
compiling in 64-bit mode. The old STD_32/EXTSW_32 definitions (which were dead)
are removed.

llvm-svn: 178438
2013-03-31 01:58:02 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c14a74d243 Implement FRINT lowering on PPC using frin
Like nearbyint, rint can be implemented on PPC using the frin instruction. The
complication comes from the fact that rint needs to set the FE_INEXACT flag
when the result does not equal the input value (and frin does not do that). As
a result, we use a custom inserter which, after the rounding, compares the
rounded value with the original, and if they differ, explicitly sets the XX bit
in the FPSCR register (which corresponds to FE_INEXACT).

Once LLVM has better modeling of the floating-point environment we should be
able to (often) eliminate this extra complexity.

llvm-svn: 178362
2013-03-29 19:41:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel
3493fd8e51 Add PPC FP rounding instructions fri[mnpz]
These instructions are available on the P5x (and later) and on the A2. They
implement the standard floating-point rounding operations (floor, trunc, etc.).
One caveat: frin (round to nearest) does not implement "ties to even", and so
is only enabled in fast-math mode.

llvm-svn: 178337
2013-03-29 08:57:48 +00:00
Hal Finkel
8672bd7c2a Specify CPUs on the PPC bswap-load-store test
Otherwise, the CHECK-NOT's might trigger depending on the host's CPU.

llvm-svn: 178287
2013-03-28 20:35:18 +00:00
Hal Finkel
88670ad5f4 Only enable 64-bit bswap DAG combines for PPC64
Compiling in 32-bit mode on a P7 would assert after 64-bit DAG combines were
added for bswap with load/store. This is because these combines are really only
valid in 64-bit mode, regardless of the CPU (and this was not being checked).

llvm-svn: 178286
2013-03-28 20:23:46 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f359927db6 Add the PPC64 ldbrx/stdbrx instructions
These are 64-bit load/store with byte-swap, and available on the P7 and the A2.
Like the similar instructions for 16- and 32-bit words, these are matched in the
target DAG-combine phase against load/store-bswap pairs.

llvm-svn: 178276
2013-03-28 19:25:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c21c3cf09e Add the PPC64 popcntd instruction
PPC ISA 2.06 (P7, A2, etc.) has a popcntd instruction. Add this instruction and
tell TTI about it so that popcount-loop recognition will know about it.

llvm-svn: 178233
2013-03-28 13:29:47 +00:00
Hal Finkel
4d8aed70c1 Cleanup PPC CR-spill kill flags and 32- vs. 64-bit instructions
There were a few places where kill flags were not being set correctly, and
where 32-bit instruction variants were being used with 64-bit registers. After
r178180, this code was being triggered causing llc to assert.

llvm-svn: 178220
2013-03-28 03:38:16 +00:00
Hal Finkel
937268691d Print PPC ZERO as 0 (not r0) even on Darwin
It seems that the Darwin PPC assembler requires r0 to be written as 0 when it
means 0 (at least in lwarx/stwcx.). Fixes PR15605.

llvm-svn: 178142
2013-03-27 13:20:52 +00:00
Hal Finkel
e0c66d8042 Allocate r0 on PPC
The R0 register can now be allocated because instructions
that cannot use R0 as a GPR have been appropriately marked.

llvm-svn: 178123
2013-03-27 06:52:27 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
8865ace4e1 Remove the link register from the GPR classes on PowerPC.
Some implementation detail in the forgotten past required the link
register to be placed in the GPRC and G8RC register classes.  This is
just wrong on the face of it, and causes several extra intersection
register classes to be generated.  I found this was having evil
effects on instruction scheduling, by causing the wrong register class
to be consulted for register pressure decisions.

No code generation changes are expected, other than some minor changes
in instruction order.  Seven tests in the test bucket required minor
tweaks to adjust to the new normal.

llvm-svn: 178114
2013-03-27 02:40:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel
3d971d2f93 Don't spill PPC VRSAVE on non-Darwin (even in SjLj)
As Bill Schmidt pointed out to me, only on Darwin do we need to spill/restore
VRSAVE in the SjLj code. For non-Darwin, don't spill/restore VRSAVE (and I've
added some asserts to make sure that we're not).

As it turns out, we're not currently handling the Darwin case correctly (I've
added a FIXME in the test case). I've tried adding various implied register
definitions/uses to force the spill without success, so I'll need to address
this later.

llvm-svn: 178096
2013-03-27 00:02:20 +00:00
Hal Finkel
a91432f726 Use multiple virtual registers in PPC CR spilling
Now that the register scavenger can support multiple spill slots, and PEI can
use virtual-register-based scavenging for multiple simultaneous registers, we
can use a virtual register for the transfer register in the CR spilling code.

This should eliminate the last place (outside of the prologue/epilogue) where
we depend on the unconditional availability of the r0 register. We will soon be
able to allocate it (in a somewhat restricted sense) as a GPR.

llvm-svn: 178060
2013-03-26 18:57:22 +00:00
Hal Finkel
164c449fcc Fix a register-class comparison bug in PPCCTRLoops
Thanks to Jakob for isolating the underlying problem from the
test case in r177423. The original commit had introduced
asymmetric copy operations, but these turned out to be a work-around
to the real problem (the use of == instead of hasSubClassEq in PPCCTRLoops).

llvm-svn: 177679
2013-03-21 23:23:34 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7e324aee83 Implement builtin_{setjmp/longjmp} on PPC
This implements SJLJ lowering on PPC, making the Clang functions
__builtin_{setjmp/longjmp} functional on PPC platforms. The implementation
strategy is similar to that on X86, with the exception that a branch-and-link
variant is used to get the right jump address. Credit goes to Bill Schmidt for
suggesting the use of the unconditional bcl form (instead of the regular bl
instruction) to limit return-address-cache pollution.

Benchmarking the speed at -O3 of:

static jmp_buf env_sigill;

void foo() {
                __builtin_longjmp(env_sigill,1);
}

main() {
	...

        for (int i = 0; i < c; ++i) {
                if (__builtin_setjmp(env_sigill)) {
                        goto done;
                } else {
                        foo();
                }

done:;
        }

	...
}

vs. the same code using the libc setjmp/longjmp functions on a P7 shows that
this builtin implementation is ~4x faster with Altivec enabled and ~7.25x
faster with Altivec disabled. This comparison is somewhat unfair because the
libc version must also save/restore the VSX registers which we don't yet
support.

llvm-svn: 177666
2013-03-21 21:37:52 +00:00
David Blaikie
67c9dc82dc Remove unused field in DISubprogram
llvm-svn: 177661
2013-03-21 20:28:52 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7e6dc78317 Add support for spilling VRSAVE on PPC
Although there is only one Altivec VRSAVE register, it is a member of
a register class, and we need the ability to spill it. Because this
register is normally callee-preserved and handled by special code this
has never before been necessary. However, this capability will be required by
a forthcoming commit adding SjLj support.

llvm-svn: 177654
2013-03-21 19:03:21 +00:00
Hal Finkel
2043b2adae Correct PPC FRAMEADDR lowering using a pseudo-register
The old code used to lower FRAMEADDR tried to replicate the logic in the real
frame-lowering code that determines whether or not the frame pointer (r31) will
be used. When it seemed as through the frame pointer would not be used, the
stack pointer (r1) was used instead. Unfortunately, because the stack size is
not yet known, this does not work. Instead, this change introduces new
always-reserved pseudo-registers (FP and FP8) that are replaced during prologue
insertion with the real frame-pointer register (either r1 or r31).

It is important that this intrinsic always return a valid frame address because
it is used by Clang to store the frame address as part of code generation for
__builtin_setjmp.

llvm-svn: 177653
2013-03-21 19:03:19 +00:00
David Blaikie
30abbc718f Remove unused field in DICompileUnit
llvm-svn: 177590
2013-03-20 22:34:33 +00:00
Hal Finkel
6c0ef5bcb5 Add a comment to the CodeGen/PowerPC/asym-regclass-copy.ll test
llvm-svn: 177434
2013-03-19 20:22:32 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
d5787350ad Rewrite pre-increment store patterns to use standard memory operands.
Currently, pre-increment store patterns are written to use two separate
operands to represent address base and displacement:

  stwu $rS, $ptroff($ptrreg)

This causes problems when implementing the assembler parser, so this
commit changes the patterns to use standard (complex) memory operands
like in all other memory access instruction patterns:

  stwu $rS, $dst

To still match those instructions against the appropriate pre_store
SelectionDAG nodes, the patch uses the new feature that allows a Pat
to match multiple DAG operands against a single (complex) instruction
operand.

Approved by Hal Finkel.

llvm-svn: 177429
2013-03-19 19:52:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel
08d0f0125c Prepare to make r0 an allocatable register on PPC
Currently the PPC r0 register is unconditionally reserved. There are two reasons
for this:

 1. r0 is treated specially (as the constant 0) by certain instructions, and so
    cannot be used with those instructions as a regular register.

 2. r0 is used as a temporary register in the CR-register spilling process
    (where, under some circumstances, we require two GPRs).

This change addresses the first reason by introducing a restricted register
class (without r0) for use by those instructions that treat r0 specially. These
register classes have a new pseudo-register, ZERO, which represents the r0-as-0
use. This has the side benefit of making the existing target code simpler (and
easier to understand), and will make it clear to the register allocator that
uses of r0 as 0 don't conflict will real uses of the r0 register.

Once the CR spilling code is improved, we'll be able to allocate r0.

Adding these extra register classes, for some reason unclear to me, causes
requests to the target to copy 32-bit registers to 64-bit registers. The
resulting code seems correct (and causes no test-suite failures), and the new
test case covers this new kind of asymmetric copy.

As r0 is still reserved, no functionality change intended.

llvm-svn: 177423
2013-03-19 18:51:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel
b4208059c6 Cleanup PPC64 unaligned i64 load/store
Remove an accidentally-added instruction definition and add a comment in the
test case. This is in response to a post-commit review by Bill Schmidt.

No functionality change intended.

llvm-svn: 177404
2013-03-19 15:23:39 +00:00
Hal Finkel
5fd6394c16 Don't reserve R31 on PPC64 unless the frame pointer is needed
llvm-svn: 177379
2013-03-19 08:09:38 +00:00
Hal Finkel
b4a799cf7e Fix a sign-extension bug in PPCCTRLoops
Don't sign extend the immediate value from the OR instruction in
an LIS/OR pair.

llvm-svn: 177361
2013-03-18 23:58:28 +00:00
Hal Finkel
42f72e7756 Fix PPC unaligned 64-bit loads and stores
PPC64 supports unaligned loads and stores of 64-bit values, but
in order to use the r+i forms, the offset must be a multiple of 4.
Unfortunately, this cannot always be determined by examining the
immediate itself because it might be available only via a TOC entry.

In order to get around this issue, we additionally predicate the
selection of the r+i form on the alignment of the load or store
(forcing it to be at least 4 in order to select the r+i form).

llvm-svn: 177338
2013-03-18 23:00:58 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
532eac0ca2 Change test cases to handle unaligned references.
Hal Finkel recently added code to allow unaligned memory references
for PowerPC.  Two tests were temporarily modified with
-disable-ppc-unaligned to keep them from failing.  This patch adjusts
the expected code generation for the unaligned references.

llvm-svn: 177328
2013-03-18 22:12:04 +00:00
David Blaikie
928fd30ba7 Remove unnecessary leading comment characters in lit-only file
llvm-svn: 177327
2013-03-18 22:08:16 +00:00
David Blaikie
ae14af22c5 Include '.test' suffix in target specific lit configs that need it
Apparently my final cleanup to use a relevant suffix for these tests before
committing r176831 caused them to stop running since lit wasn't configured to
run tests with that suffix in those directories (why don't we just have a
global suffix list?). So, add the suffix to the relevant directories & fix the
test that has bitrotted over the last week due to my debug info schema changes.

llvm-svn: 177315
2013-03-18 20:31:44 +00:00
Hal Finkel
ad2997da12 Fix large count and negative constant count handling in PPCCTRLoops
This commit fixes an assert that would occur on loops with large constant counts
(like looping for ((uint32_t) -1) iterations on PPC64). The existing code did
not handle counts that it computed to be negative (asserting instead), but
these can be created with valid inputs.

This bug was discovered by bugpoint while I was attempting to isolate a
completely different problem.

Also, in writing test cases for the negative-count problem, I discovered that
the ori/lsi handling was broken (there was a typo which caused the logic that
was supposed to detect these pairs and extract the iteration count to always
fail). This has now also been corrected (and is covered by one of the new test
cases).

llvm-svn: 177295
2013-03-18 17:40:44 +00:00
Hal Finkel
2ab64cdbb2 Cleanup initial-value constants in PPCCTRLoops
Because the initial-value constants had not been added to the list
of instructions considered for DCE the resulting code had redundant
constant-materialization instructions.

llvm-svn: 177294
2013-03-18 17:40:27 +00:00
Hal Finkel
54a73d3443 Improve PPC VR (Altivec) register spilling
This change cleans up two issues with Altivec register spilling:

  1. The spilling code was inefficient (using two instructions, and add and a
     load, when just one would do)

  2. The code assumed that r0 would always be available (true for now, but this
     will change)

The new code handles VR spilling just like GPR spills but forced into r+r mode.
As a result, when any VR spills are present, we must now always allocate the
register-scavenger spill slot.

llvm-svn: 177231
2013-03-17 04:43:44 +00:00
Hal Finkel
e729872345 Remove FIXMEs in PPC test cases related to unaligned loads/stores
As pointed out by Bill in response to r177160, these two FIXMEs
can also be removed.

llvm-svn: 177229
2013-03-16 23:02:31 +00:00
Hal Finkel
a5a86f0a8e Enable unaligned memory access on PPC for scalar types
Unaligned access is supported on PPC for non-vector types, and is generally
more efficient than manually expanding the loads and stores.

A few of the existing test cases were using expanded unaligned loads and stores
to test other features (like load/store with update), and for these test cases,
unaligned access remains disabled.

llvm-svn: 177160
2013-03-15 15:27:13 +00:00
Hal Finkel
2ecb85412e Protect PPC Altivec patterns with a predicate
In preparation for the addition of other SIMD ISA extensions (such as QPX) we
need to make sure that all Altivec patterns are properly predicated on having
Altivec support.

No functionality change intended (one test case needed to be updated b/c it
assumed that Altivec intrinsics would be supported without enabling Altivec
support).

llvm-svn: 177152
2013-03-15 13:21:21 +00:00
Hal Finkel
503a3723d1 Allocate the RS spill slot for any PPC function with spills and a large stack frame
For spills into a large stack frame, the FI-elimination code uses the register
scavenger to obtain a free GPR for use with an r+r-addressed load or store.
When there are no available GPRs, the scavenger gets one by using its spill
slot. Previously, we were not always allocating that spill slot and the RS
would assert when the spill slot was needed.

I don't currently have a small test that triggered the assert, but I've
created a small regression test that verifies that the spill slot is now
added when the stack frame is sufficiently large.

llvm-svn: 177140
2013-03-15 05:06:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel
37a5522734 Not all PPC functions with a frame pointer need a RS spill slot
We used to add a spill slot for the register scavenger whenever the function
has a frame pointer. This is unnecessarily conservative: We may need the spill
slot for dynamic stack allocations, and functions with dynamic stack
allocations always have a FP, but we might also have a FP for other reasons
(such as the user explicitly disabling frame-pointer elimination), and we don't
necessarily need a spill slot for those functions.

The structsinregs test needed adjustment because it disables FP elimination.

llvm-svn: 177106
2013-03-14 19:34:32 +00:00
David Blaikie
3c701e7671 Refactor filename/directory in DICompileUnit into a DIFile
This is the next step towards making the metadata for DIScopes have a common
prefix rather than having to delegate based on their tag type.

llvm-svn: 176913
2013-03-13 00:01:35 +00:00
David Blaikie
98d9ccffb8 Remove unused "isMain" field from DICompileUnit
llvm-svn: 176910
2013-03-12 22:43:04 +00:00
David Blaikie
c37a0a822a Update debug info test cases with empty SplitDebugFilename field.
This could be 'null' or the empty string, DIDescriptor::getStringField
coalesces the two cases anyway so it's just a matter of legible/efficient
representation.

The change in behavior of the DICompileUnit::get* functions could be
subsumed by the full verification check - but ideally that should just be an
assertion if we could front-load the actual debug info metadata failure paths.

llvm-svn: 176907
2013-03-12 22:25:36 +00:00
Jan Wen Voung
74d9647d18 Revert the test moves from 176733. Use "REQUIRES: asserts" instead.
llvm-svn: 176873
2013-03-12 16:27:52 +00:00
Hal Finkel
3edf100dda Don't reserve R2 on Darwin/PPC
Now that only the register-scavenger version of the CR spilling code remains,
we no longer need the Darwin R2 hack. Darwin can use R0 as a spare register in
any case where the System V ABI uses it (R0 is special architecturally, and so
is reserved under all common ABIs).

A few test cases needed to be updated to reflect the register-allocation changes.

llvm-svn: 176868
2013-03-12 15:18:14 +00:00
David Blaikie
b8d3b70835 Remove duplicate test contents.
llvm-svn: 176831
2013-03-11 22:10:14 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
202c1b8357 Test case hygiene.
llvm-svn: 176772
2013-03-09 18:25:40 +00:00
Jan Wen Voung
2346df4d41 Disable statistics on Release builds and move tests that depend on -stats.
Summary:
Statistics are still available in Release+Asserts (any +Asserts builds),
and stats can also be turned on with LLVM_ENABLE_STATS.

Move some of the FastISel stats that were moved under DEBUG()
back out of DEBUG(), since stats are disabled across the board now.

Many tests depend on grepping "-stats" output.  Move those into
a orig_dir/Stats/. so that they can be marked as unsupported
when building without statistics.

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D486

llvm-svn: 176733
2013-03-08 22:56:31 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
5440b8eaca Fix PR15332 (patch by Florian Zeitz).
There's no need to generate a stack frame for PPC32 SVR4 when there are
no local variables assigned to the stack, i.e., when no red zone is needed.
(PPC64 supports a red zone, but PPC32 does not.)

llvm-svn: 176124
2013-02-26 21:28:57 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
76befd83d4 Fix PR15359.
The PowerPC TLS relocation types were not previously added to the
necessary list in MCELFStreamer::fixSymbolsInTLSFixups().  Now they are!

llvm-svn: 176094
2013-02-26 16:41:03 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
a7e4a58051 Fix missing relocation for TLS addressing peephole optimization.
Report and fix due to Kai Nacke.  Testcase update by me.

llvm-svn: 176029
2013-02-25 16:44:35 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
049ba390f5 Large code model support for PowerPC.
Large code model is identical to medium code model except that the
addis/addi sequence for "local" accesses is never used.  All accesses
use the addis/ld sequence.

The coding changes are straightforward; most of the patch is taken up
with creating variants of the medium model tests for large model.

llvm-svn: 175767
2013-02-21 17:12:27 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
0e7935e723 PPCDAGToDAGISel::PostprocessISelDAG()
This patch implements the PPCDAGToDAGISel::PostprocessISelDAG virtual
method to perform post-selection peephole optimizations on the DAG
representation.

One optimization is implemented here:  folds to clean up complex
addressing expressions for thread-local storage and medium code
model.  It will also be useful for large code model sequences when
those are added later.  I originally thought about doing this on the
MI representation prior to register assignment, but it's difficult to
do effective global dead code elimination at that point.  DCE is
trivial on the DAG representation.

A typical example of a candidate code sequence in assembly:

   addis 3, 2, globalvar@toc@ha
   addi  3, 3, globalvar@toc@l
   lwz   5, 0(3)

When the final instruction is a load or store with an immediate offset
of zero, the offset from the add-immediate can replace the zero,
provided the relocation information is carried along:

   addis 3, 2, globalvar@toc@ha
   lwz   5, globalvar@toc@l(3)

Since the addi can in general have multiple uses, we need to only
delete the instruction when the last use is removed.

llvm-svn: 175697
2013-02-21 00:38:25 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
9e8b42e2f9 Stabilize vec_constants.ll
llvm-svn: 175683
2013-02-20 22:43:03 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
bcb4fa48fa Additional fixes for bug 15155.
This handles the cases where the 6-bit splat element is odd, converting
to a three-instruction sequence to add or subtract two splats.  With this
fix, the XFAIL in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vec_constants.ll is removed.

llvm-svn: 175663
2013-02-20 20:41:42 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
358367c60f Fix bug 14779 for passing anonymous aggregates [patch by Kai Nacke].
The PPC backend doesn't handle these correctly.  This patch uses logic
similar to that in the X86 and ARM backends to track these arguments
properly.

llvm-svn: 175635
2013-02-20 17:31:41 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
93b2fc9f50 Fix PR15155: lost vadd/vsplat optimization.
During lowering of a BUILD_VECTOR, we look for opportunities to use a
vector splat.  When the splatted value fits in 5 signed bits, a single
splat does the job.  When it doesn't fit in 5 bits but does fit in 6,
and is an even value, we can splat on half the value and add the result
to itself.

This last optimization hasn't been working recently because of improved
constant folding.  To circumvent this, create a pseudo VADD_SPLAT that
can be expanded during instruction selection.

llvm-svn: 175632
2013-02-20 15:50:31 +00:00
Hal Finkel
624f5d5d67 DAGCombiner: Constant folding around pre-increment loads/stores
Previously, even when a pre-increment load or store was generated,
we often needed to keep a copy of the original base register for use
with other offsets. If all of these offsets are constants (including
the offset which was combined into the addressing mode), then this is
clearly unnecessary. This change adjusts these other offsets to use the
new incremented address.

llvm-svn: 174746
2013-02-08 21:35:47 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
d07b68b101 Disable a couple more vector splat optimizations on PPC.
I didn't see those because the test case used "not grep". FileCheck the test and
XFAIL it, preserving the old optimization, so this can be fixed eventually.

llvm-svn: 174330
2013-02-04 15:52:32 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
aa2475fd87 SelectionDAG: Teach FoldConstantArithmetic how to deal with vectors.
This required disabling a PowerPC optimization that did the following:
input:
x = BUILD_VECTOR <i32 16, i32 16, i32 16, i32 16>
lowered to:
tmp = BUILD_VECTOR <i32 8, i32 8, i32 8, i32 8>
x = ADD tmp, tmp

The add now gets folded immediately and we're back at the BUILD_VECTOR we
started from. I don't see a way to fix this currently so I left it disabled
for now.

Fix some trivially foldable X86 tests too.

llvm-svn: 174325
2013-02-04 15:19:18 +00:00
David Blaikie
7c3ec60da7 Remove the (apparently) unnecessary debug info metadata indirection.
The main lists of debug info metadata attached to the compile_unit had an extra
layer of metadata nodes they went through for no apparent reason. This patch
removes that (& still passes just as much of the GDB 7.5 test suite). If anyone
can show evidence as to why these extra metadata nodes are there I'm open to
reverting this patch & documenting why they're there.

llvm-svn: 174266
2013-02-02 05:56:24 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
d3beefd1a4 LLVM enablement for some older PowerPC CPUs
llvm-svn: 174230
2013-02-01 22:59:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel
32085870d7 PPC QPX requires a 32-byte aligned stack
On systems which support the QPX vector instructions, the stack must be
32-byte aligned.

llvm-svn: 173993
2013-01-30 23:43:27 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7969f87a01 Add definitions for the PPC a2q core marked as having QPX available
This is the first commit of a large series which will add support for the
QPX vector instruction set to the PowerPC backend. This instruction set is
used on the IBM Blue Gene/Q supercomputers.

llvm-svn: 173973
2013-01-30 21:17:42 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
28daa2bbf4 This patch addresses bug 15031.
The common code in the post-RA scheduler to break anti-dependencies on the
critical path contained a flaw.  In the reported case, an anti-dependency
between the overlapping registers %X4 and %R4 exists:

	%X29<def> = OR8 %X4, %X4
	%R4<def>, %X3<def,dead,tied3> = LBZU 1, %X3<kill,tied1>

The unpatched code breaks the dependency by replacing %R4 and its uses
with %R3, the first register on the available list.  However, %R3 and
%X3 overlap, so this creates two overlapping definitions on the same
instruction.

The fix is straightforward, preventing selection of a register that
overlaps any other defined register on the same instruction.

The test case is reduced from the bug report, and verifies that we no
longer produce "lbzu 3, 1(3)" when breaking this anti-dependency.

llvm-svn: 173706
2013-01-28 18:36:58 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
5aab290f08 Restore reverted test case, this time with REQUIRES: asserts
llvm-svn: 172747
2013-01-17 19:46:51 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
2bbdbadcdc Remove bad test case
llvm-svn: 172746
2013-01-17 19:39:36 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
27aac7a2f3 This patch fixes PR13626 by providing i128 support in the return
calling convention.  128-bit integers are now properly returned
in GPR3 and GPR4 on PowerPC.

llvm-svn: 172745
2013-01-17 19:34:57 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
a2682ebf0e This patch fixes the PPC calling convention to handle returns of
_Complex float and _Complex long double, by simply increasing the
number of floating point registers available for return values.

The test case verifies that the correct registers are loaded.

llvm-svn: 172733
2013-01-17 17:45:19 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
ae8a966ad7 This patch addresses an incorrect transformation in the DAG combiner.
The included test case is derived from one of the GCC compatibility tests.
The problem arises after the selection DAG has been converted to type-legalized
form.  The combiner first sees a 64-bit load that can be converted into a
pre-increment form.  The original load feeds into a SRL that isolates the
upper 32 bits of the loaded doubleword.  This looks like an opportunity for
DAGCombiner::ReduceLoadWidth() to replace the 64-bit load with a 32-bit load.

However, this transformation is not valid, as the replacement load is not
a pre-increment load.  The pre-increment load produces an extra result,
which feeds a subsequent add instruction.  The replacement load only has
one result value, and this value is propagated to all uses of the pre-
increment load, including the add.  Because the add is looking for the
second result value as its operand, it ends up attempting to add a constant
to a token chain, resulting in a crash.

So the patch simply disables this transformation for any load with more than
two result values.

llvm-svn: 172480
2013-01-14 22:04:38 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
17f2252b33 When lowering an inreg sext first shift left, then right arithmetically.
Shifting right two times will only yield zero. Should fix
SingleSource/UnitTests/SignlessTypes/factor.

llvm-svn: 172322
2013-01-12 19:06:44 +00:00
Nadav Rotem
7a3f564b06 PPC: Implement efficient lowering of sign_extend_inreg.
llvm-svn: 172269
2013-01-11 22:57:48 +00:00
Tim Northover
978c012c2a Simplify writing floating types to assembly.
This removes previous special cases for each floating-point type in favour of a
shared codepath.

llvm-svn: 172189
2013-01-11 10:36:13 +00:00
Andrew Trick
c15e94c204 MIsched: add an ILP window property to machine model.
This was an experimental option, but needs to be defined
per-target. e.g. PPC A2 needs to aggressively hide latency.

I converted some in-order scheduling tests to A2. Hal is working on
more test cases.

llvm-svn: 171946
2013-01-09 03:36:49 +00:00
Tim Northover
337241fa6f Specify complete triple for fp128 tests.
This avoids FileCheck failing over different comment characters in
assembly (notably powerpc64 on Linux vs Darwin) and should fix David's
build-bot.

llvm-svn: 171886
2013-01-08 19:36:33 +00:00
Tim Northover
dde4cda878 Allow the asm printer to print fp128 values properly.
llvm-svn: 171866
2013-01-08 16:56:23 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
250d836387 This patch addresses bug 14678 by fixing two problems in medium code model
code generation.  Variables addressed through a GlobalAlias were not being
handled, and variables with available_externally linkage were treated
incorrectly.  The patch contains two new tests to verify the correct code
generation for these cases.

llvm-svn: 171778
2013-01-07 19:29:18 +00:00
Hal Finkel
3bc1b07a1b Support ppcf128 in SelectionDAG::getConstantFP
Fixes pr14751.

Patch by Kai; Thanks!

llvm-svn: 171261
2012-12-30 19:03:32 +00:00
Hal Finkel
62efc81644 Loosen scheduling restrictions on the PPC dcbt intrinsic
As with the prefetch intrinsic to which it maps, simply have dcbt
marked as reading from and writing to its arguments instead of having
unmodeled side effects. While this might cause unwanted code motion
(because aliasing checks don't really capture cache-line sharing),
it is more important that prefetches in unrolled loops don't block
the scheduler from rearranging the unrolled loop body.

llvm-svn: 171073
2012-12-25 18:51:18 +00:00
Hal Finkel
6b98f1baa2 Expand PPC64 atomic load and store
Use of store or load with the atomic specifier on 64-bit types would
cause instruction-selection failures. As with the 32-bit case, these
can use the default expansion in terms of cmp-and-swap.

llvm-svn: 171072
2012-12-25 17:22:53 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
70826f068e Simplify the testcase a bit.
I checked that it would still crash llc before the corresponding fix.

llvm-svn: 170709
2012-12-20 17:47:27 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
fac7a73ad8 PowerPC: Expand VSELECT nodes.
There's probably a better expansion for those nodes than the default for
altivec, but this is better than crashing. VSELECTs occur in loop vectorizer
output.

llvm-svn: 170551
2012-12-19 15:49:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel
e689252aae Check multiple register classes for inline asm tied registers
A register can be associated with several distinct register classes.
For example, on PPC, the floating point registers are each associated with
both F4RC (which holds f32) and F8RC (which holds f64). As a result, this code
would fail when provided with a floating point register and an f64 operand
because it would happen to find the register in the F4RC class first and
return that. From the F4RC class, SDAG would extract f32 as the register
type and then assert because of the invalid implied conversion between
the f64 value and the f32 register.

Instead, search all register classes. If a register class containing the
the requested register has the requested type, then return that register
class. Otherwise, as before, return the first register class found that
contains the requested register.

llvm-svn: 170436
2012-12-18 17:50:58 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
ac9760fe81 This patch removes some nondeterminism from direct object file output
for TLS dynamic models on 64-bit PowerPC ELF.  The default sort routine
for relocations only sorts on the r_offset field; but with TLS, there
can be two relocations with the same r_offset.  For PowerPC, this patch
sorts secondarily on descending r_type, which matches the behavior
expected by the linker.

llvm-svn: 170237
2012-12-14 20:28:38 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
c895316923 This patch improves the 64-bit PowerPC InitialExec TLS support by providing
for a wider range of GOT entries that can hold thread-relative offsets.
This matches the behavior of GCC, which was not documented in the PPC64 TLS
ABI.  The ABI will be updated with the new code sequence.

Former sequence:

  ld 9,x@got@tprel(2)
  add 9,9,x@tls

New sequence:

  addis 9,2,x@got@tprel@ha
  ld 9,x@got@tprel@l(9)
  add 9,9,x@tls

Note that a linker optimization exists to transform the new sequence into
the shorter sequence when appropriate, by replacing the addis with a nop
and modifying the base register and relocation type of the ld.

llvm-svn: 170209
2012-12-14 17:02:38 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
29d2ca4de4 The ordering of two relocations on the same instruction is apparently not
predictable when compiled on at least one non-PowerPC host.  Source of
nondeterminism not apparent.  Restrict the test to build on PowerPC hosts
for now while looking into the issue further.

llvm-svn: 170016
2012-12-12 20:29:20 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
7a93daad1a This patch implements local-dynamic TLS model support for the 64-bit
PowerPC target.  This is the last of the four models, so we now have 
full TLS support.

This is mostly a straightforward extension of the general dynamic model.
I had to use an additional Chain operand to tie ADDIS_DTPREL_HA to the
register copy following ADDI_TLSLD_L; otherwise everything above the
ADDIS_DTPREL_HA appeared dead and was removed.

As before, there are new test cases to test the assembly generation, and
the relocations output during integrated assembly.  The expected code
gen sequence can be read in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/tls-ld.ll.

There are a couple of things I think can be done more efficiently in the
overall TLS code, so there will likely be a clean-up patch forthcoming;
but for now I want to be sure the functionality is in place.

Bill

llvm-svn: 170003
2012-12-12 19:29:35 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
45b56f7632 This patch implements the general dynamic TLS model for 64-bit PowerPC.
Given a thread-local symbol x with global-dynamic access, the generated
code to obtain x's address is:

     Instruction                            Relocation            Symbol
  addis ra,r2,x@got@tlsgd@ha           R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_HA       x
  addi  r3,ra,x@got@tlsgd@l            R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_L        x
  bl __tls_get_addr(x@tlsgd)           R_PPC64_TLSGD                x
                                       R_PPC64_REL24           __tls_get_addr
  nop
  <use address in r3>

The implementation borrows from the medium code model work for introducing
special forms of ADDIS and ADDI into the DAG representation.  This is made
slightly more complicated by having to introduce a call to the external
function __tls_get_addr.  Using the full call machinery is overkill and,
more importantly, makes it difficult to add a special relocation.  So I've
introduced another opcode GET_TLS_ADDR to represent the function call, and
surrounded it with register copies to set up the parameter and return value.

Most of the code is pretty straightforward.  I ran into one peculiarity
when I introduced a new PPC opcode BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD, which is just like
BL8_NOP_ELF except that it takes another parameter to represent the symbol
("x" above) that requires a relocation on the call.  Something in the 
TblGen machinery causes BL8_NOP_ELF and BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD to be treated
identically during the emit phase, so this second operand was never
visited to generate relocations.  This is the reason for the slightly
messy workaround in PPCMCCodeEmitter.cpp:getDirectBrEncoding().

Two new tests are included to demonstrate correct external assembly and
correct generation of relocations using the integrated assembler.

Comments welcome!

Thanks,
Bill

llvm-svn: 169910
2012-12-11 20:30:11 +00:00
Hal Finkel
3b65689ab9 Use GetUnderlyingObjects in misched
misched used GetUnderlyingObject in order to break false load/store
dependencies, and the -enable-aa-sched-mi feature similarly relied on
GetUnderlyingObject in order to ensure it is safe to use the aliasing analysis.
Unfortunately, GetUnderlyingObject does not recurse through phi nodes, and so
(especially due to LSR) all of these mechanisms failed for
induction-variable-dependent loads and stores inside loops.

This change replaces uses of GetUnderlyingObject with GetUnderlyingObjects
(which will recurse through phi and select instructions) in misched.

Andy reviewed, tested and simplified this patch; Thanks!

llvm-svn: 169744
2012-12-10 18:49:16 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
9d8cdcda41 This patch introduces initial-exec model support for thread-local storage
on 64-bit PowerPC ELF.

The patch includes code to handle external assembly and MC output with the
integrated assembler.  It intentionally does not support the "old" JIT.

For the initial-exec TLS model, the ABI requires the following to calculate
the address of external thread-local variable x:

 Code sequence            Relocation                  Symbol
  ld 9,x@got@tprel(2)      R_PPC64_GOT_TPREL16_DS      x
  add 9,9,x@tls            R_PPC64_TLS                 x

The register 9 is arbitrary here.  The linker will replace x@got@tprel
with the offset relative to the thread pointer to the generated GOT
entry for symbol x.  It will replace x@tls with the thread-pointer
register (13).

The two test cases verify correct assembly output and relocation output
as just described.

PowerPC-specific selection node variants are added for the two
instructions above:  LD_GOT_TPREL and ADD_TLS.  These are inserted
when an initial-exec global variable is encountered by
PPCTargetLowering::LowerGlobalTLSAddress(), and later lowered to
machine instructions LDgotTPREL and ADD8TLS.  LDgotTPREL is a pseudo
that uses the same LDrs support added for medium code model's LDtocL,
with a different relocation type.

The rest of the processing is straightforward.

llvm-svn: 169281
2012-12-04 16:18:08 +00:00
Chad Rosier
05b569a7a5 test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vec_mul.ll: Add a triple. Thanks, Hal.
llvm-svn: 169026
2012-11-30 19:15:10 +00:00
Chad Rosier
bee049d9ed test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vec_mul.ll: Fix register operands.
llvm-svn: 169020
2012-11-30 18:29:01 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
a95fd58fdb test/CodeGen/PowerPC: Add explicit -march=ppc32.
FIXME: Please add another RUN line if you would like to check also on ppc64.
llvm-svn: 168999
2012-11-30 13:28:31 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
72208bbf33 This patch fixes the Altivec addend construction for the fused multiply-add
instruction (vmaddfp) to conform with IEEE to ensure the sign of a zero
result when resulting product is -0.0.

The -0.0 vector addend to vmaddfp is generated by a creating a vector
with full bits sets and then shifting each elements by 31-bits to the
left, resulting in a vector of 0x80000000 (or -0.0 as float).

The 'buildvec_canonicalize.ll' was adjusted to reflect this change and
the 'vec_mul.ll' was complemented with the float vector multiplication
test.

llvm-svn: 168998
2012-11-30 13:05:44 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
9f4da44752 This patch makes medium code model the default for 64-bit PowerPC ELF.
When the CodeGenInfo is to be created for the PPC64 target machine,
a default code-model selection is converted to CodeModel::Medium
provided we are not targeting the Darwin OS.  Defaults for Darwin
are unaffected.

llvm-svn: 168747
2012-11-27 23:36:26 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
0975882ed4 This patch implements medium code model support for 64-bit PowerPC.
The default for 64-bit PowerPC is small code model, in which TOC entries
must be addressable using a 16-bit offset from the TOC pointer.  Additionally,
only TOC entries are addressed via the TOC pointer.

With medium code model, TOC entries and data sections can all be addressed
via the TOC pointer using a 32-bit offset.  Cooperation with the linker
allows 16-bit offsets to be used when these are sufficient, reducing the
number of extra instructions that need to be executed.  Medium code model
also does not generate explicit TOC entries in ".section toc" for variables
that are wholly internal to the compilation unit.

Consider a load of an external 4-byte integer.  With small code model, the
compiler generates:

	ld 3, .LC1@toc(2)
	lwz 4, 0(3)

	.section	.toc,"aw",@progbits
.LC1:
	.tc ei[TC],ei

With medium model, it instead generates:

	addis 3, 2, .LC1@toc@ha
	ld 3, .LC1@toc@l(3)
	lwz 4, 0(3)

	.section	.toc,"aw",@progbits
.LC1:
	.tc ei[TC],ei

Here .LC1@toc@ha is a relocation requesting the upper 16 bits of the
32-bit offset of ei's TOC entry from the TOC base pointer.  Similarly,
.LC1@toc@l is a relocation requesting the lower 16 bits.  Note that if
the linker determines that ei's TOC entry is within a 16-bit offset of
the TOC base pointer, it will replace the "addis" with a "nop", and
replace the "ld" with the identical "ld" instruction from the small
code model example.

Consider next a load of a function-scope static integer.  For small code
model, the compiler generates:

	ld 3, .LC1@toc(2)
	lwz 4, 0(3)

	.section	.toc,"aw",@progbits
.LC1:
	.tc test_fn_static.si[TC],test_fn_static.si
	.type	test_fn_static.si,@object
	.local	test_fn_static.si
	.comm	test_fn_static.si,4,4

For medium code model, the compiler generates:

	addis 3, 2, test_fn_static.si@toc@ha
	addi 3, 3, test_fn_static.si@toc@l
	lwz 4, 0(3)

	.type	test_fn_static.si,@object
	.local	test_fn_static.si
	.comm	test_fn_static.si,4,4

Again, the linker may replace the "addis" with a "nop", calculating only
a 16-bit offset when this is sufficient.

Note that it would be more efficient for the compiler to generate:

	addis 3, 2, test_fn_static.si@toc@ha
        lwz 4, test_fn_static.si@toc@l(3)

The current patch does not perform this optimization yet.  This will be
addressed as a peephole optimization in a later patch.

For the moment, the default code model for 64-bit PowerPC will remain the
small code model.  We plan to eventually change the default to medium code
model, which matches current upstream GCC behavior.  Note that the different
code models are ABI-compatible, so code compiled with different models will
be linked and execute correctly.

I've tested the regression suite and the application/benchmark test suite in
two ways:  Once with the patch as submitted here, and once with additional
logic to force medium code model as the default.  The tests all compile
cleanly, with one exception.  The mandel-2 application test fails due to an
unrelated ABI compatibility with passing complex numbers.  It just so happens
that small code model was incredibly lucky, in that temporary values in 
floating-point registers held the expected values needed by the external
library routine that was called incorrectly.  My current thought is to correct
the ABI problems with _Complex before making medium code model the default,
to avoid introducing this "regression."

Here are a few comments on how the patch works, since the selection code
can be difficult to follow:

The existing logic for small code model defines three pseudo-instructions:
LDtoc for most uses, LDtocJTI for jump table addresses, and LDtocCPT for
constant pool addresses.  These are expanded by SelectCodeCommon().  The
pseudo-instruction approach doesn't work for medium code model, because
we need to generate two instructions when we match the same pattern.
Instead, new logic in PPCDAGToDAGISel::Select() intercepts the TOC_ENTRY
node for medium code model, and generates an ADDIStocHA followed by either
a LDtocL or an ADDItocL.  These new node types correspond naturally to
the sequences described above.

The addis/ld sequence is generated for the following cases:
 * Jump table addresses
 * Function addresses
 * External global variables
 * Tentative definitions of global variables (common linkage)

The addis/addi sequence is generated for the following cases:
 * Constant pool entries
 * File-scope static global variables
 * Function-scope static variables

Expanding to the two-instruction sequences at select time exposes the
instructions to subsequent optimization, particularly scheduling.

The rest of the processing occurs at assembly time, in
PPCAsmPrinter::EmitInstruction.  Each of the instructions is converted to
a "real" PowerPC instruction.  When a TOC entry needs to be created, this
is done here in the same manner as for the existing LDtoc, LDtocJTI, and
LDtocCPT pseudo-instructions (I factored out a new routine to handle this).

I had originally thought that if a TOC entry was needed for LDtocL or
ADDItocL, it would already have been generated for the previous ADDIStocHA.
However, at higher optimization levels, the ADDIStocHA may appear in a 
different block, which may be assembled textually following the block
containing the LDtocL or ADDItocL.  So it is necessary to include the
possibility of creating a new TOC entry for those two instructions.

Note that for LDtocL, we generate a new form of LD called LDrs.  This
allows specifying the @toc@l relocation for the offset field of the LD
instruction (i.e., the offset is replaced by a SymbolLo relocation).
When the peephole optimization described above is added, we will need
to do similar things for all immediate-form load and store operations.

The seven "mcm-n.ll" test cases are kept separate because otherwise the
intermingling of various TOC entries and so forth makes the tests fragile
and hard to understand.

The above assumes use of an external assembler.  For use of the
integrated assembler, new relocations are added and used by
PPCELFObjectWriter.  Testing is done with "mcm-obj.ll", which tests for
proper generation of the various relocations for the same sequences
tested with the external assembler.

llvm-svn: 168708
2012-11-27 17:35:46 +00:00
Eli Bendersky
d85e96be00 Rewrite test to not use a FileCheck variable and redefine it on the same line.
In preparation for the FileCheck functionality change which will allow using
a variable later on the same line.

No functionality change.

llvm-svn: 168588
2012-11-26 14:09:46 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
42c6896fe3 PPC: MCize most of the darwin PIC emission.
The last remaining bit is "bcl 20, 31, AnonSymbol", which I couldn't find the
instruction definition for. Only whitespace changes in assembly output.

llvm-svn: 168541
2012-11-24 13:18:25 +00:00
Andrew Trick
ab75b8798c Use a full triple for a PPC test case for asm syntax.
llvm-svn: 168283
2012-11-18 06:21:03 +00:00
Andrew Trick
d4358df73b Silence the buildbots for this test while I figure out the triple
llvm-svn: 168249
2012-11-17 03:39:26 +00:00
Andrew Trick
52f84ce773 Broaden isSchedulingBoundary to check aliases of SP.
On PPC the stack pointer is X1, but ADJCALLSTACK writes R1.

Fixes PR14315: Register regmask dependency problem with misched.

llvm-svn: 168248
2012-11-17 03:35:11 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
c159b16933 PowerPC: Lowering floor intrinsic for Altivec
This patch lowers the llvm.floor, llvm.ceil, llvm.trunc, and
llvm.nearbyint to Altivec instruction when using 4 single-precision
float vectors.

llvm-svn: 168086
2012-11-15 20:56:03 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
f294eb980a This patch is in preparation for adding medium code model support to the
PPC64 target.  The five tests modified herein test code generation that is
sensitive to the code model selected.  So I've added -code-model=small to
the RUN commands for each.

Since small code model is the default, this has no effect for now; but this
prepares us for eventually changing the default to medium code model for PPC64.

Test changes verified with small and medium code model as default on
powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu.  All tests continue to pass.

llvm-svn: 167999
2012-11-14 23:23:27 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
9c5e333c90 Do not consider a machine instruction that uses and defines the same
physical register as candidate for common subexpression elimination
in MachineCSE.

This fixes a bug on PowerPC in MultiSource/Applications/oggenc/oggenc
caused by MachineCSE invalidly merging two separate DYNALLOC insns.

llvm-svn: 167855
2012-11-13 18:40:58 +00:00
Jakob Stoklund Olesen
887571e652 Fix assertions in updateRegMaskSlots().
The RegMaskSlots contains 'r' slots while NewIdx and OldIdx are 'B'
slots. This broke the checks in the assertions.

This fixes PR14302.

llvm-svn: 167625
2012-11-09 19:18:49 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
5e496676d0 On PowerPC64, integer return values (as well as arguments) are supposed
to be extended to a full register.   This is modeled in the IR by marking
the return value (or argument) with a signext or zeroext attribute.

However, while these attributes are respected for function arguments,
they are currently ignored for function return values by the PowerPC
back-end.  This patch updates PPCCallingConv.td to ask for the promotion
to i64, and fixes LowerReturn and LowerCallResult to implement it.

The new test case verifies that both arguments and return values are
properly extended when passing them; and also that the optimizers
understand incoming argument and return values are in fact guaranteed
by the ABI to be extended.

The patch caused a spurious breakage in CodeGen/PowerPC/coalesce-ext.ll,
since the test case used a "ret" instruction to create a use of an i32
value at the end of the function (to set up data flow as required for
what the test is intended to test).  Since there's now an implicit
promotion to i64, that data flow no longer works as expected.  To fix
this, this patch now adds an extra "add" to ensure we have an appropriate
use of the i32 value.

llvm-svn: 167396
2012-11-05 19:39:45 +00:00
Hal Finkel
a82b79fc22 Add support for the PowerPC-specific inline asm Z constraint and y modifier.
The Z constraint specifies an r+r memory address, and the y modifier expands
to the "r, r" in the asm string. For this initial implementation, the base
register is forced to r0 (which has the special meaning of 0 for r+r addressing
on PowerPC) and the full address is taken in the second register. In the
future, this should be improved.

llvm-svn: 167388
2012-11-05 18:18:42 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
382ede5fd4 [PATCH] PowerPC: Expand load extend vector operations
This patch expands the SEXTLOAD, ZEXTLOAD, and EXTLOAD operations for
vector types when altivec is enabled.

llvm-svn: 167386
2012-11-05 17:15:56 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
f4c899f8e7 This patch addresses an ABI compatibility issue with empty aggregate
parameters.  Examples of these are:

  struct { } a;
  union { } b[256];
  int a[0];

An empty aggregate has an address, although dereferencing that address is
pointless.  When passed as a parameter, an empty aggregate does not consume
a protocol register, nor does it consume a doubleword in the parameter save
area.  Passing an empty aggregate by reference passes an address just as
for any other aggregate.  Returning an empty aggregate uses GPR3 as a hidden
address of the return value location, just as for any other aggregate.

The patch modifies PPCTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments_64SVR4 and
PPCTargetLowering::LowerCall_64SVR4 to properly skip empty aggregate
parameters passed by value.  The handling of return values and by-reference
parameters was already correct.

Built on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu and tested with no new regressions.
A test case is included to test proper handling of empty aggregate
parameters on both sides of the function call protocol.

llvm-svn: 167090
2012-10-31 01:15:05 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
74fd05ff3f PowerPC: Expand FSRQT for vector types
This patch expands FSQRT for floating point vector types when altivec is
used.

llvm-svn: 167034
2012-10-30 18:29:42 +00:00
Adhemerval Zanella
ac3ba40bc2 PowerPC: More support for Altivec compare operations
This patch adds more support for vector type comparisons using altivec.
It adds correct support for v16i8, v8i16, v4i32, and v4f32 vector
types for comparison operators ==, !=, >, >=, <, and <=.

llvm-svn: 167015
2012-10-30 13:50:19 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
77a8fd274b This patch solves a problem with passing varargs parameters under the PPC64
ELF ABI.

A varargs parameter consisting of a single-precision floating-point value,
or of a single-element aggregate containing a single-precision floating-point
value, must be passed in the low-order (rightmost) four bytes of the
doubleword stack slot reserved for that parameter.  If there are GPR protocol
registers remaining, the parameter must also be mirrored in the low-order
four bytes of the reserved GPR.

Prior to this patch, such parameters were being passed in the high-order
four bytes of the stack slot and the mirrored GPR.

The patch adds a new test case to verify the correct code generation.

llvm-svn: 166968
2012-10-29 21:18:16 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
445bd73056 In various places throughout the code generator, there were special
checks to avoid performing compile-time arithmetic on PPCDoubleDouble.

Now that APFloat supports arithmetic on PPCDoubleDouble, those checks
are no longer needed, and we can treat the type like any other.

llvm-svn: 166958
2012-10-29 18:35:49 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
2daab9e4b4 Allow i32/i64 for 'f' constraint on PowerPC.
This fixes PR12757.

llvm-svn: 166943
2012-10-29 17:49:34 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
2682b73f6d This patch adds alignment information for long double to the 64-bit PowerPC
ELF subtarget.

The existing logic is used as a fallback to avoid any changes to the Darwin
ABI.  PPC64 ELF now has two possible data layout strings: one for FreeBSD,
which requires 8-byte alignment, and a default string that requires
16-byte alignment.

I've added a test for PPC64 Linux to verify the 16-byte alignment.  If
somebody wants to add a separate test for FreeBSD, that would be great.

Note that there is a companion patch to update the alignment information
in Clang, which I am committing now as well.

llvm-svn: 166928
2012-10-29 14:59:36 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
71c462aff2 This patch addresses a PPC64 ELF issue with passing parameters consisting of
structs having size 3, 5, 6, or 7.  Such a struct must be passed and received
as right-justified within its register or memory slot.  The problem is only
present for structs that are passed in registers.

Previously, as part of a patch handling all structs of size less than 8, I
added logic to rotate the incoming register so that the struct was left-
justified prior to storing the whole register.  This was incorrect because
the address of the parameter had already been adjusted earlier to point to
the right-adjusted value in the storage slot.  Essentially I had accidentally
accounted for the right-adjustment twice.

In this patch, I removed the incorrect logic and reorganized the code to make
the flow clearer.

The removal of the rotates changes the expected code generation, so test case
structsinregs.ll has been modified to reflect this.  I also added a new test
case, jaggedstructs.ll, to demonstrate that structs of these sizes can now
be properly received and passed.

I've built and tested the code on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu with no new
regressions.  I also ran the GCC compatibility test suite and verified that
earlier problems with these structs are now resolved, with no new regressions.

llvm-svn: 166680
2012-10-25 13:38:09 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
2248bca601 This patch fixes failures in the SingleSource/Regression/C/uint64_to_float
test case on PowerPC caused by rounding errors when converting from a 64-bit
integer to a single-precision floating point. The reason for this are
double-rounding effects, since on PowerPC we have to convert to an
intermediate double-precision value first, which gets rounded to the
final single-precision result.

The patch fixes the problem by preparing the 64-bit integer so that the
first conversion step to double-precision will always be exact, and the
final rounding step will result in the correctly-rounded single-precision
result.  The generated code sequence is equivalent to what GCC would generate.

When -enable-unsafe-fp-math is in effect, that extra effort is omitted
and we accept possible rounding errors (just like GCC does as well).

llvm-svn: 166178
2012-10-18 13:16:11 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
ad04de0c32 This patch addresses PR13949.
For the PowerPC 64-bit ELF Linux ABI, aggregates of size less than 8
bytes are to be passed in the low-order bits ("right-adjusted") of the
doubleword register or memory slot assigned to them.  A previous patch
addressed this for aggregates passed in registers.  However, small
aggregates passed in the overflow portion of the parameter save area are
still being passed left-adjusted.

The fix is made in PPCTargetLowering::LowerCall_Darwin_Or_64SVR4 on the
caller side, and in PPCTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments_64SVR4 on
the callee side.  The main fix on the callee side simply extends
existing logic for 1- and 2-byte objects to 1- through 7-byte objects,
and correcting a constant left over from 32-bit code.  There is also a
fix to a bogus calculation of the offset to the following argument in
the parameter save area.

On the caller side, again a constant left over from 32-bit code is
fixed.  Additionally, some code for 1, 2, and 4-byte objects is
duplicated to handle the 3, 5, 6, and 7-byte objects for SVR4 only.  The
LowerCall_Darwin_Or_64SVR4 logic is getting fairly convoluted trying to
handle both ABIs, and I propose to separate this into two functions in a
future patch, at which time the duplication can be removed.

The patch adds a new test (structsinmem.ll) to demonstrate correct
passing of structures of all seven sizes.  Eight dummy parameters are
used to force these structures to be in the overflow portion of the
parameter save area.

As a side effect, this corrects the case when aggregates passed in
registers are saved into the first eight doublewords of the parameter
save area:  Previously they were stored left-justified, and now are
properly stored right-justified.  This requires changing the expected
output of existing test case structsinregs.ll.

llvm-svn: 166022
2012-10-16 13:30:53 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
1a69f3cfb5 llvm/test/CodeGen/PowerPC/2012-10-12-bitcast.ll: Try to fix failure on non-ppc hosts, to add -mattr=+altivec.
llvm-svn: 165803
2012-10-12 16:01:08 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
dd9a6100a0 Fix big-endian codegen bug in DAGTypeLegalizer::ExpandRes_BITCAST
On PowerPC, a bitcast of <16 x i8> to i128 may run through a code
path in ExpandRes_BITCAST that attempts to do an intermediate
bitcast to a <4 x i32> vector, and then construct the Hi and Lo parts
of the resulting i128 by pairing up two of those i32 vector elements
each.  The code already recognizes that on a big-endian system, the
first two vector elements form the Hi part, and the final two vector
elements form the Lo part (vice-versa from the little-endian situation).

However, we also need to take endianness into account when forming each
of those separate pairs:  on a big-endian system, vector element 0 is
the *high* part of the pair making up the Hi part of the result, and
vector element 1 is the low part of the pair.  The code currently always
uses vector element 0 as the low part and vector element 1 as the high
part, as is appropriate for little-endian platforms only.

This patch fixes this by swapping the vector elements as they are
paired up as appropriate.

llvm-svn: 165802
2012-10-12 15:42:58 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
3b8ee801af This patch addresses PR13947.
For function calls on the 64-bit PowerPC SVR4 target, each parameter
is mapped to as many doublewords in the parameter save area as
necessary to hold the parameter.  The first 13 non-varargs
floating-point values are passed in registers; any additional
floating-point parameters are passed in the parameter save area.  A
single-precision floating-point parameter (32 bits) must be mapped to
the second (rightmost, low-order) word of its assigned doubleword
slot.

Currently LLVM violates this ABI requirement by mapping such a
parameter to the first (leftmost, high-order) word of its assigned
doubleword slot.  This is internally self-consistent but will not
interoperate correctly with libraries compiled with an ABI-compliant
compiler.

This patch corrects the problem by adjusting the parameter addressing
on both sides of the calling convention.

llvm-svn: 165714
2012-10-11 15:38:20 +00:00