Summary:
This patch teaches ADCE to preserve both DominatorTrees and PostDominatorTrees.
I didn't notice any performance impact when bootstrapping clang with this patch.
The patch was originally committed in r311039 and reverted in r311049.
This revision fixes the problem with not adding a dependency on the
DominatorTreeWrapperPass for the LegacyPassManager.
Reviewers: dberlin, chandlerc, sanjoy, davide, grosser, brzycki
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: grandinj, zhendongsu, llvm-commits, david2050
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35869
llvm-svn: 311057
This way we can see what the current codegen looks like.
I've also explicitly added/removed the cmov attribute from the RUN lines,
so we know exactly what we're checking in the runs.
llvm-svn: 311052
Summary:
This patch teaches ADCE to preserve both DominatorTrees and PostDominatorTrees.
I didn't notice any performance impact when bootstrapping clang with this patch.
Reviewers: dberlin, chandlerc, sanjoy, davide, grosser, brzycki
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: grandinj, zhendongsu, llvm-commits, david2050
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35869
llvm-svn: 311039
This change extends MachineCopyPropagation to do COPY source forwarding.
This change also extends the MachineCopyPropagation pass to be able to
be run during register allocation, after physical registers have been
assigned, but before the virtual registers have been re-written, which
allows it to remove virtual register COPY LiveIntervals that become dead
through the forwarding of all of their uses.
Reviewers: qcolombet, javed.absar, MatzeB, jonpa
Subscribers: jyknight, nemanjai, llvm-commits, nhaehnle, mcrosier, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30751
llvm-svn: 311038
This can be used to build non-sanitized and sanitized versions of
runtimes, where sanitized versions use the just built sanitizer
which in turn may use the non-sanitized version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36348
llvm-svn: 311036
Summary:
Mark LoopDataPrefetch and AArch64FalkorHWPFFix passes as preserving
ScalarEvolution since they do not alter loop structure and should not
alter any SCEV values (though LoopDataPrefetch may introduce new
instructions that won't have cached SCEV values yet).
This can result in slight code differences, mainly w.r.t. nsw/nuw flags
on SCEVs, since these are computed somewhat lazily when a zext/sext
instruction is encountered. As a result, passes after the modified
passes may see SCEVs with more nsw/nuw flags present.
Reviewers: sanjoy, anemet
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, mzolotukhin, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36716
llvm-svn: 311032
Debug information for TLS variables on MIPS might have R_MIPS_TLS_DTPREL32
or R_MIPS_TLS_DTPREL64 relocations. This patch adds a support for such
relocations in the `RelocVisitor`.
llvm-svn: 311031
Summary:
This patch introduces a way of informing the (Post)DominatorTree about multiple CFG updates that happened since the last tree update. This makes performing tree updates much easier, as it internally takes care of applying the updates in lockstep with the (virtual) updates to the CFG, which is done by reverse-applying future CFG updates.
The batch updater is able to remove redundant updates that cancel each other out. In the future, it should be also possible to reorder updates to reduce the amount of work needed to perform the updates.
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, grosser, davide, brzycki
Reviewed By: brzycki
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36167
llvm-svn: 311015
To clear assumptions that are potentially invalid after trivialization, we need
to walk the use/def chain. Normally, the only way to reach an instruction with
an unsized type is via an instruction that has side effects (or otherwise will
demand its input bits). That would stop the walk. However, if we have a
readnone function that returns an unsized type (e.g., void), we must avoid
asking for the demanded bits of the function call's return value. A
void-returning readnone function is always dead (and so we can stop walking the
use/def chain here), but the check is necessary to avoid asserting.
Fixes PR34211.
llvm-svn: 311014
r310825 caused the clang-ppc64le-linux-lnt bot to go red
(http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-ppc64le-linux-lnt/builds/5712)
because of a test-suite failure of
SingleSource/UnitTests/2003-07-09-SignedArgs
This reverts commit 0028f6a87224fb595a1c19c544cde9b003035996.
llvm-svn: 311008
If a variable has an explicit section such as .sdata or .sbss, it is placed
in that section and accessed in a gp relative manner. This overrides the global
-G setting.
Otherwise if a variable has a explicit section attached to it, such as '.rodata'
or '.mysection', it is not placed in the small data section. This also overrides
the global -G setting.
Reviewers: atanasyan, nitesh.jain
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36616
llvm-svn: 311001
- Set the default runtime unroll count to 4 and use the newly added
UnrollRemainder option.
- Create loop cost and force unroll for a cost less than 12.
- Disable unrolling on Thumb1 only targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36134
llvm-svn: 310997
When creating an import library from lld, the cases with
Name != ExtName shouldn't end up as a weak alias, but as a real
export of the new name, which is what actually is exported from
the DLL.
This restores the behaviour of renamed exports to what it was in
4.0.
The other half of this commit, including test, goes into lld.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36633
llvm-svn: 310991
Hook up the -k option (that in the original GNU dlltool removes the
@n suffix from the symbol that the final executable ends up linked to).
In llvm-dlltool, make sure that functions end up with the undecorate
name type if this option is set and they are decorated. In mingw, when
creating import libraries from def files instead of creating an import
library as a side effect of linking a DLL, the symbol names in the def
contain the stdcall/fastcall decoration (but no leading underscore).
By setting the undecorate name type, a linker linking to the import
library will omit the decoration from the DLL import entry.
With this in place, mingw-w64 for i386 built with llvm-dlltool/clang
produces import libraries that actually work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36548
llvm-svn: 310990
The previous Name and ExtName aren't enough to convey all the nuances
between weak aliases and stdcall decorated function names.
A test for this will be added in LLD.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36544
llvm-svn: 310988
Summary: When we move then-else code to if, we need to merge its debug info, otherwise the hoisted instruction may have inaccurate debug info attached.
Reviewers: aprantl, probinson, dblaikie, echristo, loladiro
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36778
llvm-svn: 310985
r310940 exposed reverse-unreachable code to some optimizers,
which caused some of the code in this test to be sunk, changing
the input to the pass and breaking the exptectations.
Since that change is irrelevant to this particular test, this change
just adds an exit node to work around the problem; the
test should really be more robust (or be an MIR test?) but this preserves
the existing test intent.
llvm-svn: 310981
Undef subreg definition means that the content of the super register
doesn't matter at this point. While that's true for virtual registers,
this may not hold when replacing them with actual physical registers.
Indeed, some part of the physical register may be coalesced with the
related virtual register and thus, the values for those parts matter and
must be live.
The fix consists in checking whether or not subregs of the physical register
being assigned to an undef subreg definition are live through that def and
insert an implicit use if they are. Doing so, will keep them alive until
that point like they should be.
E.g., let vreg14 being assigned to R0_R1 then
%vreg14:gsub_0<def,read-undef> = COPY %R0 ; <-- R1 is still live here
%vreg14:gsub_1<def> = COPY %R1
Before this changes, the rewriter would change the code into:
%R0<def> = KILL %R0, %R0_R1<imp-def> ; <-- this tells R1 is redefined
%R1<def> = KILL %R1, %R0_R1<imp-def>, %R0_R1<imp-use> ; this value of this R1
; is believed to come
; from the previous
; instruction
Because of this invalid liveness, later pass could make wrong choices and in
particular clobber live register as it happened with the register scavenger in
llvm.org/PR34107
Now we would generate:
%R0<def> = KILL %R0, %R0_R1<imp-def>, %R0_R1<imp-use> ; This tells R1 needs to
; reach this point
%R1<def> = KILL %R1, %R0_R1<imp-def>, %R0_R1<imp-use>
The bug has been here forever, it got exposed recently because the register
scavenger got smarter.
Fixes llvm.org/PR34107
llvm-svn: 310979
We were only allowing ConstantInt before. This patch allows splat of ConstantInt too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36763
llvm-svn: 310970
This reverts commit r310425, thus reapplying r310335 with a fix for link
issue of the AArch64 unittests on Linux bots when BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is ON.
Original commit message:
[GlobalISel] Remove the GISelAccessor API.
Its sole purpose was to avoid spreading around ifdefs related to
building global-isel. Since r309990, GlobalISel is not optional anymore,
thus, we can get rid of this mechanism all together.
NFC.
----
The fix for the link issue consists in adding the GlobalISel library in
the list of dependencies for the AArch64 unittests. This dependency
comes from the use of AArch64Subtarget that needs to know how
to destruct the GISel related APIs when being detroyed.
Thanks to Bill Seurer and Ahmed Bougacha for helping me reproducing and
understand the problem.
llvm-svn: 310969
Fix for PR32763
An assert that checks if a Ref was untracked fails during ThinLTO context cleanup. The issue is because lazy loading temporary nodes didn't properly track ValueAsMetadata nodes. This patch ensures that the temporary nodes are properly tracked when they're replaced with the value.
llvm-svn: 310967
1. Correct description of the kernel initial state for FLAT_SCRATCH_INIT.
2. Add link to GFX9 architecture documentation.
3. Update product names.
4. Rename note record from NT_AMD_AMDGPU_METADATA to NT_AMD_AMDGPU_HSA_METADATA and move description to the AMDHSA coding convention section.
5. Minor typo corrections.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36549
llvm-svn: 310954
The %T lit expansion expands to a common directory shared between all the tests in the same directory, which is unexpected and unintuitive, and more importantly, it's been a source of subtle race conditions and flaky tests. In https://reviews.llvm.org/D35396, it was agreed that it would be best to simply ban %T and only keep %t, which is unique to each test. When a test needs a temporary directory, it can just create one using mkdir %t.
This patch removes %T in llvm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36495
llvm-svn: 310953
Narrow ops are better for bit-tracking, and in the case of vectors,
may enable better codegen.
As the trunc test shows, this can allow follow-on simplifications.
There's a block of code in visitTrunc that deals with shifted ops
with FIXME comments. It may be possible to remove some of that now,
but I want to make sure there are no problems with this step first.
http://rise4fun.com/Alive/Y3a
Name: hoist_ashr_ahead_of_sext_1
%s = sext i8 %x to i32
%r = ashr i32 %s, 3 ; shift value is < than source bit width
=>
%a = ashr i8 %x, 3
%r = sext i8 %a to i32
Name: hoist_ashr_ahead_of_sext_2
%s = sext i8 %x to i32
%r = ashr i32 %s, 8 ; shift value is >= than source bit width
=>
%a = ashr i8 %x, 7 ; so clamp this shift value
%r = sext i8 %a to i32
Name: junc_the_trunc
%a = sext i16 %v to i32
%s = ashr i32 %a, 18
%t = trunc i32 %s to i16
=>
%t = ashr i16 %v, 15
llvm-svn: 310942
Summary:
This patch teaches PostDominatorTree about infinite loops. It is built on top of D29705 by @dberlin which includes a very detailed motivation for this change.
What's new is that the patch also teaches the incremental updater how to deal with reverse-unreachable regions and how to properly maintain and verify tree roots. Before that, the incremental algorithm sometimes ended up preserving reverse-unreachable regions after updates that wouldn't appear in the tree if it was constructed from scratch on the same CFG.
This patch makes the following assumptions:
- A sequence of updates should produce the same tree as a recalculating it.
- Any sequence of the same updates should lead to the same tree.
- Siblings and roots are unordered.
The last two properties are essential to efficiently perform batch updates in the future.
When it comes to the first one, we can decide later that the consistency between freshly built tree and an updated one doesn't matter match, as there are many correct ways to pick roots in infinite loops, and to relax this assumption. That should enable us to recalculate postdominators less frequently.
This patch is pretty conservative when it comes to incremental updates on reverse-unreachable regions and ends up recalculating the whole tree in many cases. It should be possible to improve the performance in many cases, if we decide that it's important enough.
That being said, my experiments showed that reverse-unreachable are very rare in the IR emitted by clang when bootstrapping clang. Here are the statistics I collected by analyzing IR between passes and after each removePredecessor call:
```
# functions: 52283
# samples: 337609
# reverse unreachable BBs: 216022
# BBs: 247840796
Percent reverse-unreachable: 0.08716159869015269 %
Max(PercRevUnreachable) in a function: 87.58620689655172 %
# > 25 % samples: 471 ( 0.1395104988314885 % samples )
... in 145 ( 0.27733680163724345 % functions )
```
Most of the reverse-unreachable regions come from invalid IR where it wouldn't be possible to construct a PostDomTree anyway.
I would like to commit this patch in the next week in order to be able to complete the work that depends on it before the end of my internship, so please don't wait long to voice your concerns :).
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, grosser, brzycki, davide, chandlerc, hfinkel
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: nhaehnle, javed.absar, kparzysz, uabelho, jlebar, hiraditya, llvm-commits, dberlin, david2050
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35851
llvm-svn: 310940