mir-canon (MIRCanonicalizerPass) is a pass designed to reorder instructions and
rename operands so that two similar programs will diff more cleanly after being
run through mir-canon than they would otherwise. This project is still a work
in progress and there are ideas still being discussed for improving diff
quality.
M include/llvm/InitializePasses.h
M lib/CodeGen/CMakeLists.txt
M lib/CodeGen/CodeGen.cpp
A lib/CodeGen/MIRCanonicalizerPass.cpp
llvm-svn: 317285
Just aligning segment offsets to segment alignment is incorrect and also
wastes more space than is needed. The requirement is that p_offset ==
p_addr modulo p_align *not* that p_offset == 0 modulo p_align. Generally
speaking we've been using p_addr == 0 modulo p_align. In fact yaml2obj
can't even produce a valid situation which causes llvm-objcopy to
produce incorrect results because alignment and offset were both
inherited from the sections the program header covers. This change fixes
this bad behavior in llvm-objcopy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39132
llvm-svn: 317284
I have a test that I'd like to add to llvm that demands using more than
32-bits worth of address space. This test can't be run on 32-bit systems
because they don't have enough address space. The host triple should be
used to determine this instead of config.host_arch because on Debian
systems config.host_arch is not correct. This change adds the
"host-arch-is-64bit" feature to allow tests to restrict themselves to
the 64-bit case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39465
llvm-svn: 317281
Summary:
Currently the block frequency analysis is an approximation for irreducible
loops.
The new irreducible loop metadata is used to annotate the irreducible loop
headers with their header weights based on the PGO profile (currently this is
approximated to be evenly weighted) and to help improve the accuracy of the
block frequency analysis for irreducible loops.
This patch is a basic support for this.
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39028
llvm-svn: 317278
The LLVM tools can be used as a replacement for binutils, in which case
it's convenient to create symlinks with the binutils names. Add support
for these symlinks in the build system. As with any other llvm tool
symlinks, the user can limit the installed symlinks by only adding the
desired ones to `LLVM_TOOLCHAIN_TOOLS`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39530
llvm-svn: 317272
Summary:
This patch allows us to predicate range checks that have a type narrower than
the latch check type. We leverage SCEV analysis to identify a truncate for the
latchLimit and latchStart.
There is also safety checks in place which requires the start and limit to be
known at compile time. We require this to make sure that the SCEV truncate expr
for the IV corresponding to the latch does not cause us to lose information
about the IV range.
Added tests show the loop predication over range checks that are of various
types and are narrower than the latch type.
This enhancement has been in our downstream tree for a while.
Reviewers: apilipenko, sanjoy, mkazantsev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39500
llvm-svn: 317269
LLVM now requires a minimum of cmake 3.4.3, and all the policies
currently being set are present in that cmake version, so the
conditionals will always be true and are therefore unnecessary. The
movation is that the conditionals can give the false impression that the
policy settings are optional, whereas for example it's necessary to set
CMP0056 in order for `check_linker_flags` to operate correctly after
r316972. Inline the project version and language setting in the process.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39442
llvm-svn: 317264
Similarly to SVN r317189 for llvm-dlltool, these are probably
easier to find in a tools subdirectory with a name identical to
the tool, than in a toplevel directory with a different name.
This matches the move of LibDriver itself in SVN r302995.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39531
llvm-svn: 317262
'x86-64' has started to reflect a sort of generic tuning flag for more modern 64-bit CPUs. We probably shouldn't be using it as the name of an unidentifiable pentium4. So use nocona for all 64-bit pentium4s instead.
llvm-svn: 317230
We know that's the earliest CPU with 64-bit support. x86-64 has taken on a role of representing a more modern 64-bit CPU so we probably shouldn't be using that when we can't identify things.
llvm-svn: 317229
The original change was reverted in rL317217 because of the failure in
the RS4GC testcase. I couldn't reproduce the failure on my local machine
(macbook) but could reproduce it on a linux box.
The failure was around removing the uses of invariant.start. The fix
here is to just RAUW undef (which was the first implementation in D39388).
This is perfectly valid IR as discussed in the review.
llvm-svn: 317225
Summary:
Invariant.start on memory locations has the property that the memory
location is unchanging. However, this is not true in the face of
rewriting statepoints for GC.
Teach RS4GC about removing invariant.start so that optimizations after
RS4GC does not incorrect sink a load from the memory location past a
statepoint.
Added test showcasing the issue.
Reviewers: reames, apilipenko, dneilson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39388
llvm-svn: 317215
undefined reference to `llvm::TargetPassConfig::ID' on
clang-ppc64le-linux-multistage
This reverts commit eea333c33fa73ad225ef28607795984829f65688.
llvm-svn: 317213
Summary:
This is mostly a noop (most of the test diffs are renamed blocks).
There are a few temporary register renames (eax<->ecx) and a few blocks are
shuffled around.
See the discussion in PR33325 for more details.
Reviewers: spatel
Subscribers: mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39456
llvm-svn: 317211
When splitting a large load to smaller legally-typed loads, the last load should be padded to reach the size of the previous one so a CONCAT_VECTORS node could reunite them again.
The code currently pads the last load to reach the size of the first load (instead of the previous).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38495
Change-Id: Ib60b55ed26ce901fabf68108daf52683fbd5013f
llvm-svn: 317206
MSA stores and loads to the stack are more likely to require an
emergency GPR spill slot due to the smaller offsets available
with those instructions.
Handle this by overestimating the size of the stack by determining
the largest offset presuming that all callee save registers are
spilled and accounting of incoming arguments when determining
whether an emergency spill slot is required.
Reviewers: atanasyan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39056
llvm-svn: 317204
As of today we only use .cfi_offset to specify the offset of a CSR, but
we never use .cfi_restore when the CSR is restored.
If we want to perform a more advanced type of shrink-wrapping, we need
to use .cfi_restore in order to switch the CFI state between blocks.
This patch only aims at adding support for the directive.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36114
llvm-svn: 317199
Summary:
SpeculativelyExecuteBB can flatten the CFG by doing
speculative execution followed by a select instruction.
When the speculatively executed BB contained dbg intrinsics
the result could be a little bit weird, since those dbg
intrinsics were inserted before the select in the flattened
CFG. So when single stepping in the debugger, printing the
value of the variable referenced in the dbg intrinsic, it
could happen that it looked like the variable had values
that never actually were assigned to the variable.
This patch simply discards all dbg intrinsics that were found
in the speculatively executed BB.
Reviewers: aprantl, chandlerc, craig.topper
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39494
llvm-svn: 317198
The generic dag combiner will fold:
(shl (add x, c1), c2) -> (add (shl x, c2), c1 << c2)
(shl (or x, c1), c2) -> (or (shl x, c2), c1 << c2)
This can create constants which are too large to use as an immediate.
Many ALU operations are also able of performing the shl, so we can
unfold the transformation to prevent a mov imm instruction from being
generated.
Other patterns, such as b + ((a << 1) | 510), can also be simplified
in the same manner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38084
llvm-svn: 317197
Rather than looking at model numbers just check for the mmx feature flag. While there promote INTEL_PENTIUM_MMX to a CPU type instead of a subtype so that we don't have weird type with only one subtype.
llvm-svn: 317184
It's possible for multiple distribution components to have missing
targets, and it's a lot more convenient to get all those errors in one
shot rather than having to fix them individually.
llvm-svn: 317148
Sometimes program headers have larger alignments than any of the
sections they contain. Currently yaml2obj can't produce such files. A
bug recently appeared in llvm-objcopy that failed in such a case. I'd
like to be able to add tests to llvm-objcopy for such cases.
This change adds an optional alignment parameter to program headers that
will be used instead of calculating the alignment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39130
llvm-svn: 317139