Unlike my comment in 257022 said, it turns out we do handle constant vectors in the statepoint lowering, but only because SelectionDAG doesn't actually produce constants for them. Add a couple of tests which show this working.
Also, add a triple to the same test file to hopefully fix a failing bot.
It turns out we do han
llvm-svn: 257025
Currently, we try to split vectors of pointers back into their component pointer elements during rewrite-statepoints-for-gc. This is less than ideal since presumably the vectorizer chose to vectorize for a reason. :) It's also been a source of bugs - in particular, the relocation logic as currently implemented was recently discovered to be wrong.
The alternate approach is to allow gc.relocates of vector-of-pointer type and update the backend to handle them. That's what this patch tries to do. This won't actually enable vector-of-pointers in practice - there are some RS4GC changes needed - but the lowering is standalone and testable so it makes sense to separate.
Note that there are some known cases around vector constants which this patch does not handle. Once this is in, I'll send another patch with individual fixes and test cases.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15632
llvm-svn: 257022
We need to know whether or not a given basic block is in a loop for the analysis
to be correct.
Loop information may be incomplete on irreducible CFGs, therefore we may
generate incorrect code if we use it in those situations.
This fixes PR25988.
llvm-svn: 257012
Move the logic from BranchFolding to use the shared infrastructure for merging MMOs introduced in 256909. This has the effect of making BranchFolding more capable.
In the process, fix a latent bug. The existing handling for merging didn't handle the case where one of the instructions being merged had overflowed and dropped MemRefs. This was a latent bug in the places the code was commoned from, but potentially reachable in BranchFolding.
Once this is in, we're left with a single place to consider implementing MMO unique-ing as proposed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D15230.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15913
llvm-svn: 256966
The functionality that calculateCatchReturnSuccessorColors provides was
once non-trivial: it was a computation layered on top of funclet
coloring.
These days, LLVM IR directly encodes what
calculateCatchReturnSuccessorColors computed, obsoleting the need for
it.
No functionality change is intended.
llvm-svn: 256965
FindIDom() can fail in two different ways - it can either return nullptr or the
block itself, depending on the circumstances. Some users of FindIDom() check
one error condition, while others check the other.
Change it to always return nullptr on failure.
This fixes PR26004.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15847
llvm-svn: 256955
Summary:
This patch implements "-print-funcs" option to support function filtering for IR printing like -print-after-all, -print-before etc.
Examples:
-print-after-all -print-funcs=foo,bar
Reviewers: mcrosier, joker.eph
Subscribers: tejohnson, joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15776
llvm-svn: 256952
Summary:
In buildSchedGraph(), when adding memory dependencies for loads, move
the call to adjustChainDeps() after the call to
addChainDependency(AliasChain) to handle the case where
addChainDependency(AliasChain) ends up not adding a dependency and
instead putting the SU on the RejectMemNodes list. The call to
adjustChainDeps() must be done after the call to addChainDependency() in
order to process the SU added to the RejectMemNodes list to create
memory dependencies for it.
Reviewers: hfinkel, atrick, jonpa, resistor
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15927
llvm-svn: 256950
In the discussion on http://reviews.llvm.org/D15730, Andy pointed out we had a utility function for merging MMO lists. Since it turned we actually had two copies and there's another review in progress (http://reviews.llvm.org/D15230) which needs the same, extract it into a utility function and clean up the interfaces to make it easier to use with a MachineInstBuilder.
I introduced a pair here to track size and allocation together. I think we should probably move in the direction of the MachineOperandsRef helper class, but I'm leaving that for further work. I want to get the poison state introduced before I make major changes to the interface.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15757
llvm-svn: 256909
In an inbounds getelementptr, when an index produces a constant non-negative
offset to add to the base, the add can be assumed to not have unsigned overflow.
This relies on the assumption that addresses can't occupy more than half the
address space, which isn't possible in C because it wouldn't be possible to
represent the difference between the start of the object and one-past-the-end
in a ptrdiff_t.
Setting the NoUnsignedWrap flag is theoretically useful in general, and is
specifically useful to the WebAssembly backend, since it permits stronger
constant offset folding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15544
llvm-svn: 256890
When not all instructions have a scheduling class,
the error message now provides a possible solution.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15854
llvm-svn: 256839
Summary:
This commit renames GCRelocateOperands to GCRelocateInst and makes it an
intrinsic wrapper, similar to e.g. MemCpyInst. Also, all users of
GCRelocateOperands were changed to use the new intrinsic wrapper instead.
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: reames, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15762
llvm-svn: 256811
Unfortunately this fix had the effect of exposing the
-verify-machineinstrs FIXME of X86InstrInfo.cpp in two testcases for
which I disabled it for now.
Two testcases also have additional pushq/popq where the corrected code
cannot prove that %rax is dead any longer. Looking at the examples, this
could potentially be fixed by improving computeRegisterLiveness() to check
the live-in lists of the successors blocks when reaching the end of a
block.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR25951.
llvm-svn: 256799
Update some comments to be more explicit.
Change bypassSlowDivision and the functions it calls so that they take
BasicBlock*s and Instruction*s, rather than Function::iterator&s and
BasicBlock::iterator&s.
Change the APIs so that the caller is responsible for updating the
iterator, rather than the callee. This makes control flow much easier
to follow.
Patch by Justin Lebar!
llvm-svn: 256789
Summary:
Fix the CLR state numbering to generate correct tables, and update the lit
test to verify them.
The CLR numbering assigns one state number to each catchpad and
cleanuppad.
It also computes two tree-like relations over states:
1) Each state has a "HandlerParentState", which is the state of the next
outer handler enclosing this state's handler (same as nearest ancestor
per the ParentPad linkage on EH pads, but skipping over catchswitches).
2) Each state has a "TryParentState", which:
a) for a catchpad that's not the last handler on its catchswitch, is
the state of the next catchpad on that catchswitch.
b) for all other pads, is the state of the pad whose try region is the
next outer try region enclosing this state's try region. The "try
regions are not present as such in the IR, but will be inferred
based on the placement of invokes and pads which reach each other
by exceptional exits.
Catchswitches do not get their own states, but each gets mapped to the
state of its first catchpad.
Table generation requires each state's "unwind dest" state to have a lower
state number than the given state.
Since HandlerParentState can be computed as a function of a pad's
ParentPad, and TryParentState can be computed as a function of its unwind
dest and the TryParentStates of its children, the CLR state numbering
algorithm first computes HandlerParentState in a top-down pass, then
computes TryParentState in a bottom-up pass.
Also reword some comments/names in the CLR EH table generation to make the
distinction between the different kinds of "parent" clear.
Reviewers: rnk, andrew.w.kaylor, majnemer
Subscribers: AndyAyers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15325
llvm-svn: 256760
We need a frame pointer if there is a push/pop sequence after the
prologue in order to unwind the stack. Scanning the instructions to
figure out if this happened made hasFP not constant-time which is a
violation of expectations. Let's compute this up-front and reuse that
computation when we need it.
llvm-svn: 256730
Pulled out the similar CONCAT_VECTORS creation code from the 2/3 operand getNode() calls (to handle all UNDEF and all BUILD_VECTOR cases). Added a similar handler to the general getNode() call as well.
llvm-svn: 256709
Summary:
Add a pass to update catchrets when their successors get cloned; the
existing pass doesn't catch these because it walks the funclet whose
blocks are being cloned but the catchret is in a child funclet.
Also update the test for removing incoming PHI values; when the
predecessor is a catchret, the relevant color is the catchret's parentPad,
not its block's color.
Reviewers: andrew.w.kaylor, rnk, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15840
llvm-svn: 256689
While the original code would work with or without braces, it makes sense to
set HaveSemi to true only if (!HaveSemi), otherwise it's already true, so I
put the assignment inside the if block. This addresses PR25998.
llvm-svn: 256688
Recolor the IR to make sure our computed colors are not hiding any bugs.
Also, verifyFunction if we are running some post-preparation operations;
some of these operations can hide latent bugs.
llvm-svn: 256687
missing includes so that the pointee types for DenseMap pointer keys and
such are complete prior to us querying the pointer traits for them.
This is part of a series of patches to allow LLVM to check for complete
pointee types when computing its pointer traits. This is absolutely
necessary to get correct (or reproducible) results for things like how
many low bits are guaranteed to be zero.
llvm-svn: 256550
This adds support for the MCU psABI in a way different from r251223 and r251224,
basically reverting most of these two patches. The problem with the approach
taken in r251223/4 is that it only handled libcalls that originated from the backend.
However, the mid-end also inserts quite a few libcalls and assumes these use the
platform's default calling convention.
The previous patch tried to insert inregs when necessary both in the FE and,
somewhat hackily, in the CG. Instead, we now define a new default calling convention
for the MCU, which doesn't use inreg marking at all, similarly to what x86-64 does.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15054
llvm-svn: 256494
We already know how to properly print out basic blocks in
printAsOperand, we should not roll it ourselves in
AsmPrinter::EmitBasicBlockStart. No functionality change is intended.
llvm-svn: 256413
Teach the statepoint lowering code to emit Indirect stackmap entries for spill inserted by StatepointLowering (i.e. SelectionDAG), but Direct stackmap entries for in-IR allocas which represent manual stack slots. This is what the docs call for (http://llvm.org/docs/StackMaps.html#stack-map-format), but we've been emitting both as Direct. This was pointed out recently on the mailing list as a bug. It also blocks http://reviews.llvm.org/D15632 which extends the lowering to handle vector-of-pointers since only Indirect references can encode a variable sized slot.
To implement this, I introduced a new flag on the StackObject class used to maintian information about stack slots. I original considered (and prototyped in http://reviews.llvm.org/D15632), the idea of using the existing isSpillSlot flag, but end up deciding that was a bit too risky and that the cost of adding a new flag was low. Having the new flag will also allow us - in the future - to emit better comments in verbose assembly which indicate where a particular stack spill around a call comes from. (deopt, gc, regalloc).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15759
llvm-svn: 256352
Clarify a comment about what it means to drop memory operands from an instruction. While I'm adding change the name of the method slightly to make it a bit more clear what's going on when reading calling code.
llvm-svn: 256346
As far as I can tell, the correct interpretation of an empty memoperands list is that we didn't have sufficient room to store information about the MachineInstr, NOT that the MachineInstr doesn't access any particular bit of memory. This appears to be fairly consistent in a number of places, but I'm not 100% sure of this interpretation. I'd really appreciate someone more knowledgeable confirming my reading of the code.
This patch fixes two latent bugs in MachineLICM - given the above assumption - and adds comments to document the meaning and required handling. I don't have test cases; these were noticed by inspection.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15730
llvm-svn: 256335
We visited the same catchswitch twice because it was both the child of
another funclet and the predecessor of a cleanuppad.
Instead, change the numbering algorithm to only recurse if the unwind
destination of the inner funclet agrees with the unwind destination of
the catchswitch.
This fixes PR25926.
llvm-svn: 256317
Reasons:
1) The existing form was a form of false generality. None of the implemented GCStrategies use anything other than a type. Its becoming more and more clear we're going to need some type of strong GC pointer in the type system and we shouldn't pretend otherwise at this point.
2) The API was awkward when applied to vectors-of-pointers. The old one could have been made to work, but calling isGCManagedPointer(Ty->getScalarType()) is much cleaner than the Value alternatives.
3) The rewriting implementation effectively assumes the type based predicate as well. We should be consistent.
llvm-svn: 256312
This patch removes all weight-related interfaces from BPI and replace
them by probability versions. With this patch, we won't use edge weight
anymore in either IR or MC passes. Edge probabilitiy is a better
representation in terms of CFG update and validation.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15519
llvm-svn: 256263
Summary:
These were deprecated 11 months ago when a generic
llvm.experimental.gc.result intrinsic, which works for all types, was added.
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: sanjoy, chenli, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15719
llvm-svn: 256262
In r256077, I added printing for DIExpressions in DEBUG_VALUE comments,
but neglected to handle DW_OP_bit_piece operands. Thanks to
Mikael Holmen and Joerg Sonnenberger for spotting this.
llvm-svn: 256236
Today, we always take into account the possibility that object files
produced by MC may be consumed by an incremental linker. This results
in us initialing fields which vary with time (TimeDateStamp) which harms
hermetic builds (e.g. verifying a self-host went well) and produces
sub-optimal code because we cannot assume anything about the relative
position of functions within a section (call sites can get redirected
through incremental linker thunks).
Let's provide an MCTargetOption which controls this behavior so that we
can disable this functionality if we know a-priori that the build will
not rely on /incremental.
llvm-svn: 256203
LiveDebugVariables unconditionally propagates all DBG_VALUE down the
dominator tree, which happens to work fine if there already is another
DBG_VALUE or the DBG_VALUE happends to describe a single-assignment vreg
but is otherwise wrong if the DBG_VALUE is coming from only one of the
predecessors.
In r255759 we introduced a proper data flow analysis scheduled after
LiveDebugVariables that correctly propagates DBG_VALUEs across basic block
boundaries. With the new pass in place, the incorrect propagation in
LiveDebugVariables can be retired witout loosing any of the benefits
where LiveDebugVariables happened to do the right thing.
llvm-svn: 256188
Summary:
First up is instcombine, where in the dbg.declare -> dbg.value conversion,
the llvm.dbg.value needs to be called on the actual loaded value, rather
than the address (since the whole point of this transformation is to be
able to get rid of the alloca). Further, now that that's cleaned up, we
can remove a hack in the backend, that would add an implicit OP_deref if
the argument to dbg.value was an alloca. This stems from before the
existence of DIExpression and is no longer necessary since the deref can
be expressed explicitly.
Now, in order to make sure that the tests pass with this change, we need to
correct the printing of DEBUG_VALUE comments to take into account the
expression, which wasn't taken into account before.
Unfortunately, for both these changes, there were a number of incorrect
test cases (mostly the wrong number of DW_OP_derefs, but also a couple
where the test itself was broken more badly). aprantl and I have gone
through and adjusted these test case in order to make them pass with
these fixes and in some cases to make sure they're actually testing
what they are meant to test.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: dsanders
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14186
llvm-svn: 256077
This patch removes all getEdgeWeight() interfaces from CodeGen directory. As
getEdgeProbability() is a little more expensive than getEdgeWeight(), I will
compose a patch soon in which BPI only stores probabilities instead of edge
weights so that getEdgeProbability() will have O(1) time.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15489
llvm-svn: 256039
This is a quick fix to PR25838. The issue comes from the restriction that we
cannot normalize probabilities containing both known and unknown ones. A patch
that removes this restriction is under the review now:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15548
llvm-svn: 255867
Update supportSplitCSR's interface to take machine function instead of the
calling convention.
Review comments for http://reviews.llvm.org/D15341
llvm-svn: 255818
increase
Summary:
This patch adds a function called getRegPressureSetScore() to
TargetRegisterInfo. The MachineScheduler uses this when comparing
instruction that increase the register pressure of different sets
to determine which set is safer to increase.
This hook is useful for GPU targets where the number of registers in the
class is not the best metric for determing which presser set is safer to
increase.
Future work may include adding more parameters to this function, like
for example, the current pressure level of the set or the amount that
the pressure will be increased/decreased.
Reviewers: qcolombet, escha, arsenm, atrick, MatzeB
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14806
llvm-svn: 255795
Add a function VLIWPacketizerList::shouldAddToPacket, which will allow
specific implementations to decide if it is profitable to add given
instruction to the current packet.
llvm-svn: 255780
Summary: This patch adds a check in visitLandingPad to see if landingpad's result type is token type. If so, do not create DAG nodes for its exception pointer and selector value. This patch enables the back end to handle landingpads of token type.
Reviewers: JosephTremoulet, majnemer, rnk
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15405
llvm-svn: 255749
This patch allows atomic loads and stores of floating point to be specified in the IR and adds an adapter to allow them to be lowered via existing backend support for bitcast-to-equivalent-integer idiom.
Previously, the only way to specify a atomic float operation was to bitcast the pointer to a i32, load the value as an i32, then bitcast to a float. At it's most basic, this patch simply moves this expansion step to the point we start lowering to the backend.
This patch does not add canonicalization rules to convert the bitcast idioms to the appropriate atomic loads. I plan to do that in the future, but for now, let's simply add the support. I'd like to get instruction selection working through at least one backend (x86-64) without the bitcast conversion before canonicalizing into this form.
Similarly, I haven't yet added the target hooks to opt out of the lowering step I added to AtomicExpand. I figured it would more sense to add those once at least one backend (x86) was ready to actually opt out.
As you can see from the included tests, the generated code quality is not great. I plan on submitting some patches to fix this, but help from others along that line would be very welcome. I'm not super familiar with the backend and my ramp up time may be material.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15471
llvm-svn: 255737
It adjusts from RSP-after-prologue to RBP, which is what SEH filters
need to do before they can use llvm.localrecover.
Fixes SEH filter captures, which were broken in r250088.
Issue reported by Alex Crichton.
llvm-svn: 255707
SimplifyCFG allows tail merging with code which terminates in
unreachable which, in turn, makes it possible for an invoke to end up in
a funclet which it was not originally part of.
Using operand bundles on invokes allows us to determine whether or not
an invoke was part of a funclet in the source program.
Furthermore, it allows us to unambiguously answer questions about the
legality of inlining into call sites which the personality may have
trouble with.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15517
llvm-svn: 255674
It appears that neither compiler-rt nor the gnu soft-float libraries actually
implement these conversions. Instead of emitting calls to library functions
that don't exist, handle it similarly to the way we handle i8 -> float and
i16 -> float conversions: call the i32 library function, and adjust the type.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15151
llvm-svn: 255643
This patch improves a temporary fix in r255530 so that we can normalize
successor list without trigger assertion failures in tail duplication pass.
llvm-svn: 255638
Full type legalizer that works with all vectors length - from 2 to 16, (i32, i64, float, double).
This intrinsic, for example
void @llvm.masked.scatter.v2f32(<2 x float>%data , <2 x float*>%ptrs , i32 align , <2 x i1>%mask )
requires type widening for data and type promotion for mask.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13633
llvm-svn: 255629
The post-dominance property is not sufficient to guarantee that a restore point
inside a loop is safe.
E.g.,
while(1) {
Save
Restore
if (...)
break;
use/def CSRs
}
All the uses/defs of CSRs are dominated by Save and post-dominated
by Restore. However, the CSRs uses are still reachable after
Restore and before Save are executed.
This fixes PR25824
llvm-svn: 255613
Part 1 was submitted in http://reviews.llvm.org/D15134.
Changes in this part:
* X86RegisterInfo.td, X86RecognizableInstr.cpp: Add FR128 register class.
* X86CallingConv.td: Pass f128 values in XMM registers or on stack.
* X86InstrCompiler.td, X86InstrInfo.td, X86InstrSSE.td:
Add instruction selection patterns for f128.
* X86ISelLowering.cpp:
When target has MMX registers, configure MVT::f128 in FR128RegClass,
with TypeSoftenFloat action, and custom actions for some opcodes.
Add missed cases of MVT::f128 in places that handle f32, f64, or vector types.
Add TODO comment to support f128 type in inline assembly code.
* SelectionDAGBuilder.cpp:
Fix infinite loop when f128 type can have
VT == TLI.getTypeToTransformTo(Ctx, VT).
* Add unit tests for x86-64 fp128 type.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11438
llvm-svn: 255558
This will make the depedence graph more accurate if an alias analysis
is provided. If nullptr is specified in its place, the behavior will
remain as it is currently.
llvm-svn: 255540
The normalization may cause assertion failures on SystemZ and some out-of-tree
tests. The root cause is that unknown probabilities are materialized into known
ones by calling getSuccProbability(), which is then used to add another
successor to the same MBB which results in mixed known and unknown
probabilities. But currently those mixed probabilities cannot be normalized.
I will compose another patch to fix the root issue.
llvm-svn: 255530
It turns out that terminatepad gives little benefit over a cleanuppad
which calls the termination function. This is not sufficient to
implement fully generic filters but MSVC doesn't support them which
makes terminatepad a little over-designed.
Depends on D15478.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15479
llvm-svn: 255522
When FastISel fails to translate an instruction it hands off code
generation to SelectionDAG. Before it does so, it may have generated
local value instructions to feed phi nodes in successor blocks. These
instructions will then be generated again by SelectionDAG, causing
duplication and less efficient code, including extra spill
instructions.
Patch by Wolfgang Pieb!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11768
llvm-svn: 255520
This patch adds some missing calls to MBB::normalizeSuccProbs() in several
locations where it should be called. Those places are found by checking if the
sum of successors' probabilities is approximate one in MachineBlockPlacement
pass with some instrumented code (not in this patch).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15259
llvm-svn: 255455
Summary:
Previously SelectionDAGBuilder asserted that the pointer operands of
memcpy / memset / memmove intrinsics are in address space < 256. This assert
implicitly assumed the X86 backend, where all address spaces < 256 are
equivalent to address space 0 from the code generator's point of view. On some
targets (R600 and NVPTX) several address spaces < 256 have a target-defined
meaning, so this assert made little sense for these targets.
This patch removes this wrong assertion and adds extra checks before lowering
these intrinsics to library calls. If a pointer operand can't be casted to
address space 0 without changing semantics, a fatal error is reported to the
user.
The new behavior should be valid for all targets that give address spaces != 0
a target-specified meaning (NVPTX, R600, X86). NVPTX lowers big or
variable-sized memory intrinsics before SelectionDAG construction. All other
memory intrinsics are inlined (the threshold is set very high for this target).
R600 doesn't support memcpy / memset / memmove library calls (previously the
illegal emission of a call to such library function triggered an error
somewhere in the code generator). X86 now emits inline loads and stores for
address spaces 256 and 257 up to the same threshold that is used for address
space 0 and reports a fatal error otherwise.
I call this a "partial fix" because there are still cases that can't be
lowered. A fatal error is reported in these cases.
Reviewers: arsenm, theraven, compnerd, hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits, alex
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7241
llvm-svn: 255441
While we have successfully implemented a funclet-oriented EH scheme on
top of LLVM IR, our scheme has some notable deficiencies:
- catchendpad and cleanupendpad are necessary in the current design
but they are difficult to explain to others, even to seasoned LLVM
experts.
- catchendpad and cleanupendpad are optimization barriers. They cannot
be split and force all potentially throwing call-sites to be invokes.
This has a noticable effect on the quality of our code generation.
- catchpad, while similar in some aspects to invoke, is fairly awkward.
It is unsplittable, starts a funclet, and has control flow to other
funclets.
- The nesting relationship between funclets is currently a property of
control flow edges. Because of this, we are forced to carefully
analyze the flow graph to see if there might potentially exist illegal
nesting among funclets. While we have logic to clone funclets when
they are illegally nested, it would be nicer if we had a
representation which forbade them upfront.
Let's clean this up a bit by doing the following:
- Instead, make catchpad more like cleanuppad and landingpad: no control
flow, just a bunch of simple operands; catchpad would be splittable.
- Introduce catchswitch, a control flow instruction designed to model
the constraints of funclet oriented EH.
- Make funclet scoping explicit by having funclet instructions consume
the token produced by the funclet which contains them.
- Remove catchendpad and cleanupendpad. Their presence can be inferred
implicitly using coloring information.
N.B. The state numbering code for the CLR has been updated but the
veracity of it's output cannot be spoken for. An expert should take a
look to make sure the results are reasonable.
Reviewers: rnk, JosephTremoulet, andrew.w.kaylor
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15139
llvm-svn: 255422
After much discussion, ending here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151123/315620.html
it has been decided that, instead of having the vectorizer directly generate
special absdiff and horizontal-add intrinsics, we'll recognize the relevant
reduction patterns during CodeGen. Accordingly, these intrinsics are not needed
(the operations they represent can be pattern matched, as is already done in
some backends). Thus, we're backing these out in favor of the current
development work.
r248483 - Codegen: Fix llvm.*absdiff semantic.
r242546 - [ARM] Use [SU]ABSDIFF nodes instead of intrinsics for VABD/VABA
r242545 - [AArch64] Use [SU]ABSDIFF nodes instead of intrinsics for ABD/ABA
r242409 - [Codegen] Add intrinsics 'absdiff' and corresponding SDNodes for absolute difference operation
llvm-svn: 255387
computeRegisterLiveness() was broken in that it reported dead for a
register even if a subregister was alive. I assume this was because the
results of analayzePhysRegs() are hard to understand with respect to
subregisters.
This commit: Changes the results of analyzePhysRegs (=struct
PhysRegInfo) to be clearly understandable, also renames the fields to
avoid silent breakage of third-party code (and improve the grammar).
Fix all (two) users of computeRegisterLiveness() in llvm: By reenabling
it and removing workarounds for the bug.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR24535 and http://llvm.org/PR25033
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15320
llvm-svn: 255362
The access function has a short entry and a short exit, the initialization
block is only run the first time. To improve the performance, we want to
have a short frame at the entry and exit.
We explicitly handle most of the CSRs via copies. Only the CSRs that are not
handled via copies will be in CSR_SaveList.
Frame lowering and prologue/epilogue insertion will generate a short frame
in the entry and exit according to CSR_SaveList. The majority of the CSRs will
be handled by register allcoator. Register allocator will try to spill and
reload them in the initialization block.
We add CSRsViaCopy, it will be explicitly handled during lowering.
1> we first set FunctionLoweringInfo->SplitCSR if conditions are met (the target
supports it for the given calling convention and the function has only return
exits). We also call TLI->initializeSplitCSR to perform initialization.
2> we call TLI->insertCopiesSplitCSR to insert copies from CSRsViaCopy to
virtual registers at beginning of the entry block and copies from virtual
registers to CSRsViaCopy at beginning of the exit blocks.
3> we also need to make sure the explicit copies will not be eliminated.
rdar://problem/23557469
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15340
llvm-svn: 255353
PR25763 demonstrated an issue with D14683 - vector comparison constant folding only works for i1 results, so we need to split off the sign-extension of the result to the required type. Luckily this can be done with the existing type legalization code.
llvm-svn: 255289
SystemZ needs to do its scheduling after branch relaxation, which can
only happen after block placement, and therefore the standard
PostRAScheduler point in the pass sequence is too early.
TargetMachine::targetSchedulesPostRAScheduling() is a new method that
signals on returning true that target will insert the final scheduling
pass on its own.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel
llvm-svn: 255234
Detecting additional dead-defs without a dead flag that are only visible
through liveness information should be part of the register operand
collection not intertwined with the register pressure update logic.
llvm-svn: 255192
Target-specific instructions may have uninteresting physreg clobbers,
for target-specific reasons. The peephole pass doesn't need to concern
itself with such defs, as long as they're implicit and marked as dead.
llvm-svn: 255182
During selection DAG legalization, extractelement is replaced with a load
instruction. To do this, a temporary store to the stack is used unless an
existing store is found that can be re-used.
If re-using a store, the chain going out of the store must be replaced by
the one going out of the new load (this ensures that any stores that must
take place after the store happens after the load, else the value might
be overwritten before it is loaded).
The problem is, if the extractelement index is dependent on the store
replacing the chain will introduce a cycle in the selection DAG (the load
uses the index, and by replacing the chain we will make the index dependent
on the load).
To fix this, if the index is dependent on the store, the store is skipped.
This is conservative as we may end up creating an unnecessary extra store
to the stack. However, the situation is not expected to occur very often.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15330
llvm-svn: 255114
It's strange to duplicate the logic for emitting FP values into
emitGlobalConstantDataSequential, and it's even stranger that we end
up printing the verbose assembly comments differently between the two
paths. Just call into emitGlobalConstantFP rather than crudely
duplicating its logic.
llvm-svn: 254988
Patterns were missing for KNL target for <8 x i32>, <8 x float> masked load/store.
This intrinsic comes with all legal types:
<8 x float> @llvm.masked.load.v8f32(<8 x float>* %addr, i32 align, <8 x i1> %mask, <8 x float> %passThru),
but still requires lowering, because VMASKMOVPS, VMASKMOVDQU32 work with 512-bit vectors only.
All data operands should be widened to 512-bit vector.
The mask operand should be widened to v16i1 with zeroes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15265
llvm-svn: 254909
Summary:
If we remove the MMOs from Load/Store instructions,
they are treated as volatile. This makes other optimization passes unhappy.
eg. Load/Store Optimization
So, it looks better to merge, not remove.
Reviewers: gberry, mcrosier
Subscribers: gberry, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14797
llvm-svn: 254694
Re-comitting with a change that avoids undefined uses getting put into
the VRegUses list.
The new algorithm remembers the uses encountered while walking backwards
until a matching def is found. Contrary to the previous version this:
- Works without LiveIntervals being available
- Allows to increase the precision to subregisters/lanemasks
(not used for now)
The changes in the AMDGPU tests are necessary because the R600 scheduler
is not stable with respect to the order of nodes in the ready queues.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9068
llvm-svn: 254683
This is a revised version of r254655 which uses a Printable wrapper
class to avoid ambiguous overload problems.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14348
llvm-svn: 254681
CFI emits jump slots for indirect functions as a byte array
constant, and declares function-typed aliases to these constants.
This change fixes AsmPrinter to emit these aliases as function
symbols and not data symbols.
llvm-svn: 254674
Code generation often exposes redundant physical register copies through
virtual registers such as:
%vreg = COPY %PHYSREG
...
%PHYSREG = COPY %vreg
There are cases where no intervening clobber of %PHYSREG occurs, and the
later copy could therefore be removed. In some cases this further allows
us to remove the initial copy.
This patch contains a motivating example which comes from the x86 build
of Chrome, specifically cc::ResourceProvider::UnlockForRead uses
libstdc++'s implementation of hash_map. That example has two tests live
at the same time, and after machine sinking LLVM has confused itself
enough and things spilling EFLAGS is a great idea even though it's
never restored and the comparison results are both live.
Before this patch we have:
DEC32m %RIP, 1, %noreg, <ga:@L>, %noreg, %EFLAGS<imp-def>
%vreg1<def> = COPY %EFLAGS; GR64:%vreg1
%EFLAGS<def> = COPY %vreg1; GR64:%vreg1
JNE_1 <BB#1>, %EFLAGS<imp-use>
Both copies are useless. This patch tries to eliminate the later copy in
a generic manner.
dec is especially confusing to LLVM when compared with sub.
I wrote this patch to treat all physical registers generically, but only
remove redundant copies of non-allocatable physical registers because
the allocatable ones caused issues (e.g. when calling conventions weren't
properly modeled) and should be handled later by the register allocator
anyways.
The following tests used to failed when the patch also replaced allocatable
registers:
CodeGen/X86/StackColoring.ll
CodeGen/X86/avx512-calling-conv.ll
CodeGen/X86/copy-propagation.ll
CodeGen/X86/inline-asm-fpstack.ll
CodeGen/X86/musttail-varargs.ll
CodeGen/X86/pop-stack-cleanup.ll
CodeGen/X86/preserve_mostcc64.ll
CodeGen/X86/tailcallstack64.ll
CodeGen/X86/this-return-64.ll
This happens because COPY has other special meaning for e.g. dependency
breakage and x87 FP stack.
Note that all other backends' tests pass.
Reviewers: qcolombet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15157
llvm-svn: 254665
Almost all these changes are conditioned and only apply to the new
x86-64 f128 type configuration, which will be enabled in a follow up
patch. They are required together to make new f128 work. If there is
any error, we should fix or revert them as a whole.
These changes should have no impact to current configurations.
* Relax type legalization checks to accept new f128 type configuration,
whose TypeAction is TypeSoftenFloat, not TypeLegal, but also has
TLI.isTypeLegal true.
* Relax GetSoftenedFloat to return in some cases f128 type SDValue,
which is TLI.isTypeLegal but not "softened" to i128 node.
* Allow customized FABS, FNEG, FCOPYSIGN on new f128 type configuration,
to generate optimized bitwise operators for libm functions.
* Enhance related Lower* functions to handle f128 type.
* Enhance DAGTypeLegalizer::run, SoftenFloatResult, and related functions
to keep new f128 type in register, and convert f128 operators to library calls.
* Fix Combiner, Emitter, Legalizer routines that did not handle f128 type.
* Add ExpandConstant to handle i128 constants, ExpandNode
to handle ISD::Constant node.
* Add one more parameter to getCommonSubClass and firstCommonClass,
to guarantee that returned common sub class will contain the specified
simple value type.
This extra parameter is used by EmitCopyFromReg in InstrEmitter.cpp.
* Fix infinite loop in getTypeLegalizationCost when f128 is the value type.
* Fix printOperand to handle null operand.
* Enhance ISD::BITCAST node to handle f128 constant.
* Expand new f128 type for BR_CC, SELECT_CC, SELECT, SETCC nodes.
* Enhance X86AsmPrinter to emit f128 values in comments.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15134
llvm-svn: 254653
This works mostly fine but breaks some stage 1 builders when compiling
compiler-rt on i386. Revert for further investigation as I can't see an
obvious cause/fix.
This reverts commit r254577.
llvm-svn: 254586
The new algorithm remembers the uses encountered while walking backwards
until a matching def is found. Contrary to the previous version this:
- Works without LiveIntervals being available
- Allows to increase the precision to subregisters/lanemasks
(not used for now)
The changes in the AMDGPU tests are necessary because the R600 scheduler
is not stable with respect to the order of nodes in the ready queues.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9068
llvm-svn: 254577
AggressiveAntiDepBreaker was renaming registers specified by the user
for inline assembly. While this will work for compiler-specified
registers, it won't work for user-specified registers, and at the time
this runs, I don't currently see a way to distinguish them.
llvm-svn: 254532
vector.resize() is significantly slower than memset in many STLs
and the cost of initializing these vectors is significant on targets
with many registers. Since we don't need the overhead of a vector,
use a simple unique_ptr instead.
llvm-svn: 254526
The ARM ARM is clear that 128-bit loads are only guaranteed to have been atomic
if there has been a corresponding successful stxp. It's less clear for AArch32, so
I'm leaving that alone for now.
llvm-svn: 254524
The bug is introduced in r254377 which failed some tests on ARM, where a new
probability is assigned to a successor but the provided BB may not be a
successor.
llvm-svn: 254463
Cost calculation for vector GEP failed with due to invalid cast to GEP index operand.
The bug is fixed, added a test.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D14976
llvm-svn: 254408
The @llvm.get.dynamic.area.offset.* intrinsic family is used to get the offset
from native stack pointer to the address of the most recent dynamic alloca on
the caller's stack. These intrinsics are intendend for use in combination with
@llvm.stacksave and @llvm.restore to get a pointer to the most recent dynamic
alloca. This is useful, for example, for AddressSanitizer's stack unpoisoning
routines.
Patch by Max Ostapenko.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14983
llvm-svn: 254404
Previously it is not allowed for each MBB to have successors with both known and
unknown probabilities. However, this may be too strict as at this stage we could
not always guarantee that. It is better to remove this restriction now, and I
will work on validating MBB's successors' probabilities first (for example,
check if the sum is approximate one).
llvm-svn: 254402
(This is the second attempt to submit this patch. The first caused two assertion
failures and was reverted. See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25687)
The patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D13745 is broken into four parts:
1. New interfaces without functional changes (http://reviews.llvm.org/D13908).
2. Use new interfaces in SelectionDAG, while in other passes treat probabilities
as weights (http://reviews.llvm.org/D14361).
3. Use new interfaces in all other passes.
4. Remove old interfaces.
This patch is 3+4 above. In this patch, MBB won't provide weight-based
interfaces any more, which are totally replaced by probability-based ones.
The interface addSuccessor() is redesigned so that the default probability is
unknown. We allow unknown probabilities but don't allow using it together
with known probabilities in successor list. That is to say, we either have a
list of successors with all known probabilities, or all unknown
probabilities. In the latter case, we assume each successor has 1/N
probability where N is the number of successors. An assertion checks if the
user is attempting to add a successor with the disallowed mixed use as stated
above. This can help us catch many misuses.
All uses of weight-based interfaces are now updated to use probability-based
ones.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14973
llvm-svn: 254377
and the follow-up r254356: "Fix a bug in MachineBlockPlacement that may cause assertion failure during BranchProbability construction."
Asserts were firing in Chromium builds. See PR25687.
llvm-svn: 254366
SDAG currently can emit debug location for function parameters when
an llvm.dbg.declare points to either a function argument SSA temp,
or to an AllocaInst. This change extends this logic by adding a
fallback case when neither of the above is true.
This is required for SafeStack, which may copy the contents of a
byval function argument into something that is not an alloca, and
then describe the target as the new location of the said argument.
llvm-svn: 254352
The patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D13745 is broken into four parts:
1. New interfaces without functional changes (http://reviews.llvm.org/D13908).
2. Use new interfaces in SelectionDAG, while in other passes treat probabilities
as weights (http://reviews.llvm.org/D14361).
3. Use new interfaces in all other passes.
4. Remove old interfaces.
This patch is 3+4 above. In this patch, MBB won't provide weight-based
interfaces any more, which are totally replaced by probability-based ones.
The interface addSuccessor() is redesigned so that the default probability is
unknown. We allow unknown probabilities but don't allow using it together
with known probabilities in successor list. That is to say, we either have a
list of successors with all known probabilities, or all unknown
probabilities. In the latter case, we assume each successor has 1/N
probability where N is the number of successors. An assertion checks if the
user is attempting to add a successor with the disallowed mixed use as stated
above. This can help us catch many misuses.
All uses of weight-based interfaces are now updated to use probability-based
ones.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14973
llvm-svn: 254348
This patch implements dynamic realignment of stack objects for targets
with a non-realigned stack pointer. Behaviour in FunctionLoweringInfo
is changed so that for a target that has StackRealignable set to
false, over-aligned static allocas are considered to be variable-sized
objects and are handled with DYNAMIC_STACKALLOC nodes.
It would be good to group aligned allocas into a single big alloca as
an optimization, but this is yet todo.
SystemZ benefits from this, due to its stack frame layout.
New tests SystemZ/alloca-03.ll for aligned allocas, and
SystemZ/alloca-04.ll for "no-realign-stack" attribute on functions.
Review and help from Ulrich Weigand and Hal Finkel.
llvm-svn: 254227
Summary:
Many target lowerings copy-paste the code to test SDValues for known constants.
This code can instead be shared in SelectionDAG.cpp, and reused in the targets.
Reviewers: MatzeB, andreadb, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, jyknight, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14945
llvm-svn: 254085
to a simple type when lowering a truncating store of a vector type. In this
case for an EVT we'll return Expand as we should in all of the cases anyhow.
The testcase triggered at the one in VectorLegalizer::LegalizeOp, inspection
found the rest.
llvm-svn: 254061
The patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D13745 is broken into four parts:
1. New interfaces without functional changes.
2. Use new interfaces in SelectionDAG, while in other passes treat probabilities
as weights.
3. Use new interfaces in all other passes.
4. Remove old interfaces.
This the second patch above. In this patch SelectionDAG starts to use
probability-based interfaces in MBB to add successors but other MC passes are
still using weight-based interfaces. Therefore, we need to maintain correct
weight list in MBB even when probability-based interfaces are used. This is
done by updating weight list in probability-based interfaces by treating the
numerator of probabilities as weights. This change affects many test cases
that check successor weight values. I will update those test cases once this
patch looks good to you.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14361
llvm-svn: 253965
Duplicate a few common definitions between DFAPacketizer.cpp and
DFAPacketizerEmitter.cpp to avoid including files from CodeGen
in TableGen.
llvm-svn: 253820
Extended DFA tablegen to:
- added "-debug-only dfa-emitter" support to llvm-tblgen
- defined CVI_PIPE* resources for the V60 vector coprocessor
- allow specification of multiple required resources
- supports ANDs of ORs
- e.g. [SLOT2, SLOT3], [CVI_MPY0, CVI_MPY1] means:
(SLOT2 OR SLOT3) AND (CVI_MPY0 OR CVI_MPY1)
- added support for combo resources
- allows specifying ORs of ANDs
- e.g. [CVI_XLSHF, CVI_MPY01] means:
(CVI_XLANE AND CVI_SHIFT) OR (CVI_MPY0 AND CVI_MPY1)
- increased DFA input size from 32-bit to 64-bit
- allows for a maximum of 4 AND'ed terms of 16 resources
- supported expressions now include:
expression => term [AND term] [AND term] [AND term]
term => resource [OR resource]*
resource => one_resource | combo_resource
combo_resource => (one_resource [AND one_resource]*)
Author: Dan Palermo <dpalermo@codeaurora.org>
kparzysz: Verified AMDGPU codegen to be unchanged on all llc
tests, except those dealing with instruction encodings.
Reapply the previous patch, this time without circular dependencies.
llvm-svn: 253793
Extended DFA tablegen to:
- added "-debug-only dfa-emitter" support to llvm-tblgen
- defined CVI_PIPE* resources for the V60 vector coprocessor
- allow specification of multiple required resources
- supports ANDs of ORs
- e.g. [SLOT2, SLOT3], [CVI_MPY0, CVI_MPY1] means:
(SLOT2 OR SLOT3) AND (CVI_MPY0 OR CVI_MPY1)
- added support for combo resources
- allows specifying ORs of ANDs
- e.g. [CVI_XLSHF, CVI_MPY01] means:
(CVI_XLANE AND CVI_SHIFT) OR (CVI_MPY0 AND CVI_MPY1)
- increased DFA input size from 32-bit to 64-bit
- allows for a maximum of 4 AND'ed terms of 16 resources
- supported expressions now include:
expression => term [AND term] [AND term] [AND term]
term => resource [OR resource]*
resource => one_resource | combo_resource
combo_resource => (one_resource [AND one_resource]*)
Author: Dan Palermo <dpalermo@codeaurora.org>
kparzysz: Verified AMDGPU codegen to be unchanged on all llc
tests, except those dealing with instruction encodings.
llvm-svn: 253790
When MergeConsecutiveStores() combines two loads and two stores into
wider loads and stores, the chain users of both of the original loads
must be transfered to the new load, because it may be that a chain
user only depends on one of the loads.
New test case: test/CodeGen/SystemZ/dag-combine-01.ll
Reviewed by James Y Knight.
Bugzilla: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25310#c6
llvm-svn: 253779
Summary:
Add and instructions immediately after loads that only have their low
bits used, assuming that the (and (load x) c) will be matched as a
extload and the ands/truncs fed by the extload will be removed by isel.
Reviewers: mcrosier, qcolombet, ab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14584
llvm-svn: 253722
The included test only checks for a compiler crash for now. Several people are
facing this issue, so we first resolve the crash, and will increase shrinkwrap's
coverage later in a follow-up patch.
llvm-svn: 253718
This adds a new API, LTOCodeGenerator::setFileType, to choose the output file
format for LTO CodeGen. A corresponding change to use this new API from
llvm-lto and a test case is coming in a separate commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14554
llvm-svn: 253622
Now that the register allocator knows about the barriers on funclet
entry and exit, testing has shown that this is unnecessary.
We still demote PHIs on unsplittable blocks due to the differences
between the IR CFG and the Machine CFG.
llvm-svn: 253619
This is another step towards allowing SimplifyCFG to speculate harder, but then have
CGP clean things up if the target doesn't like it.
Previous patches in this series:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12882http://reviews.llvm.org/D13297
D13297 should catch most expensive ops, but speculation of cttz/ctlz requires special
handling because of weirdness in the intrinsic definition for handling a zero input
(that definition can probably be blamed on x86).
For example, if we have the usual speculated-by-select expensive op pattern like this:
%tobool = icmp eq i64 %A, 0
%0 = tail call i64 @llvm.cttz.i64(i64 %A, i1 true) ; is_zero_undef == true
%cond = select i1 %tobool, i64 64, i64 %0
ret i64 %cond
There's an instcombine that will turn it into:
%0 = tail call i64 @llvm.cttz.i64(i64 %A, i1 false) ; is_zero_undef == false
This CGP patch is looking for that case and despeculating it back into:
entry:
%tobool = icmp eq i64 %A, 0
br i1 %tobool, label %cond.end, label %cond.true
cond.true:
%0 = tail call i64 @llvm.cttz.i64(i64 %A, i1 true) ; is_zero_undef == true
br label %cond.end
cond.end:
%cond = phi i64 [ %0, %cond.true ], [ 64, %entry ]
ret i64 %cond
This unfortunately may lead to poorer codegen (see the changes in the existing x86 test),
but if we increase speculation in SimplifyCFG (the next step in this patch series), then
we should avoid those kinds of cases in the first place.
The need for this patch was originally mentioned here:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7506
with follow-up here:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7554
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14630
llvm-svn: 253573
Note, this was reviewed (and more details are in) http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html
These intrinsics currently have an explicit alignment argument which is
required to be a constant integer. It represents the alignment of the
source and dest, and so must be the minimum of those.
This change allows source and dest to each have their own alignments
by using the alignment attribute on their arguments. The alignment
argument itself is removed.
There are a few places in the code for which the code needs to be
checked by an expert as to whether using only src/dest alignment is
safe. For those places, they currently take the minimum of src/dest
alignments which matches the current behaviour.
For example, code which used to read:
call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* %dest, i8* %src, i32 500, i32 8, i1 false)
will now read:
call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* align 8 %dest, i8* align 8 %src, i32 500, i1 false)
For out of tree owners, I was able to strip alignment from calls using sed by replacing:
(call.*llvm\.memset.*)i32\ [0-9]*\,\ i1 false\)
with:
$1i1 false)
and similarly for memmove and memcpy.
I then added back in alignment to test cases which needed it.
A similar commit will be made to clang which actually has many differences in alignment as now
IRBuilder can generate different source/dest alignments on calls.
In IRBuilder itself, a new argument was added. Instead of calling:
CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)
you now call
CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, SrcAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)
There is a temporary class (IntegerAlignment) which takes the source alignment and rejects
implicit conversion from bool. This is to prevent isVolatile here from passing its default
parameter to the source alignment.
Note, changes in future can now be made to codegen. I didn't change anything here, but this
change should enable better memcpy code sequences.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel.
llvm-svn: 253511
This patch adds support for vector constant folding of integer/float comparisons.
This requires FoldConstantVectorArithmetic to support scalar constant operands (in this case ISD::CONDCASE). In future we should be able to support other scalar constant types as necessary (and possibly start calling FoldConstantVectorArithmetic for all node creations)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14683
llvm-svn: 253504
This change introduces an instrumentation intrinsic instruction for
value profiling purposes, the lowering of the instrumentation intrinsic
and raw reader updates. The raw profile data files for llvm-profdata
testing are updated.
llvm-svn: 253484
The virtual register containing the address for returned value on
stack should in the DAG be represented with a CopyFromReg node and not
a Register node. Otherwise, InstrEmitter will not make sure that it
ends up in the right register class for the target instruction.
SystemZ needs this, becuause the reg class for address registers is a
subset of the general 64 bit register class.
test/SystemZ/CodeGen/args-07.ll and args-04.ll updated to run with
-verify-machineinstrs.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel.
llvm-svn: 253461
If a section is rw, it is irrelevant if the dynamic linker will write to
it or not.
It looks like llvm implemented this because gcc was doing it. It looks
like gcc implemented this in the hope that it would put all the
relocated items close together and speed up the dynamic linker.
There are two problem with this:
* It doesn't work. Both bfd and gold will map .data.rel to .data and
concatenate the input sections in the order they are seen.
* If we want a feature like that, it can be implemented directly in the
linker since it knowns where the dynamic relocations are.
llvm-svn: 253436
When looking for the best successor from the outer loop for a block
belonging to an inner loop, the edge probability computation can be
improved so that edges in the inner loop are ignored. For example,
suppose we are building chains for the non-loop part of the following
code, and looking for B1's best successor. Assume the true body is very
hot, then B3 should be the best candidate. However, because of the
existence of the back edge from B1 to B0, the probability from B1 to B3
can be very small, preventing B3 to be its successor. In this patch, when
computing the probability of the edge from B1 to B3, the weight on the
back edge B1->B0 is ignored, so that B1->B3 will have 100% probability.
if (...)
do {
B0;
... // some branches
B1;
} while(...);
else
B2;
B3;
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10825
llvm-svn: 253414
While still allowing CodeGen/AsmPrinter in llvm to own them using a bump
ptr allocator. (might be nice to replace the pointers there with
something that at least automatically calls their dtors, if that's
necessary/useful, rather than having it done explicitly (I think a typed
BumpPtrAllocator already does this, or maybe a unique_ptr with a custom
deleter, etc))
llvm-svn: 253409
Summary:
Now that there is a one-to-one mapping from MachineFunction to
WinEHFuncInfo, we don't need to use a DenseMap to select the right
WinEHFuncInfo for the current funclet.
The main challenge here is that X86WinEHStatePass is an IR pass that
doesn't have access to the MachineFunction. I gave it its own
WinEHFuncInfo object that it uses to calculate state numbers, which it
then throws away. As long as nobody creates or removes EH pads between
this pass and SDAG construction, we will get the same state numbers.
The other thing X86WinEHStatePass does is to mark the EH registration
node. Instead of communicating which alloca was the registration through
WinEHFuncInfo, I added the llvm.x86.seh.ehregnode intrinsic. This
intrinsic generates no code and simply marks the alloca in use.
Reviewers: JCTremoulet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14668
llvm-svn: 253378
Statepoint lowering currently expects that the target method of a
statepoint only defines a single value. This precludes using
statepoints with ABIs that return values in multiple registers
(e.g. the SysV AMD64 ABI). This change adds support for lowering
statepoints with mutli-def targets.
llvm-svn: 253339
Several places in AsmPrinter.cpp print comments describing MachineOperand
registers using MCRegisterInfo, which uses MCOperand-oriented names. This
doesn't work for targets that use virtual registers exclusively, as
WebAssembly does, since virtual registers are represented and printed
differently.
This patch preserves what seems to be the spirit of r229978, avoiding the
use of TM.getSubtargetImpl(), while still using MachineOperand-oriented
printing for MachineOperands.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14709
llvm-svn: 253338
The way prelink used to work was
* The compiler decides if a given section only has relocations that
are know to point to the same DSO. If so, it names it
.data.rel.ro.local<something>.
* The static linker puts all of these together.
* The prelinker program assigns addresses to each library and resolves
the local relocations.
There are many problems with this:
* It is incompatible with address space randomization.
* The information passed by the compiler is redundant. The linker
knows if a given relocation is in the same DSO or not. If could sort
by that if so desired.
* There are newer ways of speeding up DSO (gnu hash for example).
* Even if we want to implement this again in the compiler, the previous
implementation is pretty broken. It talks about relocations that are
"resolved by the static linker". If they are resolved, there are none
left for the prelinker. What one needs to track is if an expression
will require only dynamic relocations that point to the same DSO.
At this point it looks like the prelinker is an historical curiosity.
For example, fedora has retired it because it failed to build for two
releases
(http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/prelink.git/commit/?id=eb43100a8331d91c801ee3dcdb0a0bb9babfdc1f)
This patch removes support for it. That is, it stops printing the
".local" sections.
llvm-svn: 253280
Allowing imprecise lane masks in case of more than 32 sub register lanes
lead to some tricky corner cases, and I need another bugfix for another
one. Instead I rather declare lane masks as precise and let tablegen
abort if we do not have enough bits.
This does not affect any in-tree target, even AMDGPU only needs 16 lanes
at the moment. If the 32 lanes turn out to be a problem in the future,
then we can easily change the LaneBitmask typedef to uint64_t.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14557
llvm-svn: 253279
Summary: Since we're passing references to dbg.value as pointers,
we need to have the frontend properly declare their sizes and
alignments (as it already does for regular pointers) in preparation
for my upcoming patch to have the verifer check that the sizes agree.
Also augment the backend logic that skips actually emitting this
information into DWARF such that it also handles reference types.
Reviewers: aprantl, dexonsmith, dblaikie
Subscribers: dblaikie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14275
llvm-svn: 253186
MCRelaxableFragment previously kept a copy of MCSubtargetInfo and
MCInst to enable re-encoding the MCInst later during relaxation. A copy
of MCSubtargetInfo (instead of a reference or pointer) was needed
because the feature bits could be modified by the parser.
This commit replaces the MCSubtargetInfo copy in MCRelaxableFragment
with a constant reference to MCSubtargetInfo. The copies of
MCSubtargetInfo are kept in MCContext, and the target parsers are now
responsible for asking MCContext to provide a copy whenever the feature
bits of MCSubtargetInfo have to be toggled.
With this patch, I saw a 4% reduction in peak memory usage when I
compiled verify-uselistorder.lto.bc using llc.
rdar://problem/21736951
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14346
llvm-svn: 253127
attribute.
Even if the target supports shrink-wrapping, the prologue and epilogue
must not move because a crash can happen anywhere and sanitizers need
to be able to unwind from the PC of the crash.
llvm-svn: 253116
Richard Trieu noted that UBSan detected an overflowing shift, and the obvious fix caused a crash.
What was happening was that the shiftee (1U) was indeed too small for the possible range of shifts it had to handle, but also we were using "VT.getSizeInBits()" to get the maximum type bitwidth, but we wanted "VT.getScalarSizeInBits()" to get the vector lane size instead of the entire vector size.
Use an APInt for the shift and VT.getScalarSizeInBits().
llvm-svn: 253023
This reverts commit r252565.
This also includes the revert of the commit mentioned below in order to
avoid breaking tests in AMDGPU:
Revert "AMDGPU: Set isAllocatable = 0 on VS_32/VS_64"
This reverts commit r252674.
llvm-svn: 252956