16-bit literals are encoded as 32-bit values. If high 16-bits of the value is 0xFFFF, the decoded instruction cannot be reassembled.
For example, the following code
0xff,0x04,0x04,0x52,0xcd,0xab,0xff,0xff
was decoded as
v_mul_lo_u16_e32 v2, 0xffffabcd, v2
However this literal is actually a 64-bit constant 0x00000000ffffabcd which violates requirements described in the documentation - the truncation is not safe.
This change corrects decoding to make reassembly possible.
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84098
tryLatency compares two sched candidates. For the top zone it prefers
the one with lesser depth, but only if that depth is greater than the
total latency of the instructions we've already scheduled -- otherwise
its latency would be hidden and there would be no stall.
Unfortunately it only tests the depth of one of the candidates. This can
lead to situations where the TopDepthReduce heuristic does not kick in,
but a lower priority heuristic chooses the other candidate, whose depth
*is* greater than the already scheduled latency, which causes a stall.
The fix is to apply the heuristic if the depth of *either* candidate is
greater than the already scheduled latency.
All this also applies to the BotHeightReduce heuristic in the bottom
zone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72392
This usually results in better code. Fixes using
inline asm with short2, and also fixes having a different
ABI for function parameters between VI and gfx9.
Partially cleans up the mess used for lowering of the d16
operations. Making v4f16 legal will help clean this up more,
but this requires additional work.
llvm-svn: 332953
Use VOP3 add/addc like usual.
This has some tradeoffs. Inline immediates fold
a little better, but other constants are worse off.
SIShrinkInstructions could be made smarter to handle
these cases.
This allows us to avoid selecting scalar adds where we
need to track the carry in scc and replace its users.
This makes it easier to use the carryless VALU adds.
llvm-svn: 318340
Remove dependency of SDWA pass on SIShrinkInstructions.
The goal is to move SDWA even higher in the stack to avoid second run
of MachineLICM, MachineCSE and SIFoldOperands.
Also added handling to preserve original src modifiers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33860
llvm-svn: 304665
An encoding does not allow to use SDWA in an instruction with
scalar operands, either literals or SGPRs. That is however possible
to copy these operands into a VGPR first.
Several copies of the value are produced if multiple SDWA conversions
were done. To cleanup MachineLICM (to hoist copies out of loops),
MachineCSE (to remove duplicate copies) and SIFoldOperands (to replace
SGPR to VGPR copy with immediate copy right to the VGPR) runs are added
after the SDWA pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33583
llvm-svn: 304219
Turn expensive 64 bit shift into 32 bit if shift does not overflow int:
shl (ext x) => zext (shl x)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33367
llvm-svn: 303569
Currently the default C calling convention functions are treated
the same as compute kernels. Make this explicit so the default
calling convention can be changed to a non-kernel.
Converted with perl -pi -e 's/define void/define amdgpu_kernel void/'
on the relevant test directories (and undoing in one place that actually
wanted a non-kernel).
llvm-svn: 298444
Surprisingly, one of the three interference checks in LiveRegMatrix was
using the main live range instead of the apropriate subregister range
resulting in unnecessarily conservative results.
llvm-svn: 296722