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Commit Graph

642 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Fang
772a101ff0 initial draft of PPCMachObjectWriter.cpp
this records relocation entries in the mach-o object file
for PIC code generation.
tested on powerpc-darwin8, validated against darwin otool -rvV

llvm-svn: 188004
2013-08-08 20:14:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel
e76170ce53 PPC: Map frin to round() not nearbyint() and rint()
Making use of the recently-added ISD::FROUND, which allows for custom lowering
of round(), the PPC backend will now map frin to round(). Previously, we had
been using frin to lower nearbyint() (and rint() via some custom lowering to
handle the extra fenv flags requirements), but only in fast-math mode because
frin does not tie-to-even. Several users had complained about this behavior,
and this new mapping of frin to round is certainly more appropriate (and does
not require fast-math mode).

In effect, this reverts r178362 (and part of r178337, replacing the nearbyint
mapping with the round mapping).

llvm-svn: 187960
2013-08-08 04:31:34 +00:00
Hal Finkel
71d37e18da Add PPC64 mulli pattern
The PPC backend had been missing a pattern to generate mulli for 64-bit
multiples. We had been generating it only for 32-bit multiplies. Unfortunately,
generating li + mulld unnecessarily increases register pressure.

llvm-svn: 187807
2013-08-06 17:03:03 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f91cfcdaed Fix PPC64 64-bit GPR inline asm constraint matching
Internally, the PowerPC backend names the 32-bit GPRs R[0-9]+, and names the
64-bit parent GPRs X[0-9]+. When matching inline assembly constraints with
explicit register names, on PPC64 when an i64 MVT has been requested, we need
to follow gcc's convention of using r[0-9]+ to refer to the 64-bit (parent)
registers.

At some point, we'll probably want to arrange things so that the generic code
in TargetLowering uses the AsmName fields declared in *RegisterInfo.td in order
to match these inline asm register constraints. If we do that, this change can
be reverted.

llvm-svn: 187693
2013-08-03 12:25:10 +00:00
Roman Divacky
32a21acb65 PPC32 va_list is an actual structure so va_copy needs to copy the whole
structure not just a pointer. This implements that and thus fixes va_copy
on PPC32. Fixes #15286. Both bug and patch by Florian Zeitz!

llvm-svn: 187158
2013-07-25 21:36:47 +00:00
Manman Ren
c20620404a Debug Info: improve the verifier to check field types.
Make sure the context field of DIType is MDNode.
Fix testing cases to make them pass the verifier.

llvm-svn: 187150
2013-07-25 19:33:30 +00:00
Manman Ren
2abe20d1ee Debug Info: improve the Finder.
Improve the Finder to handle context of a DIVariable used by DbgValueInst.
Fix testing cases to make them pass the verifier.

llvm-svn: 187052
2013-07-24 17:10:09 +00:00
Stephen Lin
52ebde139c Disambiguate function names in some CodeGen tests. (Some tests were using function names that also were names of instructions and/or doing other unusual things that were making the test not amenable to otherwise scriptable pattern matching.) No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 186621
2013-07-18 22:29:15 +00:00
Hal Finkel
fdd124178e PPC: Support dynamic allocas with large alignment
Support for dynamic stack alignments in the PPC backend has been unfinished, in
part because it depends on dynamic stack realignment (which I only just
recently implemented fully). Now we can also support dynamic allocas with
higher than the default target stack alignment (16 bytes).

In order to round-up the requested size to the maximum requested alignment, we
need an additional register to hold the rounded-up size. We're already using one
scavenged register to hold the previous stack-pointer value (which needs to be
stored with the signal-safe stdux update), and so when we have dynamic allocas
and a large alignment, we allocate two emergency spill slots for the scavenger.

llvm-svn: 186562
2013-07-18 04:28:21 +00:00
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