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6302 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth
88fd126216 [PM] Separate the TargetLibraryInfo object from the immutable pass.
The pass is really just a means of accessing a cached instance of the
TargetLibraryInfo object, and this way we can re-use that object for the
new pass manager as its result.

Lots of delta, but nothing interesting happening here. This is the
common pattern that is developing to allow analyses to live in both the
old and new pass manager -- a wrapper pass in the old pass manager
emulates the separation intrinsic to the new pass manager between the
result and pass for analyses.

llvm-svn: 226157
2015-01-15 10:41:28 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
0068e08baa Update libdeps since TLI was moved from Target to Analysis in r226078.
llvm-svn: 226126
2015-01-15 05:21:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
49a7633378 [PM] Move TargetLibraryInfo into the Analysis library.
While the term "Target" is in the name, it doesn't really have to do
with the LLVM Target library -- this isn't an abstraction which LLVM
targets generally need to implement or extend. It has much more to do
with modeling the various runtime libraries on different OSes and with
different runtime environments. The "target" in this sense is the more
general sense of a target of cross compilation.

This is in preparation for porting this analysis to the new pass
manager.

No functionality changed, and updates inbound for Clang and Polly.

llvm-svn: 226078
2015-01-15 02:16:27 +00:00
Ramkumar Ramachandra
f8622411fe Standardize {pred,succ,use,user}_empty()
The functions {pred,succ,use,user}_{begin,end} exist, but many users
have to check *_begin() with *_end() by hand to determine if the
BasicBlock or User is empty. Fix this with a standard *_empty(),
demonstrating a few usecases.

llvm-svn: 225760
2015-01-13 03:46:47 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
2d390ba50f fix typo; NFC
llvm-svn: 225753
2015-01-13 01:51:52 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
8a3043d80f 80-cols; NFC
llvm-svn: 225700
2015-01-12 21:21:28 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
ed6b379845 GVN: propagate equalities for floating point compares
Allow optimizations based on FP comparison values in the same way
as integers. 

This resolves PR17713:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17713

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6911

llvm-svn: 225660
2015-01-12 19:29:48 +00:00
Hal Finkel
977fb5e0c3 [LoopUnroll] Fix the partial unrolling threshold for small loop sizes
When we compute the size of a loop, we include the branch on the backedge and
the comparison feeding the conditional branch. Under normal circumstances,
these don't get replicated with the rest of the loop body when we unroll. This
led to the somewhat surprising behavior that really small loops would not get
unrolled enough -- they could be unrolled more and the resulting loop would be
below the threshold, because we were assuming they'd take
(LoopSize * UnrollingFactor) instructions after unrolling, instead of
(((LoopSize-2) * UnrollingFactor)+2) instructions. This fixes that computation.

llvm-svn: 225565
2015-01-10 00:30:55 +00:00
Tim Northover
ef7d18507b Re-reapply r221924: "[GVN] Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before
doing Load PRE"

It's not really expected to stick around, last time it provoked a weird LTO
build failure that I can't reproduce now, and the bot logs are long gone. I'll
re-revert it if the failures recur.

Original description: Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before
doing Load PRE.

llvm-svn: 225536
2015-01-09 19:19:56 +00:00
Philip Reames
1ca2c06169 [Refactor] Have getNonLocalPointerDependency take the query instruction
Previously, MemoryDependenceAnalysis::getNonLocalPointerDependency was taking a list of properties about the instruction being queried. Since I'm about to need one more property to be passed down through the infrastructure - I need to know a query instruction is non-volatile in an inner helper - fix the interface once and for all.

I also added some assertions and behaviour clarifications around volatile and ordered field accesses. At the moment, this is mostly to document expected behaviour. The only non-standard instructions which can currently reach this are atomic, but unordered, loads and stores. Neither ordered or volatile accesses can reach here.

The call in GVN is protected by an isSimple check when it first considers the load. The calls in MemDepPrinter are protected by isUnordered checks. Both utilities also check isVolatile for loads and stores.

llvm-svn: 225481
2015-01-09 00:04:22 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
d3017f3565 Revert "Reapply: Teach SROA how to update debug info for fragmented variables."
This reverts commit r225379 while investigating an assertion failure reported
by Alexey.

llvm-svn: 225424
2015-01-08 02:02:00 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
f59b4b4d08 Reapply: Teach SROA how to update debug info for fragmented variables.
The two buildbot failures were addressed in LLVM r225378 and CFE r225359.

This rapplies commit 225272 without modifications.

llvm-svn: 225379
2015-01-07 20:52:22 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
72c4811183 Revert "Reapply: Teach SROA how to update debug info for fragmented variables."
because of a tsan buildbot failure.
This reverts commit 225272.

Fix should be coming soon.

llvm-svn: 225288
2015-01-06 19:47:27 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
452a905a99 Reapply: Teach SROA how to update debug info for fragmented variables.
This also rolls in the changes discussed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D6766.
Defers migrating the debug info for new allocas until after all partitions
are created.

Thanks to Chandler for reviewing!

llvm-svn: 225272
2015-01-06 17:14:10 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2015da7ed2 [SROA] Apply a somewhat heavy and unpleasant hammer to fix PR22093, an
assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA.

This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have
a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both
be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do
because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to
track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes
invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those
loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that
cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really
triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue.

The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being
quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores
don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of
introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the
right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only
do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in
the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative
results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual
pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end
up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this
is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is.

llvm-svn: 225149
2015-01-05 04:17:53 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
c140bae640 [PM] Split the AssumptionTracker immutable pass into two separate APIs:
a cache of assumptions for a single function, and an immutable pass that
manages those caches.

The motivation for this change is two fold. Immutable analyses are
really hacks around the current pass manager design and don't exist in
the new design. This is usually OK, but it requires that the core logic
of an immutable pass be reasonably partitioned off from the pass logic.
This change does precisely that. As a consequence it also paves the way
for the *many* utility functions that deal in the assumptions to live in
both pass manager worlds by creating an separate non-pass object with
its own independent API that they all rely on. Now, the only bits of the
system that deal with the actual pass mechanics are those that actually
need to deal with the pass mechanics.

Once this separation is made, several simplifications become pretty
obvious in the assumption cache itself. Rather than using a set and
callback value handles, it can just be a vector of weak value handles.
The callers can easily skip the handles that are null, and eventually we
can wrap all of this up behind a filter iterator.

For now, this adds boiler plate to the various passes, but this kind of
boiler plate will end up making it possible to port these passes to the
new pass manager, and so it will end up factored away pretty reasonably.

llvm-svn: 225131
2015-01-04 12:03:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0f3b8d1a20 [SROA] Teach SROA to be more aggressive in splitting now that we have
a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores.

Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the
entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and
stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were
unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting
logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we
can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In
order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the
integer loads and stores as splittable.

However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer
loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar
integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In
order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do
pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully
splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca
that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where
introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from
a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer
loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been,
repartition and rewrite.

The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere
within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger
object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the
aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to
demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we
have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores.

This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is
really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian
testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced
me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA.
=] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16
loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment.

This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle
splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of
zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases
explode in glorious fireworks. =]

I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as
splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely
no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove
all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not
doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions
that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk.

llvm-svn: 225074
2015-01-02 03:55:54 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0eb0fb8e08 [SROA] Make the computation of adjusted pointers not leak GEP
instructions.

I noticed this when working on dialing up how aggressively we can
pre-split loads and stores. My test case wasn't passing because dead
GEPs into the allocas persisted when they were built by this routine.
This isn't terribly harmful, we still rewrote and promoted the alloca
and I can't conceive of how to cause this to happen in a case where we
will keep the exact same alloca but rewrite and promote the uses of it.
If that ever happened, we'd get an assert out of mem2reg.

So I don't have a direct test case yet, but the subsequent commit's test
case wouldn't pass without this. There are other problems fixed by this
patch that I spotted purely by inspection such as the fact that
getAdjustedPtr could have actually deleted dead base pointers. I don't
know how to get a base pointer to go into getAdjustedPtr today, so
I think this bug could never have manifested (and I certainly can't
write a test case for it) but, it wasn't the intent of the code. The
code really just wanted to GC the new instructions built. That can be
done more directly by comparing with the base pointer which is the only
non-new instruction that this code can return.

llvm-svn: 225073
2015-01-02 02:47:38 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2d32e84ac2 [SROA] Fix the loop exit placement to be prior to indexing the splits
array. This prevents it from walking out of bounds on the splits array.

Bug found with the existing tests by ASan and by the MSVC debug build.

llvm-svn: 225069
2015-01-02 00:10:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
72c329e5b3 [SROA] Fix two total think-os in r225061 that should have been caught on
a +asserts bootstrap, but my bootstrap had asserts off. Oops.

Anyways, in some places it is reasonable to cast (as a sanity check) the
pointer operand to a load or store to an instruction within SROA --
namely when the pointer operand is expected to be derived from an
alloca, and thus always an instruction. However, the pre-splitting code
also deals with loads and stores to non-alloca pointers and there we
need to just use the Value*. Nothing about the code relied on the
instruction cast, it was only there essentially as an invariant
assertion. Remove the two that don't actually hold.

This should fix the proximate issue in PR22080, but I'm also doing an
asserts bootstrap myself to see if there are other issues lurking.

I'll craft a reduced test case in a moment, but I wanted to get the tree
healthy as quickly as possible.

llvm-svn: 225068
2015-01-01 23:26:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
b27ce0e2ce [SROA] Switch to using a more direct debug logging technique in one part
of my new load and store splitting, and fix a bug where it logged
a totally irrelevant slice rather than the actual slice in question.

The logging here previously worked because we used to place new slices
onto the back of the core sequence, but that caused other problems.
I updated the actual code to store new slices in their own vector but
didn't update the logging. There isn't a good way to reuse the logging
any more, and frankly it wasn't needed. We can directly log this bit
more easily.

llvm-svn: 225063
2015-01-01 12:56:47 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
4a7c5492f8 [SROA] Fix formatting with clang-format which I managed to fail to do
prior to committing r225061. Sorry for that.

llvm-svn: 225062
2015-01-01 12:01:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
e46230af0c [SROA] Teach SROA how to much more intelligently handle split loads and
stores.

When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer
load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA
splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit
math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is
effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in
the rest of the optimizer:

- It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side
  where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading
  specific elements that are stored.
- We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't
  always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN.
- This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with
  integer bit math such as floating point operations.
- It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle
  the scalar stores that underly the aggregate.

At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores
in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the
values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering
because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math.

The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is
partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable
loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent
load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the
loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked
extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive
approaches to this problem.

However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have
loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are
hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm
implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass
over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior
to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of
overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the
same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice
configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses
(the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split
up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in
SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required.

With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA
where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be
splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all
the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent
handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer
loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to
help with bisecting any fallout.

The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate
scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now
generates perfect code for this high-level test case using
std::complex<float>:

  #include <complex>

  void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) {
    x += std::complex<float>(a, b);
  }
  void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) {
    x -= std::complex<float>(a, b);
  }

  void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b,
           std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) {
    std::complex<float> l1 = x;
    g1(l1, a, b);
    std::complex<float> l2 = x;
    g2(l2, a, b);
    x1 = l1;
    x2 = l2;
  }

This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot
inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when
using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and
pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due
to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were
"stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge.

So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other
testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though,
so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings
in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact
of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more
integer loads and stores.

llvm-svn: 225061
2015-01-01 11:54:38 +00:00
Philip Reames
10eda0ad7d Refine the notion of MayThrow in LICM to include a header specific version
In LICM, we have a check for an instruction which is guaranteed to execute and thus can't introduce any new faults if moved to the preheader. To handle a function which might unconditionally throw when first called, we check for any potentially throwing call in the loop and give up.

This is unfortunate when the potentially throwing condition is down a rare path. It prevents essentially all LICM of potentially faulting instructions where the faulting condition is checked outside the loop. It also greatly diminishes the utility of loop unswitching since control dependent instructions - which are now likely in the loops header block - will not be lifted by subsequent LICM runs.

define void @nothrow_header(i64 %x, i64 %y, i1 %cond) {
; CHECK-LABEL: nothrow_header
; CHECK-LABEL: entry
; CHECK: %div = udiv i64 %x, %y
; CHECK-LABEL: loop
; CHECK: call void @use(i64 %div)
entry:
  br label %loop
loop: ; preds = %entry, %for.inc
  %div = udiv i64 %x, %y
  br i1 %cond, label %loop-if, label %exit
loop-if:
  call void @use(i64 %div)
  br label %loop
exit:
  ret void
}

The current patch really only helps with non-memory instructions (i.e. divs, etc..) since the maythrow call down the rare path will be considered to alias an otherwise hoistable load.  The one exception is that it does kick in for loads which are known to be invariant without regard to other possible stores, i.e. those marked with either !invarant.load metadata of tbaa 'is constant memory' metadata.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6725

llvm-svn: 224965
2014-12-29 23:00:57 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
aa0e0370a0 [SROA] Update the documentation and names for accessing the slices
within a partition of an alloca in SROA.

This reflects the fact that the organization of the slices isn't really
ideal for analysis, but is the naive way in which the slices are
available while we're processing them in the core partitioning
algorithm.

It is possible we could improve matters, and I've left a FIXME with
one of my ideas for how to do this, but it is a lot of work, the benefit
is somewhat minor, and it isn't clear that it would be strictly better.
=/ Not really satisfying, but I'm out of really good ideas.

This also improves one place where the debug logging failed to mark some
split partitions. Now we log in one place, slightly later, and with
accurate information about whether the slice is split by the partition
being rewritten.

llvm-svn: 224800
2014-12-24 01:48:09 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
268dbb6208 [SROA] Refactor the integer and vector promotion testing logic to
operate in terms of the new Partition class, and generally have a more
clear set of arguments. No functionality changed.

The most notable improvements here are consistently using the
terminology of 'partition' for a collection of slices that will be
rewritten together and 'slice' for a region of an alloca that is used by
a particular instruction.

This also makes it more clear that the split things are actually slices
as well, just ones that will be split by the proposed partition.

This doesn't yet address the confusing aspects of the partition's
interface where slices that will be split by the partition and start
prior to the partition are accesssed via Partition::splitSlices() while
the core range of slices exposed by a Partition includes both unsplit
slices and slices which will be split by the end, but started within the
offset range of the partition. This is particularly hard to address
because the algorithm which computes partitions quite literally doesn't
know which slices these will end up being until too late. I'm looking at
whether I can fix that or not, but I'm not optimistic. I'll update the
comments and/or names to further explain this either way. I've also
added one FIXME in this patch relating to this confusion so that I don't
forget about it.

llvm-svn: 224798
2014-12-24 01:05:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
5fb4297ebd Revert r224739: Debug info: Teach SROA how to update debug info for
fragmented variables.

This caused codegen to start crashing when we built somewhat large
programs with debug info and optimizations. 'check-msan' hit in, and
I suspect a bootstrap would as well. I mailed a test case to the
review thread.

llvm-svn: 224750
2014-12-23 02:58:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
d6a74b72f1 [SROA] Lift the logic for traversing the alloca slices one partition at
a time into a partition iterator and a Partition class.

There is a lot of knock-on simplification that this enables, largely
stemming from having a Partition object to refer to in lots of helpers.
I've only done a minimal amount of that because enoguh stuff is changing
as-is in this commit.

This shouldn't change any observable behavior. I've worked hard to
preserve the *exact* traversal semantics which were originally present
even though some of them make no sense. I'll be changing some of this in
subsequent commits now that the logic is carefully factored into
a reusable place.

The primary motivation for this change is to break the rewriting into
phases in order to support more intelligent rewriting. For example, I'm
planning to change how split loads and stores are rewritten to remove
the significant overuse of integer bit packing in the resulting code and
allow more effective secondary splitting of aggregates. For any of this
to work, they have to share the exact traversal logic.

llvm-svn: 224742
2014-12-22 22:46:00 +00:00
Bruno Cardoso Lopes
c8d20ce475 [LCSSA] Handle PHI insertion in disjoint loops
Take two disjoint Loops L1 and L2.

LoopSimplify fails to simplify some loops (e.g. when indirect branches
are involved). In such situations, it can happen that an exit for L1 is
the header of L2. Thus, when we create PHIs in one of such exits we are
also inserting PHIs in L2 header.

This could break LCSSA form for L2 because these inserted PHIs can also
have uses in L2 exits, which are never handled in the current
implementation. Provide a fix for this corner case and test that we
don't assert/crash on that.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6624

rdar://problem/19166231

llvm-svn: 224740
2014-12-22 22:35:46 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
85354b18d3 Debug info: Teach SROA how to update debug info for fragmented variables.
This allows us to generate debug info for extremely advanced code such as

  typedef struct { long int a; int b;} S;

  int foo(S s) {
    return s.b;
  }

which at -O1 on x86_64 is codegen'd into

  define i32 @foo(i64 %s.coerce0, i32 %s.coerce1) #0 {
    ret i32 %s.coerce1, !dbg !24
  }

with this patch we emit the following debug info for this

  TAG_formal_parameter [3]
    AT_location( 0x00000000
                 0x0000000000000000 - 0x0000000000000006: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rsi, piece 0x00000004
                 0x0000000000000006 - 0x0000000000000008: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rax, piece 0x00000004 )
                 AT_name( "s" )
                 AT_decl_file( "/Volumes/Data/llvm/_build.ninja.release/test.c" )

Thanks to chandlerc, dblaikie, and echristo for their feedback on all
previous iterations of this patch!

llvm-svn: 224739
2014-12-22 22:26:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
e9116958a3 [SROA] Run clang-format over the entire SROA pass as I wrote it before
much of the glory of clang-format, and now any time I touch it I risk
introducing formatting changes as part of a functional commit.

Also, clang-format is *way* better at formatting my code than I am.
Most of this is a huge improvement although I reverted a couple of
places where I hit a clang-format bug with lambdas that has been filed
but not (fully) fixed.

llvm-svn: 224666
2014-12-20 02:39:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
d82a3ea601 [SROA] Cleanup - remove the use of std::mem_fun_ref nonsense and use
a lambda now that we have them.

llvm-svn: 224500
2014-12-18 05:19:47 +00:00
Elena Demikhovsky
1560acad27 Sink store based on alias analysis
- by Ella Bolshinsky
The alias analysis is used define whether the given instruction
is a barrier for store sinking. For 2 identical stores, following
instructions are checked in the both basic blocks, to determine
whether they are sinking barriers.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D6420

llvm-svn: 224247
2014-12-15 14:09:53 +00:00
Chad Rosier
5670ef081f [Reassociate] Use dbgs() instead of errs().
llvm-svn: 224125
2014-12-12 14:44:12 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
3d57886267 IR: Split Metadata from Value
Split `Metadata` away from the `Value` class hierarchy, as part of
PR21532.  Assembly and bitcode changes are in the wings, but this is the
bulk of the change for the IR C++ API.

I have a follow-up patch prepared for `clang`.  If this breaks other
sub-projects, I apologize in advance :(.  Help me compile it on Darwin
I'll try to fix it.  FWIW, the errors should be easy to fix, so it may
be simpler to just fix it yourself.

This breaks the build for all metadata-related code that's out-of-tree.
Rest assured the transition is mechanical and the compiler should catch
almost all of the problems.

Here's a quick guide for updating your code:

  - `Metadata` is the root of a class hierarchy with three main classes:
    `MDNode`, `MDString`, and `ValueAsMetadata`.  It is distinct from
    the `Value` class hierarchy.  It is typeless -- i.e., instances do
    *not* have a `Type`.

  - `MDNode`'s operands are all `Metadata *` (instead of `Value *`).

  - `TrackingVH<MDNode>` and `WeakVH` referring to metadata can be
    replaced with `TrackingMDNodeRef` and `TrackingMDRef`, respectively.

    If you're referring solely to resolved `MDNode`s -- post graph
    construction -- just use `MDNode*`.

  - `MDNode` (and the rest of `Metadata`) have only limited support for
    `replaceAllUsesWith()`.

    As long as an `MDNode` is pointing at a forward declaration -- the
    result of `MDNode::getTemporary()` -- it maintains a side map of its
    uses and can RAUW itself.  Once the forward declarations are fully
    resolved RAUW support is dropped on the ground.  This means that
    uniquing collisions on changing operands cause nodes to become
    "distinct".  (This already happened fairly commonly, whenever an
    operand went to null.)

    If you're constructing complex (non self-reference) `MDNode` cycles,
    you need to call `MDNode::resolveCycles()` on each node (or on a
    top-level node that somehow references all of the nodes).  Also,
    don't do that.  Metadata cycles (and the RAUW machinery needed to
    construct them) are expensive.

  - An `MDNode` can only refer to a `Constant` through a bridge called
    `ConstantAsMetadata` (one of the subclasses of `ValueAsMetadata`).

    As a side effect, accessing an operand of an `MDNode` that is known
    to be, e.g., `ConstantInt`, takes three steps: first, cast from
    `Metadata` to `ConstantAsMetadata`; second, extract the `Constant`;
    third, cast down to `ConstantInt`.

    The eventual goal is to introduce `MDInt`/`MDFloat`/etc. and have
    metadata schema owners transition away from using `Constant`s when
    the type isn't important (and they don't care about referring to
    `GlobalValue`s).

    In the meantime, I've added transitional API to the `mdconst`
    namespace that matches semantics with the old code, in order to
    avoid adding the error-prone three-step equivalent to every call
    site.  If your old code was:

        MDNode *N = foo();
        bar(isa             <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(0)));
        baz(cast            <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(1)));
        bak(cast_or_null    <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(2)));
        bat(dyn_cast        <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(3)));
        bay(dyn_cast_or_null<ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(4)));

    you can trivially match its semantics with:

        MDNode *N = foo();
        bar(mdconst::hasa               <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(0)));
        baz(mdconst::extract            <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(1)));
        bak(mdconst::extract_or_null    <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(2)));
        bat(mdconst::dyn_extract        <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(3)));
        bay(mdconst::dyn_extract_or_null<ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(4)));

    and when you transition your metadata schema to `MDInt`:

        MDNode *N = foo();
        bar(isa             <MDInt>(N->getOperand(0)));
        baz(cast            <MDInt>(N->getOperand(1)));
        bak(cast_or_null    <MDInt>(N->getOperand(2)));
        bat(dyn_cast        <MDInt>(N->getOperand(3)));
        bay(dyn_cast_or_null<MDInt>(N->getOperand(4)));

  - A `CallInst` -- specifically, intrinsic instructions -- can refer to
    metadata through a bridge called `MetadataAsValue`.  This is a
    subclass of `Value` where `getType()->isMetadataTy()`.

    `MetadataAsValue` is the *only* class that can legally refer to a
    `LocalAsMetadata`, which is a bridged form of non-`Constant` values
    like `Argument` and `Instruction`.  It can also refer to any other
    `Metadata` subclass.

(I'll break all your testcases in a follow-up commit, when I propagate
this change to assembly.)

llvm-svn: 223802
2014-12-09 18:38:53 +00:00
Tom Stellard
213a8062a7 StructurizeCFG: Use LoopInfo analysis for better loop detection
We were assuming that each back-edge in a region represented a unique
loop, which is not always the case.  We need to use LoopInfo to
correctly determine which back-edges are loops.

llvm-svn: 223199
2014-12-03 04:28:32 +00:00
Bruno Cardoso Lopes
498cbaf867 [LICM] Avoind store sinking if no preheader is available
Load instructions are inserted into loop preheaders when sinking stores
and later removed if not used by the SSA updater. Avoid sinking if the
loop has no preheader and avoid crashes. This fixes one more side effect
of not handling indirectbr instructions properly on LoopSimplify.

llvm-svn: 223119
2014-12-02 14:22:34 +00:00
Bruno Cardoso Lopes
a072cee758 [LICM] Store sink and indirectbr instructions
Loop simplify skips exit-block insertion when exits contain indirectbr
instructions. This leads to an assertion in LICM when trying to sink
stores out of non-dedicated loop exits containing indirectbr
instructions. This patch fix this issue by re-checking for dedicated
exits in LICM prior to store sink attempts.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6414

rdar://problem/18943047

llvm-svn: 222927
2014-11-28 19:47:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
7feb19d89c Revert r220349 to re-instate r220277 with a fix for PR21330 -- quite
clearly only exactly equal width ptrtoint and inttoptr casts are no-op
casts, it says so right there in the langref. Make the code agree.

Original log from r220277:
Teach the load analysis to allow finding available values which require
inttoptr or ptrtoint cast provided there is datalayout available.
Eventually, the datalayout can just be required but in practice it will
always be there today.

To go with the ability to expose available values requiring a ptrtoint
or inttoptr cast, helpers are added to perform one of these three casts.

These smarts are necessary to finish canonicalizing loads and stores to
the operational type requirements without regressing fundamental
combines.

I've added some test cases. These should actually improve as the load
combining and store combining improves, but they may fundamentally be
highlighting some missing combines for select in addition to exercising
the specific added logic to load analysis.

llvm-svn: 222739
2014-11-25 08:20:27 +00:00
David Majnemer
0f2c44c562 This Reassociate change unintentionally slipped in r222499
llvm-svn: 222500
2014-11-21 02:37:38 +00:00
David Majnemer
8a561be3da SROA: The alloca type isn't a candidate promotion type for vectors
The alloca's type is irrelevant, only those types which are used in a
load or store of the exact size of the slice should be considered.

This manifested as an assertion failure when we compared the various
types: we had a size mismatch.

This fixes PR21480.

llvm-svn: 222499
2014-11-21 02:34:55 +00:00
Chad Rosier
eafdf66096 Revert "[Reassociate] As the expression tree is rewritten make sure the operands are"
This reverts commit r222142.  This is causing/exposing an execution-time regression
in spec2006/gcc and coremark on AArch64/A57/Ofast.

Conflicts:

	test/Transforms/Reassociate/optional-flags.ll

llvm-svn: 222398
2014-11-19 23:21:20 +00:00
Arnaud A. de Grandmaison
fdfed29d10 Fix tail recursion elimination
When the BasicBlock containing the return instrution has a PHI with 2
incoming values, FoldReturnIntoUncondBranch will remove the no longer
used incoming value and remove the no longer needed phi as well. This
leaves us with a BB that no longer has a PHI, but the subsequent call
to FoldReturnIntoUncondBranch from FoldReturnAndProcessPred will not
remove the return instruction (which still uses the result of the call
instruction). This prevents EliminateRecursiveTailCall to remove
the value, as it is still being used in a basicblock which has no
predecessors.

The basicblock can not be erased on the spot, because its iterator is
still being used in runTRE.

This issue was exposed when removing the threshold on size for lifetime
marker insertion for named temporaries in clang. The testcase is a much
reduced version of peelOffOuterExpr(const Expr*, const ExplodedNode *)
from clang/lib/StaticAnalyzer/Core/BugReporterVisitors.cpp.

llvm-svn: 222354
2014-11-19 13:32:51 +00:00
David Blaikie
60e6c80905 Update SetVector to rely on the underlying set's insert to return a pair<iterator, bool>
This is to be consistent with StringSet and ultimately with the standard
library's associative container insert function.

This lead to updating SmallSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update SmallPtrSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update all the existing users of those functions...

llvm-svn: 222334
2014-11-19 07:49:26 +00:00
Hao Liu
a3e7d1ff7e [SeparateConstOffsetFromGEP] Allow SeparateConstOffsetFromGEP pass to lower GEPs.
If LowerGEP is enabled, it can lower a GEP with multiple indices into GEPs with a single index
or arithmetic operations. Lowering GEPs can always extract structure indices. Lowering GEPs can
also give use more optimization opportunities. It can benefit passes like CSE, LICM and CGP.

Reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D5864

llvm-svn: 222328
2014-11-19 06:24:44 +00:00
Manman Ren
df5625ea3a Revert r222039 because of bot failure.
http://lab.llvm.org:8080/green/job/clang-Rlto_master/298/
Hopefully, bot will be green. If not, we will re-submit the commit.

llvm-svn: 222287
2014-11-19 00:13:26 +00:00
Chad Rosier
dc822c8d6f [Reassociate] Rename local variable to not use same name as a member
variable. NFC.

llvm-svn: 222248
2014-11-18 20:21:54 +00:00
Philip Reames
33e827b222 Tweak EarlyCSE to recognize series of dead stores
EarlyCSE is giving up on the current instruction immediately when it recognizes that the current instruction makes a previous store trivially dead. There's no reason to do this. Once the previous store has been deleted, it's perfectly legal to remember the value of the current store (for value forwarding) and the fact the store occurred (it could be dead too!).

Reviewed by: Hal
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6301

llvm-svn: 222241
2014-11-18 17:46:32 +00:00
David Majnemer
35be2aba4c IndVarSimplify: Allow LFTR to fire more often
I added a pessimization in r217102 to prevent miscompiles when the
incremented induction variable was used in a comparison; it would be
poison.

Try to use the incremented induction variable more often when we can be
sure that the increment won't end in poison.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6222

llvm-svn: 222213
2014-11-18 02:20:58 +00:00
Chad Rosier
2db8cbf601 [Reassociate] As the expression tree is rewritten make sure the operands are
emitted in canonical form.

llvm-svn: 222142
2014-11-17 16:33:50 +00:00
Chad Rosier
fc00bbc305 [Reassociate] Canonicalize constants to RHS operand.
Fix a thinko where the RHS was already a constant.

llvm-svn: 222139
2014-11-17 15:52:51 +00:00
Chad Rosier
b2f1df48f3 Reapply r221924: "[GVN] Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before
doing Load PRE"

This commit updates the failing test in
Analysis/TypeBasedAliasAnalysis/gvn-nonlocal-type-mismatch.ll

The failing test is sensitive to the order in which we process loads.  This
version turns on the RPO traversal instead of the while DT traversal in GVN.
The new test code is functionally same just the order of loads that are
eliminated is swapped.

This new version also fixes an issue where GVN splits a critical edge and
potentially invalidate the RPO/DT iterator.

llvm-svn: 222039
2014-11-14 21:09:13 +00:00
Chad Rosier
91839c8c44 [Reassociate] Canonicalize the operands of all binary operators.
llvm-svn: 222008
2014-11-14 17:09:19 +00:00
Chad Rosier
534da46914 [Reassociate] Canonicalize operands of vector binary operators.
Prior to this commit fmul and fadd binary operators were being canonicalized for
both scalar and vector versions.  We now canonicalize add, mul, and, or, and xor
vector instructions.

llvm-svn: 222006
2014-11-14 17:08:15 +00:00
Chad Rosier
40ae58f215 [Reassociate] Canonicalize constants to RHS operand.
llvm-svn: 222005
2014-11-14 17:05:59 +00:00
Chad Rosier
f413fc7c77 [Reassociate] Improve rank debug information. NFC.
llvm-svn: 221999
2014-11-14 15:01:38 +00:00
Chad Rosier
b78b0f87d3 Revert "[GVN] Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before doing Load PRE."
This reverts commit r221924.  It appears the commit was a bit premature and is causing
bot failures that need further investigation.

llvm-svn: 221939
2014-11-13 22:54:59 +00:00
Chad Rosier
9c48d1f2b8 [GVN] Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before doing Load PRE.
Phabricator Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6103
Patch by "Balaram Makam" <bmakam@codeaurora.org>!

llvm-svn: 221924
2014-11-13 21:17:58 +00:00
Chad Rosier
164ded07a4 [Reassociate] Update comment. NFC.
llvm-svn: 221894
2014-11-13 15:40:20 +00:00
Jingyue Wu
b12753b896 Disable indvar widening if arithmetics on the wider type are more expensive
Summary:
Reapply r221772. The old patch breaks the bot because the @indvar_32_bit test
was run whether NVPTX was enabled or not.

IndVarSimplify should not widen an indvar if arithmetics on the wider
indvar are more expensive than those on the narrower indvar. For
instance, although NVPTX64 treats i64 as a legal type, an ADD on i64 is
twice as expensive as that on i32, because the hardware needs to
simulate a 64-bit integer using two 32-bit integers.

Split from D6188, and based on D6195 which adds NVPTXTargetTransformInfo.

Fixes PR21148.

Test Plan:
Added @indvar_32_bit that verifies we do not widen an indvar if the arithmetics
on the wider type are more expensive. This test is run only when NVPTX is
enabled.

Reviewers: jholewinski, eliben, meheff, atrick

Reviewed By: atrick

Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6196

llvm-svn: 221799
2014-11-12 18:09:15 +00:00
Jingyue Wu
d0362ddb0e Reverts r221772 which fails tests
llvm-svn: 221773
2014-11-12 07:19:25 +00:00
Jingyue Wu
cc35aae4ef Disable indvar widening if arithmetics on the wider type are more expensive
Summary:
IndVarSimplify should not widen an indvar if arithmetics on the wider
indvar are more expensive than those on the narrower indvar. For
instance, although NVPTX64 treats i64 as a legal type, an ADD on i64 is
twice as expensive as that on i32, because the hardware needs to
simulate a 64-bit integer using two 32-bit integers.

Split from D6188, and based on D6195 which adds NVPTXTargetTransformInfo.

Fixes PR21148.

Test Plan:
Added @indvar_32_bit that verifies we do not widen an indvar if the arithmetics
on the wider type are more expensive.

Reviewers: jholewinski, eliben, meheff, atrick

Reviewed By: atrick

Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6196

llvm-svn: 221772
2014-11-12 06:58:45 +00:00
Chad Rosier
96d5147e3f [Reassociate] Canonicalize negative constants out of expressions.
Add support for FDiv, which was regressed by the previous commit.

llvm-svn: 221738
2014-11-11 23:36:42 +00:00
Chad Rosier
ac6f04f1d5 [Reassociate] Canonicalize negative constants out of expressions.
This is a reapplication of r221171, but we only perform the transformation
on expressions which include a multiplication.  We do not transform rem/div
operations as this doesn't appear to be safe in all cases.

llvm-svn: 221721
2014-11-11 22:58:35 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
8770505e4e Revert "IR: MDNode => Value"
Instead, we're going to separate metadata from the Value hierarchy.  See
PR21532.

This reverts commit r221375.
This reverts commit r221373.
This reverts commit r221359.
This reverts commit r221167.
This reverts commit r221027.
This reverts commit r221024.
This reverts commit r221023.
This reverts commit r220995.
This reverts commit r220994.

llvm-svn: 221711
2014-11-11 21:30:22 +00:00
Chad Rosier
b957900a1e [Reassociate] Better preserve NSW/NUW flags.
Part of PR12985.

Phabricator Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6172

llvm-svn: 221555
2014-11-07 22:12:57 +00:00
David Majnemer
f319f32100 SCCP: overdefined calls cannot become constant
We would attempt to fold away a call instruction which had been marked
overdefined.  However, it's not valid to transition to constant from
overdefined.

This fixes PR21512.

llvm-svn: 221513
2014-11-07 08:54:19 +00:00
Chad Rosier
541e081d90 [Reassociate] Don't reassociate when mixing regular and fast-math FP
instructions.  Inlining might cause such cases and it's not valid to
reassociate floating-point instructions without the unsafe algebra flag.

Patch by Mehdi Amini <mehdi_amini@apple.com>!

llvm-svn: 221462
2014-11-06 16:46:37 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
20ad81c3d1 Revert "[Reassociate] Canonicalize negative constants out of expressions."
This reverts commit r221171.

It performs this invalid transformation:
-  %div.i = urem i64 -1, %add
-  %sub.i = sub i64 -2, %div.i
+  %div.i = urem i64 1, %add
+  %sub.i1 = add i64 %div.i, -2

llvm-svn: 221317
2014-11-04 23:42:45 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
159d4a83e8 Revert "Transforms: reapply SVN r219899"
This reverts commit r220811 and r220839. It made an incorrect change to
musttail handling.

llvm-svn: 221226
2014-11-04 02:02:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f36da1447f Use AA in LoadCombine
LoadCombine can be smarter about aborting when a writing instruction is
encountered, instead of aborting upon encountering any writing instruction, use
an AliasSetTracker, and only abort when encountering some write that might
alias with the loads that could potentially be combined.

This was originally motivated by comments made (and a test case provided) by
David Majnemer in response to PR21448. It turned out that LoadCombine was not
responsible for that PR, but LoadCombine should also be improved so that
unrelated stores (and @llvm.assume) don't interrupt load combining.

llvm-svn: 221203
2014-11-03 23:19:16 +00:00
Hal Finkel
d731cfc8f4 EarlyCSE should ignore calls to @llvm.assume
EarlyCSE uses a simple generation scheme for handling memory-based
dependencies, and calls to @llvm.assume (which are marked as writing to memory
to ensure the preservation of control dependencies) disturb that scheme
unnecessarily. Skipping calls to @llvm.assume is legal, and the alternative
(adding AA calls in EarlyCSE) is likely undesirable (we have GVN for that).

Fixes PR21448.

llvm-svn: 221175
2014-11-03 20:21:32 +00:00
Chad Rosier
db50482578 [Reassociate] Canonicalize negative constants out of expressions.
This gives CSE/GVN more options to eliminate duplicate expressions.
This is a follow up patch to http://reviews.llvm.org/D4904.

http://reviews.llvm.org/D5363

llvm-svn: 221171
2014-11-03 19:11:30 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
8f49c8202f IR: MDNode => Value: Instruction::getAllMetadataOtherThanDebugLoc()
Change `Instruction::getAllMetadataOtherThanDebugLoc()` from a vector of
`MDNode` to one of `Value`.  Part of PR21433.

llvm-svn: 221167
2014-11-03 18:13:57 +00:00
Diego Novillo
ba36fbe7cb Use ErrorOr for the ::create factory on instrumented and sample profilers.
Summary:
As discussed in
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20141027/242445.html,
the creation of reader and writer instances is better done using
ErrorOr. There are no functional changes, but several callers needed to
be adjusted.

Reviewers: bogner

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6076

llvm-svn: 221120
2014-11-03 00:51:45 +00:00
Elena Demikhovsky
e6082bc9c0 Use Alias Analysis to hoist 2 loads from diamond to the common predecessor basic block.
Alias Analysis allows to detect real barriers for load hoisting.

Review in http://reviews.llvm.org/D5991

llvm-svn: 221091
2014-11-02 08:03:05 +00:00
Diego Novillo
83d52f4c02 Fix Twine corruption problem with diagnostics.
This fixes the autobuilders I broke with a recent patch. Thanks echristo
and dblaikie for beating me with a clue stick.

llvm-svn: 220918
2014-10-30 18:48:41 +00:00
Diego Novillo
a5ff3524ec Add profile writing capabilities for sampling profiles.
Summary:
This patch finishes up support for handling sampling profiles in both
text and binary formats. The new binary format uses uleb128 encoding to
represent numeric values. This makes profiles files about 25% smaller.

The profile writer class can write profiles in the existing text and the
new binary format. In subsequent patches, I will add the capability to
read (and perhaps write) profiles in the gcov format used by GCC.

Additionally, I will be adding support in llvm-profdata to manipulate
sampling profiles.

There was a bit of refactoring needed to separate some code that was in
the reader files, but is actually common to both the reader and writer.

The new test checks that reading the same profile encoded as text or
raw, produces the same results.

Reviewers: bogner, dexonsmith

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6000

llvm-svn: 220915
2014-10-30 18:00:06 +00:00
Yi Jiang
4dba23a59c Do not simplifyLatch for loops where hoisting increments couldresult in extra live range interferance
llvm-svn: 220872
2014-10-29 20:19:47 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool
c568d1c120 Transforms: reapply SVN r219899
This restores the commit from SVN r219899 with an additional change to ensure
that the CodeGen is correct for the case that was identified as being incorrect
(originally PR7272).

In the case that during inlining we need to synthesize a value on the stack
(i.e. for passing a value byval), then any function involving that alloca must
be stripped of its tailness as the restriction that it does not access the
parent's stack no longer holds.  Unfortunately, a single alloca can cause a
rippling effect through out the inlining as the value may be aliased or may be
mutated through an escaped external call.  As such, we simply track if an alloca
has been introduced in the frame during inlining, and strip any tail calls.

llvm-svn: 220811
2014-10-28 18:27:37 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
e24697a037 Reformat partially, where I touched for whitespace changes.
llvm-svn: 220773
2014-10-28 11:54:52 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
1e3f8944dc LoopRerollPass.cpp: Use range-based loop. NFC.
llvm-svn: 220772
2014-10-28 11:54:05 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
f2d570a79b Untabify and whitespace cleanups.
llvm-svn: 220771
2014-10-28 11:53:30 +00:00
Andrew Trick
6aca626b5c LSR: Minor cleanup after Daniel's patch.
Combine the Inserted an Done sets into a Visited set.

llvm-svn: 220623
2014-10-25 19:59:30 +00:00
Andrew Trick
b8b40e0564 Fix LSR compile time.
This is a simple fix that brings the compilation time from 5min to 5s
on a specific real-world example. It's a large chain of computation in
a crypto routine (always a problem for SCEV). A unit test is not
feasible and there would be no way to check it. The fix is just basic
good practice for dealing with SCEVs, there's no risk of regression.

Patch by Daniel Reynaud!

llvm-svn: 220622
2014-10-25 19:42:07 +00:00
Jingyue Wu
23067c1fec [SeparateConstOffsetFromGEP] Fixed a bug related to unsigned modulo
The dividend in "signed % unsigned" is treated as unsigned instead of signed,
causing unexpected behavior such as -64 % (uint64_t)24 == 0.

Added a regression test in split-gep.ll

Patched by Hao Liu.

llvm-svn: 220618
2014-10-25 18:34:03 +00:00
Jingyue Wu
9c957b2e8e [SeparateConstOffsetFromGEP] Fixed a bug in rebuilding OR expressions
The two operands of the new OR expression should be NextInChain and TheOther
instead of the two original operands.

Added a regression test in split-gep.ll.

Hao Liu reported this bug, and provded the test case and an initial patch.
Thanks! 

llvm-svn: 220615
2014-10-25 17:36:21 +00:00
Timur Iskhodzhanov
1a7cffcda9 Make getDISubprogram(const Function *F) available in LLVM
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5950

llvm-svn: 220536
2014-10-23 23:46:28 +00:00
Diego Novillo
e87aec19c1 Shorten auto iterators for function basic blocks.
Use consistent naming for basic block instances.

No functional changes.

llvm-svn: 220404
2014-10-22 18:39:50 +00:00
Diego Novillo
bdc18f1388 Use auto iteration in lib/Transforms/Scalar/SampleProfile.cpp. No functional changes.
llvm-svn: 220394
2014-10-22 16:51:50 +00:00
Diego Novillo
d46a4d6eb2 Change error to warning when a profile cannot be found.
When the profile for a function cannot be applied, we use to emit an
error. This seems extreme. The compiler can continue, it's just that the
optimization opportunities won't include profile information.

llvm-svn: 220386
2014-10-22 13:36:35 +00:00
Diego Novillo
f3c6118ba0 Support using sample profiles with partial debug info.
Summary:
When using a profile, we used to require the use -gmlt so that we could
get access to the line locations. This is used to match line numbers in
the input profile to the line numbers in the function's IR.

But this is actually not necessary. The driver can provide source
location tracking without the emission of debug information. In these
cases, the annotation 'llvm.dbg.cu' is missing from the IR, but the
actual line location annotations are still present.

This patch adds a new way of looking for the start of the current
function. Instead of looking through the compile units in llvm.dbg.cu,
we can walk up the scope for the first instruction in the function with
a debug loc. If that describes the function, we use it. Otherwise, we
keep looking until we find one.

If no such instruction is found, we then give up and produce an error.

Reviewers: echristo, dblaikie

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5887

llvm-svn: 220382
2014-10-22 12:59:00 +00:00
Hans Wennborg
b55f26d3d1 Revert "Teach the load analysis to allow finding available values which require" (r220277)
This seems to have caused PR21330.

llvm-svn: 220349
2014-10-21 23:49:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
eaa3d973ce Teach the load analysis to allow finding available values which require
inttoptr or ptrtoint cast provided there is datalayout available.
Eventually, the datalayout can just be required but in practice it will
always be there today.

To go with the ability to expose available values requiring a ptrtoint
or inttoptr cast, helpers are added to perform one of these three casts.

These smarts are necessary to finish canonicalizing loads and stores to
the operational type requirements without regressing fundamental
combines.

I've added some test cases. These should actually improve as the load
combining and store combining improves, but they may fundamentally be
highlighting some missing combines for select in addition to exercising
the specific added logic to load analysis.

llvm-svn: 220277
2014-10-21 09:00:40 +00:00
Philip Reames
c3e4c79873 Introduce enum values for previously defined metadata types. (NFC)
Our metadata scheme lazily assigns IDs to string metadata, but we have a mechanism to preassign them as well.  Using a preassigned ID is helpful since we get compile time type checking, and avoid some (minimal) string construction and comparison.  This change adds enum value for three existing metadata types:
+    MD_nontemporal = 9, // "nontemporal"
+    MD_mem_parallel_loop_access = 10, // "llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access"
+    MD_nonnull = 11 // "nonnull"

I went through an updated various uses as well.  I made no attempt to get all uses; I focused on the ones which were easily grepable and easily to translate.  For example, there were several items in LoopInfo.cpp I chose not to update.

llvm-svn: 220248
2014-10-21 00:13:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
c114be9a74 Fix a somewhat subtle pair of issues with JumpThreading I introduced in
r220178. First, the creation routine doesn't insert prior to the
terminator of the basic block provided, but really at the end of the
basic block. Instead, get the terminator and insert before that. The
next issue was that we need to ensure multiple PHI node entries for
a single predecessor re-use the same cast instruction rather than
creating new ones.

All of the logic here was without tests previously. I've reduced and
added a test case from the test suite that crashed without both of these
fixes.

llvm-svn: 220186
2014-10-20 05:34:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
883dec8d65 Teach the load analysis driving core instcombine logic and other bits of
logic to look through pointer casts, making them trivially stronger in
the face of loads and stores with intervening pointer casts.

I've included a few test cases that demonstrate the kind of folding
instcombine can do without pointer casts and then variations which
obfuscate the logic through bitcasts. Without this patch, the variations
all fail to optimize fully.

This is more important now than it has been in the past as I've started
moving the load canonicialization to more closely follow the value type
requirements rather than the pointer type requirements and thus this
needs to be prepared for more pointer casts. When I made the same change
to stores several test cases regressed without logic along these lines
so I wanted to systematically improve matters first.

llvm-svn: 220178
2014-10-20 00:24:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
b7ea0ce700 Fix a long-standing miscompile in the load analysis that was uncovered
by my refactoring of this code.

The method isSafeToLoadUnconditionally assumes that the load will
proceed with the preferred type alignment. Given that, it has to ensure
that the alloca or global is at least that aligned. It has always done
this historically when a datalayout is present, but has never checked it
when the datalayout is absent. When I refactored the code in r220156,
I exposed this path when datalayout was present and that turned the
latent bug into a patent bug.

This fixes the issue by just removing the special case which allows
folding things without datalayout. This isn't worth the complexity of
trying to tease apart when it is or isn't safe without actually knowing
the preferred alignment.

llvm-svn: 220161
2014-10-19 08:17:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
3111128783 [SROA] Change how SROA does vector-based promotion of allocas to handle
cases where the alloca type, the load types, and the store types used
all disagree.

Previously, the only way that vector-based promotion occured was if the
alloca type was a vector type. This was one of the *very* few remaining
uses of the alloca's type to guide SROA/mem2reg left in LLVM. It turns
out it was a bad idea.

The alloca type can change very easily based on the mixture of types
loaded and stored to that alloca. We shouldn't be relying on it as
a signal for very much. Instead, the source of truth should be loads and
stores. We should canonicalize the loads and stores as much as possible
and then rely on them exclusively in SROA.

When looking and loads and stores, we may find many different candidate
vector types. This change will let SROA try all of them to find a vector
type which is a viable way to promote the entire alloca to a vector
register.

With this change, it becomes possible to do better canonicalization and
optimization of loads and stores without breaking SROA in random ways,
and that should allow fixing a core source of performance loss in hot
numerical loops such as those in Eigen.

llvm-svn: 220116
2014-10-18 00:44:02 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
eb9335bdab Revert "TRE: make TRE a bit more aggressive"
This reverts commit r219899.

This also updates byval-tail-call.ll to make it clear what was breaking.
Adding r219899 again will cause the load/store to disappear.

llvm-svn: 220093
2014-10-17 21:25:48 +00:00