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6669 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Elena Demikhovsky
fdf2d14b30 [Loop Vectorizer] Consecutive memory access - fixed and simplified
Amended consecutive memory access detection in Loop Vectorizer.
Load/Store were not handled properly without preceding GEP instruction.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20789

llvm-svn: 281853
2016-09-18 13:56:08 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
11e8147804 [InstCombine] allow vector types for constant folding / computeKnownBits (PR24942)
computeKnownBits() already works for integer vectors, so allow vector types when calling that from InstCombine.

I don't think the change to use m_APInt in computeKnownBits is strictly necessary because we do check for 
ConstantVector later, but it's more efficient to handle the splat case without needing to loop on vector elements.

This should work with InstSimplify, but doesn't yet, so I made that a FIXME comment on the test for PR24942:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24942

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24677

llvm-svn: 281777
2016-09-16 21:20:36 +00:00
David L Kreitzer
d923ca0cb8 Reapplying r278731 after fixing the problem that caused it to be reverted.
Enhance SCEV to compute the trip count for some loops with unknown stride.

Patch by Pankaj Chawla

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22377

llvm-svn: 281732
2016-09-16 14:38:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
f1fcfdd6f0 [LCG] Redesign the lazy post-order iteration mechanism for the
LazyCallGraph to support repeated, stable iterations, even in the face
of graph updates.

This is particularly important to allow the CGSCC pass manager to walk
the RefSCCs (and thus everything else) in a module more than once. Lots
of unittests and other tests were hard or impossible to write because
repeated CGSCC pass managers which didn't invalidate the LazyCallGraph
would conclude the module was empty after the first one. =[ Really,
really bad.

The interesting thing is that in many ways this simplifies the code. We
can now re-use the same code for handling reference edge insertion
updates of the RefSCC graph as we use for handling call edge insertion
updates of the SCC graph. Outside of adapting to the shared logic for
this (which isn't trivial, but is *much* simpler than the DFS it
replaces!), the new code involves putting newly created RefSCCs when
deleting a reference edge into the cached list in the correct way, and
to re-formulate the iterator to be stable and effective even in the face
of these kinds of updates.

I've updated the unittests for the LazyCallGraph to re-iterate the
postorder sequence and verify that this all works. We even check for
using alternating iterators to trigger the lazy formation of RefSCCs
after mutation has occured.

It's worth noting that there are a reasonable number of likely
simplifications we can make past this. It isn't clear that we need to
keep the "LeafRefSCCs" around any more. But I've not removed that mostly
because I want this to be a more isolated change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24219

llvm-svn: 281716
2016-09-16 10:20:17 +00:00
Sriraman Tallam
0bea49c555 [PM] Port CFGViewer and CFGPrinter to the new Pass Manager
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24592

llvm-svn: 281640
2016-09-15 18:35:27 +00:00
Wei Mi
0092b54e43 Add some shortcuts in LazyValueInfo to reduce compile time of Correlated Value Propagation.
The patch is to partially fix PR10584. Correlated Value Propagation queries LVI
to check non-null for pointer params of each callsite. If we know the def of
param is an alloca instruction, we know it is non-null and can return early from
LVI. Similarly, CVP queries LVI to check whether pointer for each mem access is
constant. If the def of the pointer is an alloca instruction, we know it is not
a constant pointer. These shortcuts can reduce the cost of CVP significantly.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18066

llvm-svn: 281586
2016-09-15 06:28:34 +00:00
Wei Mi
c1cf1864f4 Create a getelementptr instead of sub expr for ValueOffsetPair if the
value is a pointer.

This patch is to fix PR30213. When expanding an expr based on ValueOffsetPair,
if the value is of pointer type, we can only create a getelementptr instead
of sub expr.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24088

llvm-svn: 281439
2016-09-14 04:39:50 +00:00
Andrea Di Biagio
5f72d10163 [ConstantFold] Improve the bitcast folding logic for constant vectors.
The constant folder didn't know how to always fold bitcasts of constant integer
vectors. In particular, it was unable to handle the case where a constant vector
had some undef elements, and the resulting (i.e. bitcasted) vector type had more
elements than the original vector type.

Example:
  %cast = bitcast <2 x i64><i64 undef, i64 2> to <4 x i32>

On a little endian target, %cast could have been folded to:
  <4 x i32><i32 undef, i32 undef, i32 2, i32 0>

This patch improves the folding logic by teaching how to correctly propagate
undef elements in the folded vector.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24301

llvm-svn: 281343
2016-09-13 14:50:47 +00:00
Philip Reames
d1d1d7910e [LVI] Complete the abstract of the cache layer [NFCI]
Convert the previous introduced is-a relationship between the LVICache and LVIImple clases into a has-a relationship and hide all the implementation details of the cache from the lazy query layer.

The only slightly concerning change here is removing the addition of a queried block into the SeenBlock set in LVIImpl::getBlockValue.  As far as I can tell, this was effectively dead code.  I think it *used* to be the case that getCachedValueInfo wasn't const and might end up inserting elements in the cache during lookup.  That's no longer true and hasn't been for a while.  I did fixup the const usage to make that more obvious.

llvm-svn: 281272
2016-09-12 22:38:44 +00:00
Philip Reames
14f5e6cf51 [LVI] Sink a couple more cache manipulation routines into the cache itself [NFCI]
The only interesting bit here is the refactor of the handle callback and even that's pretty straight-forward.

llvm-svn: 281267
2016-09-12 22:03:36 +00:00
Philip Reames
c53c4f4788 [LVI] Abstract out the actual cache logic [NFCI]
Seperate the caching logic from the implementation of the lazy analysis.  For the moment, the lazy analysis impl has a is-a relationship with the cache; this will change to a has-a relationship shortly.  This was done as two steps merely to keep the changes simple and the diff understandable.

llvm-svn: 281266
2016-09-12 21:46:58 +00:00
Justin Lebar
2c71fc8bb7 Add handling of !invariant.load to PropagateMetadata.
Summary:
This will let e.g. the load/store vectorizer propagate this metadata
appropriately.

Reviewers: arsenm

Subscribers: tra, jholewinski, hfinkel, mzolotukhin

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23479

llvm-svn: 281153
2016-09-11 01:39:08 +00:00
Dehao Chen
eb60ada52c Do not widen load for different variable in GVN.
Summary:
Widening load in GVN is too early because it will block other optimizations like PRE, LICM.

https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=29110

The SPECCPU2006 benchmark impact of this patch:

Reference: o2_nopatch
(1): o2_patched

           Benchmark             Base:Reference   (1)  
-------------------------------------------------------
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd                  25.2  -0.08%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII               45.92  +1.05%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex                41.7  -0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray               35.65  +1.68%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc                   23.79  +0.42%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm                    41.88  -1.12%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3                47.94  +1.67%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp             22.46  -0.36%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar               21.19  +0.24%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk           36.09  -0.11%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench             33.28  +1.35%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2                 22.76  -0.04%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc                   32.36  +0.12%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf                   41.04  -0.41%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk                 26.94  +0.04%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer                  24.5  -0.20%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng                    28  -0.46%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum            55.25  +0.27%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref               45.87  +0.72%

geometric mean                                   +0.23%

For most benchmarks, it's a wash, but we do see stable improvements on some benchmarks, e.g. 447,453,482,400.

Reviewers: davidxl, hfinkel, dberlin, sanjoy, reames

Subscribers: gberry, junbuml

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24096

llvm-svn: 281074
2016-09-09 18:42:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
6a72044ca6 [LCG] Clean up and make NDEBUG verify calls more rigorous with
make_scope_exit now that we have that utility.

This makes the code much more clear and readable by isolating the check.
It also makes it easy to go through and make sure all the interesting
update routines have a start and end verify so we don't slowly let the
graph drift into an invalid state.

llvm-svn: 280619
2016-09-04 08:34:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2f848e0e0f [LCG] A NFC refactoring to extract the logic for doing
a postorder-sequence based update after edge insertion into a generic
helper function.

This separates the SCC-specific logic into two fairly simple lambdas and
extracts the rest into a generic helper template function. I think this
is a net win on its own merits because it disentangles different pieces
of the algorithm. Now there is one place that does the two-step
partition to identify a set of newly connected components and at the
same time update the postorder sequence.

However, I'm also hoping to re-use this an upcoming patch to update
a cached post-order sequence of RefSCCs when doing the analogous update
to the RefSCC graph, and I don't want to have two copies.

The diff is quite messy but this really is just moving things around and
making types generic rather than specific.

llvm-svn: 280618
2016-09-04 08:34:24 +00:00
Andrea Di Biagio
c30204881e Simplify code a bit. No functional change intended.
We don't need to call `GetCompareTy(LHS)' every single time true or false is
returned from function SimplifyFCmpInst as suggested by Sanjay in review D24142.

llvm-svn: 280491
2016-09-02 15:55:25 +00:00
Andrea Di Biagio
12f309496c [instsimplify] Fix incorrect folding of an ordered fcmp with a vector of all NaN.
This patch fixes a crash caused by an incorrect folding of an ordered comparison
between a packed floating point vector and a splat vector of NaN.

An ordered comparison between a vector and a constant vector of NaN, should
always be folded into a constant vector where each element is i1 false.

Since revision 266175, SimplifyFCmpInst folds the ordered fcmp into a scalar
'false'. Later on, this would cause an assertion failure, since the value type
of the folded value doesn't match the expected value type of the uses of the
original instruction: "Assertion failed: New->getType() == getType() &&
"replaceAllUses of value with new value of different type!".

This patch fixes the issue and adds a test case to the already existing test
InstSimplify/floating-point-compares.ll.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24143

llvm-svn: 280488
2016-09-02 14:47:43 +00:00
Michael Zolotukhin
d2ab1fcb94 [LoopInfo] Add verification by recomputation.
Summary:
Current implementation of LI verifier isn't ideal and fails to detect
some cases when LI is incorrect. For instance, it checks that all
recorded loops are in a correct form, but it has no way to check if
there are no more other (unrecorded in LI) loops in the function. This
patch adds a way to detect such bugs.

Reviewers: chandlerc, sanjoy, hfinkel

Subscribers: llvm-commits, silvas, mzolotukhin

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23437

llvm-svn: 280280
2016-08-31 19:26:19 +00:00
Chad Rosier
a07337bd30 Fix indent. NFC.
llvm-svn: 280270
2016-08-31 18:37:52 +00:00
Tim Shen
830cc5f6f2 s/static inline/static/ for headers I have changed in r279475. NFC.
llvm-svn: 280257
2016-08-31 16:48:13 +00:00
David Majnemer
d770d3137d [Loads] Properly populate the visited set in isDereferenceableAndAlignedPointer
There were paths where we wouldn't populate the visited set, causing us
to recurse forever if an SSA variable was defined in terms of itself.

This fixes PR30210.

llvm-svn: 280191
2016-08-31 03:22:32 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
35c1fea391 Fixup r279618, instantiate *AnalysisManagerProxy<*AnalysisManager,LazyCallGraph::SCC>, instead of *AnalysisManagerProxy<*AnalysisManager,LazyCallGraph::SCC,LazyCallGraph&>, for PassID.
Or they were not instantiated as expected;

  llvm::InnerAnalysisManagerProxy<llvm::AnalysisManager<llvm::Function>, llvm::LazyCallGraph::SCC>::PassID
  llvm::InnerAnalysisManagerProxy<llvm::AnalysisManager<llvm::Function>, llvm::LazyCallGraph::SCC>::PassID

llvm-svn: 280105
2016-08-30 15:47:13 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski
f3f0f64ccf NFC: add early exit in ModuleSummaryAnalysis
Summary:
Changed this code because it was not very readable.
The one question that I got after changing it is, should we
count calls to intrinsics? We don't add them to caller summary,
so maybe we shouldn't also count them?

Reviewers: tejohnson, eraman, mehdi_amini

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23949

llvm-svn: 280036
2016-08-30 00:46:26 +00:00
Easwaran Raman
08d34d7c85 Fix a thinko in r278189.
llvm-svn: 280008
2016-08-29 20:45:51 +00:00
Elena Demikhovsky
eed0bb3d71 [Loop Vectorizer] Fixed memory confilict checks.
Fixed a bug in run-time checks for possible memory conflicts inside loop.
The bug is in Low <-> High boundaries calculation. The High boundary should be calculated as "last memory access pointer + element size".

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23176

llvm-svn: 279930
2016-08-28 08:53:53 +00:00
Adam Nemet
68515406cf [Inliner] Report when inlining fails because callee's def is unavailable
Summary:
This is obviously an interesting case because it may motivate code
restructuring or LTO.

Reporting this requires instantiation of ORE in the loop where the call
sites are first gathered.  I've checked compile-time
overhead *with* -Rpass-with-hotness and the worst slow-down was 6% in
mcf and quickly tailing off.  As before without -Rpass-with-hotness
there is no overhead.

Because this could be a pretty noisy diagnostics, it is currently
qualified as 'verbose'.  As of this patch, 'verbose' diagnostics are
only emitted with -Rpass-with-hotness, i.e. when the output is expected
to be filtered.

Reviewers: eraman, chandlerc, davidxl, hfinkel

Subscribers: tejohnson, Prazek, davide, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23415

llvm-svn: 279860
2016-08-26 20:21:05 +00:00
Bob Haarman
7dc400a765 limit the number of instructions per block examined by dead store elimination
Summary: Dead store elimination gets very expensive when large numbers of instructions need to be analyzed. This patch limits the number of instructions analyzed per store to the value of the memdep-block-scan-limit parameter (which defaults to 100). This resulted in no observed difference in performance of the generated code, and no change in the statistics for the dead store elimination pass, but improved compilation time on some files by more than an order of magnitude.

Reviewers: dexonsmith, bruno, george.burgess.iv, dberlin, reames, davidxl

Subscribers: davide, chandlerc, dberlin, davidxl, eraman, tejohnson, mbodart, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D15537

llvm-svn: 279833
2016-08-26 16:34:27 +00:00
George Burgess IV
7056845909 Update a comment.
r279696, which changed `LLVM_CONSTEXPR AliasAttr` to `const AliasAttr`,
made this comment make less sense.

llvm-svn: 279699
2016-08-25 01:29:55 +00:00
George Burgess IV
dd6439368a Make some LLVM_CONSTEXPR variables const. NFC.
This patch changes LLVM_CONSTEXPR variable declarations to const
variable declarations, since LLVM_CONSTEXPR expands to nothing if the
current compiler doesn't support constexpr. In all of the changed
cases, it looks like the code intended the variable to be const instead
of sometimes-constexpr sometimes-not.

llvm-svn: 279696
2016-08-25 01:05:08 +00:00
Eugene Zelenko
5c80b0e4f8 Fix some Clang-tidy modernize-use-using and Include What You Use warnings; other minor fixes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23861

llvm-svn: 279695
2016-08-25 00:45:04 +00:00
Evgeny Stupachenko
a52e9dab82 The patch improves ValueTracking on left shift with nsw flag.
Summary:
The patch fixes PR28946.

Reviewers: majnemer, sanjoy

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23296

From: Li Huang
llvm-svn: 279684
2016-08-24 23:01:33 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
94942f5c00 [PM] Introduce basic update capabilities to the new PM's CGSCC pass
manager, including both plumbing and logic to handle function pass
updates.

There are three fundamentally tied changes here:
1) Plumbing *some* mechanism for updating the CGSCC pass manager as the
   CG changes while passes are running.
2) Changing the CGSCC pass manager infrastructure to have support for
   the underlying graph to mutate mid-pass run.
3) Actually updating the CG after function passes run.

I can separate them if necessary, but I think its really useful to have
them together as the needs of #3 drove #2, and that in turn drove #1.

The plumbing technique is to extend the "run" method signature with
extra arguments. We provide the call graph that intrinsically is
available as it is the basis of the pass manager's IR units, and an
output parameter that records the results of updating the call graph
during an SCC passes's run. Note that "...UpdateResult" isn't a *great*
name here... suggestions very welcome.

I tried a pretty frustrating number of different data structures and such
for the innards of the update result. Every other one failed for one
reason or another. Sometimes I just couldn't keep the layers of
complexity right in my head. The thing that really worked was to just
directly provide access to the underlying structures used to walk the
call graph so that their updates could be informed by the *particular*
nature of the change to the graph.

The technique for how to make the pass management infrastructure cope
with mutating graphs was also something that took a really, really large
number of iterations to get to a place where I was happy. Here are some
of the considerations that drove the design:

- We operate at three levels within the infrastructure: RefSCC, SCC, and
  Node. In each case, we are working bottom up and so we want to
  continue to iterate on the "lowest" node as the graph changes. Look at
  how we iterate over nodes in an SCC running function passes as those
  function passes mutate the CG. We continue to iterate on the "lowest"
  SCC, which is the one that continues to contain the function just
  processed.

- The call graph structure re-uses SCCs (and RefSCCs) during mutation
  events for the *highest* entry in the resulting new subgraph, not the
  lowest. This means that it is necessary to continually update the
  current SCC or RefSCC as it shifts. This is really surprising and
  subtle, and took a long time for me to work out. I actually tried
  changing the call graph to provide the opposite behavior, and it
  breaks *EVERYTHING*. The graph update algorithms are really deeply
  tied to this particualr pattern.

- When SCCs or RefSCCs are split apart and refined and we continually
  re-pin our processing to the bottom one in the subgraph, we need to
  enqueue the newly formed SCCs and RefSCCs for subsequent processing.
  Queuing them presents a few challenges:
  1) SCCs and RefSCCs use wildly different iteration strategies at
     a high level. We end up needing to converge them on worklist
     approaches that can be extended in order to be able to handle the
     mutations.
  2) The order of the enqueuing need to remain bottom-up post-order so
     that we don't get surprising order of visitation for things like
     the inliner.
  3) We need the worklists to have set semantics so we don't duplicate
     things endlessly. We don't need a *persistent* set though because
     we always keep processing the bottom node!!!! This is super, super
     surprising to me and took a long time to convince myself this is
     correct, but I'm pretty sure it is... Once we sink down to the
     bottom node, we can't re-split out the same node in any way, and
     the postorder of the current queue is fixed and unchanging.
  4) We need to make sure that the "current" SCC or RefSCC actually gets
     enqueued here such that we re-visit it because we continue
     processing a *new*, *bottom* SCC/RefSCC.

- We also need the ability to *skip* SCCs and RefSCCs that get merged
  into a larger component. We even need the ability to skip *nodes* from
  an SCC that are no longer part of that SCC.

This led to the design you see in the patch which uses SetVector-based
worklists. The RefSCC worklist is always empty until an update occurs
and is just used to handle those RefSCCs created by updates as the
others don't even exist yet and are formed on-demand during the
bottom-up walk. The SCC worklist is pre-populated from the RefSCC, and
we push new SCCs onto it and blacklist existing SCCs on it to get the
desired processing.

We then *directly* update these when updating the call graph as I was
never able to find a satisfactory abstraction around the update
strategy.

Finally, we need to compute the updates for function passes. This is
mostly used as an initial customer of all the update mechanisms to drive
their design to at least cover some real set of use cases. There are
a bunch of interesting things that came out of doing this:

- It is really nice to do this a function at a time because that
  function is likely hot in the cache. This means we want even the
  function pass adaptor to support online updates to the call graph!

- To update the call graph after arbitrary function pass mutations is
  quite hard. We have to build a fairly comprehensive set of
  data structures and then process them. Fortunately, some of this code
  is related to the code for building the cal graph in the first place.
  Unfortunately, very little of it makes any sense to share because the
  nature of what we're doing is so very different. I've factored out the
  one part that made sense at least.

- We need to transfer these updates into the various structures for the
  CGSCC pass manager. Once those were more sanely worked out, this
  became relatively easier. But some of those needs necessitated changes
  to the LazyCallGraph interface to make it significantly easier to
  extract the changed SCCs from an update operation.

- We also need to update the CGSCC analysis manager as the shape of the
  graph changes. When an SCC is merged away we need to clear analyses
  associated with it from the analysis manager which we didn't have
  support for in the analysis manager infrsatructure. New SCCs are easy!
  But then we have the case that the original SCC has its shape changed
  but remains in the call graph. There we need to *invalidate* the
  analyses associated with it.

- We also need to invalidate analyses after we *finish* processing an
  SCC. But the analyses we need to invalidate here are *only those for
  the newly updated SCC*!!! Because we only continue processing the
  bottom SCC, if we split SCCs apart the original one gets invalidated
  once when its shape changes and is not processed farther so its
  analyses will be correct. It is the bottom SCC which continues being
  processed and needs to have the "normal" invalidation done based on
  the preserved analyses set.

All of this is mostly background and context for the changes here.

Many thanks to all the reviewers who helped here. Especially Sanjoy who
caught several interesting bugs in the graph algorithms, David, Sean,
and others who all helped with feedback.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21464

llvm-svn: 279618
2016-08-24 09:37:14 +00:00
David Majnemer
70561a7ec3 [ValueTracking] Use a function_ref to avoid multiple instantiations
No functional change intended, this should just be a code size
improvement.

llvm-svn: 279563
2016-08-23 20:52:00 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
af4e2d5037 [InstSimplify] allow icmp with constant folds for splat vectors, part 2
Completes the m_APInt changes for simplifyICmpWithConstant().

Other commits in this series:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL279492
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL279530
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL279534
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL279538

llvm-svn: 279543
2016-08-23 18:00:51 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
16b202aa5c [InstSimplify] allow icmp with constant folds for splat vectors, part 1
llvm-svn: 279538
2016-08-23 17:30:56 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
9f87f9ae09 [InstSimplify] add helper function for SimplifyICmpInst(); NFCI
And add a FIXME because the helper excludes folds for vectors. It's
not clear yet how many of these are actually testable (and therefore
necessary?) because later analysis uses computeKnownBits and other
methods to catch many of these cases.

llvm-svn: 279492
2016-08-22 23:12:02 +00:00
Tim Shen
33e4d80307 [GraphTraits] Replace all NodeType usage with NodeRef
This should finish the GraphTraits migration.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23730

llvm-svn: 279475
2016-08-22 21:09:30 +00:00
Artur Pilipenko
7913289c6e Revert -r278267 [ValueTracking] An improvement to IR ValueTracking on Non-negative Integers
This change cause performance regression on MultiSource/Benchmarks/TSVC/Symbolics-flt/Symbolics-flt from LNT and some other bechmarks.

See https://reviews.llvm.org/D18777 for details.

llvm-svn: 279433
2016-08-22 13:14:07 +00:00
Tim Shen
823bde34b3 [GraphTraits] Make nodes_iterator dereference to NodeType*/NodeRef
Currently nodes_iterator may dereference to a NodeType* or a NodeType&. Make them all dereference to NodeType*, which is NodeRef later.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23704
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23705

llvm-svn: 279326
2016-08-19 21:20:13 +00:00
Michael Kuperstein
2a0f74a4bf [AliasSetTracker] Degrade AliasSetTracker when may-alias sets get too large.
Repeated inserts into AliasSetTracker have quadratic behavior - inserting a
pointer into AST is linear, since it requires walking over all "may" alias
sets and running an alias check vs. every pointer in the set.

We can avoid this by tracking the total number of pointers in "may" sets,
and when that number exceeds a threshold, declare the tracker "saturated".
This lumps all pointers into a single "may" set that aliases every other
pointer.

(This is a stop-gap solution until we migrate to MemorySSA)

This fixes PR28832.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23432

llvm-svn: 279274
2016-08-19 17:05:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
f68dd1e089 [PM] Rework the new PM support for building the ModuleSummaryIndex to
directly produce the index as the value type result.

This requires making the index movable which is straightforward. It
greatly simplifies things by allowing us to completely avoid the builder
API and the layers of abstraction inherent there. Instead both pass
managers can directly construct these when run by value. They still
won't be constructed truly eagerly thanks to the optional in the legacy
PM. The code that directly builds the index can also just share a direct
function.

A notable change here is that the result type of the analysis for the
new PM is no longer a reference type. This was really problematic when
making changes to how we handle result types to make our interface
requirements *much* more strict and precise. But I think this is an
overall improvement.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23701

llvm-svn: 279216
2016-08-19 07:49:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
6e2f9dbe22 [Assumptions] Make collecting ephemeral values not quadratic in the
number of assume intrinsics.

The classical way to have a cache-friendly vector style container when
we need queue semantics for BFS instead of stack semantics for DFS is to
use an ever-growing vector and an index. Erasing from the front requires
O(size) work, and unless we expect the worklist to grow *very* large,
its probably cheaper to just grow and race down the list.

But that makes it more bad that we're putting the assume intrinsics in
this at all. We end up looking at the (by definition empty) use list to
see if they're ephemeral (when we've already put them in that set), etc.

Instead, directly populate the worklist with the operands when we mark
the assume intrinsics as ephemeral. Also, test the visited set *before*
putting things into the worklist so we don't accumulate the same value
in the list 100s of times.

It would be nice to use a set-vector for this but I think its useful to
test the set earlier to avoid repeatedly querying whether the same
instruction is safe to speculate.

Hopefully with these changes the number of values pushed onto the
worklist is smaller, and we avoid quadratic work by letting it grow as
necessary.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23396

llvm-svn: 279099
2016-08-18 17:51:24 +00:00
Hans Wennborg
2c5ccecba6 SCEV: Don't assert about non-SCEV-able value in isSCEVExprNeverPoison() (PR28932)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23594

llvm-svn: 278999
2016-08-17 22:50:18 +00:00
Justin Bogner
507d362929 Replace a few more "fall through" comments with LLVM_FALLTHROUGH
Follow up to r278902. I had missed "fall through", with a space.

llvm-svn: 278970
2016-08-17 20:30:52 +00:00
Tim Shen
6bdebc6a97 [GraphWriter] Change GraphWriter to use NodeRef in GraphTraits
Summary:
This is part of the "NodeType* -> NodeRef" migration. Notice that since
GraphWriter prints object address as identity, I added a static_assert on
NodeRef to be a pointer type.

Reviewers: dblaikie

Subscribers: llvm-commits, MatzeB

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23580

llvm-svn: 278966
2016-08-17 20:07:29 +00:00
Jonas Paulsson
6ae041f182 [LoopStrenghtReduce] Refactoring and addition of a new target cost function.
Refactored so that a LSRUse owns its fixups, as oppsed to letting the
LSRInstance own them. This makes it easier to rate formulas for
LSRUses, since the fixups are available directly. The Offsets vector
has been removed since it was no longer necessary.

New target hook isFoldableMemAccessOffset(), which is used during formula
rating.

For SystemZ, this is useful to express that loads and stores with
float or vector types with a big/negative offset should be avoided in
loops. Without this, LSR will generate a lot of negative offsets that
would require extra instructions for loading the address.

Updated tests:
test/CodeGen/SystemZ/loop-01.ll

Reviewed by: Quentin Colombet and Ulrich Weigand.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D19152

llvm-svn: 278927
2016-08-17 13:24:19 +00:00
Justin Bogner
b5f5b0ef6d Replace "fallthrough" comments with LLVM_FALLTHROUGH
This is a mechanical change of comments in switches like fallthrough,
fall-through, or fall-thru to use the LLVM_FALLTHROUGH macro instead.

llvm-svn: 278902
2016-08-17 05:10:15 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
dbfd669893 ObjCARC: Don't increment or dereference end() when scanning args
When there's only one argument and it doesn't match one of the known
functions, return ARCInstKind::CallOrUser rather than falling through
to the two argument case.  The old behaviour both incremented past and
dereferenced end().

llvm-svn: 278881
2016-08-17 01:02:18 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
bffc0a3155 Revert "Enhance SCEV to compute the trip count for some loops with unknown stride."
This reverts commit r278731. It caused http://crbug.com/638314

llvm-svn: 278853
2016-08-16 21:02:04 +00:00
David Majnemer
4ca4b42bf0 [InstSimplify] Fold gep (gep V, C), (xor V, -1) to C-1
llvm-svn: 278779
2016-08-16 06:13:46 +00:00