This brings the number of remaining failures in 'make check' without
LiveVariables down to 39, with 1 unexpectedly passing test.
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available.
With this commit there are no longer any assertion or verifier failures when
running 'make check' without LiveVariables. There are still 56 failing tests
with codegen differences and 1 unexpectedly passing test.
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Rewrite value numbers directly in the 'Other' LiveInterval which is
moribund anyway. This avoids allocating the OtherAssignments vector.
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When findReachingDefs() finds that only one value can reach the basic
block, just copy the work list of visited blocks directly into the live
interval.
Sort the block list and use a LiveRangeUpdater to make the bulk add
fast.
When multiple reaching defs are found, transfer the work list to the
updateSSA() work list as before. Also use LiveRangeUpdater in
updateLiveIns() following updateSSA().
This makes live interval analysis more than 3x faster on one huge test
case.
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related failures when running 'make check' without LiveVariables with the
verifier enabled. Some of the remaining failures elsewhere may still be fallout
from incorrect updating of LiveIntervals or the few missing cases left in the
two-address pass.
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(2xi32) (truncate ((2xi64) bitcast (buildvector i32 a, i32 x, i32 b, i32 y)))
can be folded into a (2xi32) (buildvector i32 a, i32 b).
Such a DAG would cause uneccessary vdup instructions followed by vmovn
instructions.
We generate this code on ARM NEON for a setcc olt, 2xf64, 2xf64. For example, in
the vectorized version of the code below.
double A[N];
double B[N];
void test_double_compare_to_double() {
int i;
for(i=0;i<N;i++)
A[i] = (double)(A[i] < B[i]);
}
radar://13191881
Fixes bug 15283.
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Adding new segments to large LiveIntervals can be expensive because the
LiveRange objects after the insertion point may need to be moved left or
right. This can cause quadratic behavior when adding a large number of
segments to a live range.
The LiveRangeUpdater class allows the LIveInterval to be in a temporary
invalid state while segments are being added. It maintains an internal
gap in the LiveInterval when it is shrinking, and it has a spill area
for new segments when the LiveInterval is growing.
The behavior is similar to the existing mergeIntervalRanges() function,
except it allocates less memory for the spill area, and the algorithm is
turned inside out so the loop is driven by the clients.
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- When extloading from a vector with non-byte-addressable element, e.g.
<4 x i1>, the current logic breaks. Extend the current logic to
fix the case where the element type is not byte-addressable by loading
all bytes, bit-extracting/packing each element.
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and removing instructions. The implementation seems more complicated than it
needs to be, but I couldn't find something simpler that dealt with all of the
corner cases.
Also add a call to repairIndexesInRange() from repairIntervalsInRange().
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Target implementations of getRegAllocationHints() should use the
provided allocation order, and they can never return hints outside the
order. This is already documented in TargetRegisterInfo.h.
<rdar://problem/13240556>
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Due to the execution order of doFinalization functions, the GC information were
deleted before AsmPrinter::doFinalization was executed. Thus, the
GCMetadataPrinter::finishAssembly was never called.
The patch fixes that by moving the code of the GCInfoDeleter::doFinalization to
Printer::doFinalization.
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arguably better than forward iterators for this use case, they are confusing and
there are some implementation problems with reverse iterators and MI bundles.
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MachineBasicBlock::SplitCriticalEdge. Since this is an iterator rather than
an instr_iterator, the isBundled() check only passes if getFirstTerminator()
returned end() and the garbage memory happens to lean that way.
Multiple successors can be present without any terminator instructions in the
case of exception handling with a fallthrough.
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terminators that actually have register uses when splitting critical edges.
This commit also introduces a method repairIntervalsInRange() on LiveIntervals,
which allows for repairing LiveIntervals in a small range after an arbitrary
target hook modifies, inserts, and removes instructions. It's pretty limited
right now, but I hope to extend it to support all of the things that are done
by the convertToThreeAddress() target hooks.
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If the frame pointer is omitted, and any stack changes occur in the inline
assembly, e.g.: "pusha", then any C local variable or C argument references
will be incorrect.
I pass no judgement on anyone who would do such a thing. ;)
rdar://13218191
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If two functions require different features (e.g., `-mno-sse' vs. `-msse') then
we want to honor that, especially during LTO. We can do that by resetting the
subtarget's features depending upon the 'target-feature' attribute.
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- add sincos to runtime library if target triple environment is GNU
- added canCombineSinCosLibcall() which checks that sincos is in the RTL and
if the environment is GNU then unsafe fpmath is enabled (required to
preserve errno)
- extended sincos-opt lit test
Reviewed by: Hal Finkel
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of the copy is a subregister def. The current code assumes that it can do a full
def of the destination register, but it is not checking that the def operand is
read-undef. It also doesn't clear the subregister index of the destination in
the new instruction to reflect the full subregister def.
These issues were found running 'make check' with my next commit that enables
rematerialization in more cases.
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Remove dead functions: renameRegister
Move private member variables from LDV to Impl
Remove ssp/uwtable from testing case
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RegisterCoalescer used to depend on LiveDebugVariable. LDV removes DBG_VALUEs
without emitting them at the end.
We fix this by removing LDV from RegisterCoalescer. Also add an assertion to
make sure we call emitDebugValues if DBG_VALUEs are removed at
runOnMachineFunction.
rdar://problem/13183203
Reviewed by Andy & Jakob
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MI sched DAG construction allows targets to include terminators into scheduling DAG.
Extend this functionality to labels as well.
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DAGCombiner::ReduceLoadWidth was converting (trunc i32 (shl i64 v, 32))
into (shl i32 v, 32) into undef. To prevent this, check the shift count
against the final result size.
Patch by: Kevin Schoedel
Reviewed by: Nadav Rotem
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live ranges should always be extended, and the only successor that should be
considered for extension of other ranges is the target of the split edge.
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Sorry for the lack of a test case. I tried writing one for i386 as i know selects are illegal on this target, but they are actually considered legal by isel and expanded later.
I can't see any targets to trigger this, but checking for the legality of a node before forming it is general goodness.
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This is currently a bit hairier than it needs to be, since depending on where the
split block resides the end ListEntry of the split block may be the end ListEntry
of the original block or a new entry. Some changes to the SlotIndexes updating
should make it possible to eliminate the two cases here.
This also isn't as optimized as it could be. In the future Liveinterval should
probably get a flag that indicates whether the LiveInterval is within a single
basic block. We could ignore all such intervals when splitting an edge.
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This reverts my commit 171047. Now that I've removed my misguided attempt to
support backend warnings, these diagnostics are only about inline assembly.
It would take quite a bit more work to generalize them properly, so I'm
just reverting this.
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function is successfully handled by fast-isel. That's because function
arguments are *always* handled by SDISel. Introduce FastLowerArguments to
allow each target to provide hook to handle formal argument lowering.
As a proof-of-concept, add ARMFastIsel::FastLowerArguments to handle
functions with 4 or fewer scalar integer (i8, i16, or i32) arguments. It
completely eliminates the need for SDISel for trivial functions.
rdar://13163905
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support for updating SlotIndexes to MachineBasicBlock::SplitCriticalEdge(). This
calls renumberIndexes() every time; it should be improved to only renumber
locally.
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present, it currently verifies them with the MachineVerifier, and this passed
all of the test cases in 'make check' (when accounting for existing verifier
errors). There were some assertion failures in the two-address pass, but they
also happened on code without phis and look like they are caused by different
kill flags from LiveIntervals.
The only part that doesn't work is the critical edge splitting heuristic,
because there isn't currently an efficient way to update LiveIntervals after
splitting an edge. I'll probably start by implementing the slow fallback and
test that it works before tackling the fast path for single-block ranges. The
existing code that updates LiveVariables is fairly slow as it is.
There isn't a command-line option for enabling this; instead, just edit
PHIElimination.cpp to require LiveIntervals.
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This uses a liveness algorithm that does not depend on data from the
LiveVariables analysis, it is the first step towards removing
LiveVariables completely.
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This reverts r171041. This was a nice idea that didn't work out well.
Clang warnings need to be associated with warning groups so that they can
be selectively disabled, promoted to errors, etc. This simplistic patch didn't
allow for that. Enhancing it to provide some way for the backend to specify
a front-end warning type seems like overkill for the few uses of this, at
least for now.
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Previously, even when a pre-increment load or store was generated,
we often needed to keep a copy of the original base register for use
with other offsets. If all of these offsets are constants (including
the offset which was combined into the addressing mode), then this is
clearly unnecessary. This change adjusts these other offsets to use the
new incremented address.
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Aside from the question of whether we report a warning or an error when we
can't satisfy a requested stack object alignment, the current implementation
of this is not good. We're not providing any source location in the diagnostics
and the current warning is not connected to any warning group so you can't
control it. We could improve the source location somewhat, but we can do a
much better job if this check is implemented in the front-end, so let's do that
instead. <rdar://problem/13127907>
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Adds a function to target transform info to query for the cost of address
computation. The cost model analysis pass now also queries this interface.
The code in LoopVectorize adds the cost of address computation as part of the
memory instruction cost calculation. Only there, we know whether the instruction
will be scalarized or not.
Increase the penality for inserting in to D registers on swift. This becomes
necessary because we now always assume that address computation has a cost and
three is a closer value to the architecture.
radar://13097204
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syms before constructing the compile units so we're not emitting
section references to sections not there already.
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Failure: undefined symbol 'Lline_table_start0'.
Root-cause: we use a symbol subtraction to calculate at_stmt_list, but
the line table entries are not dumped in the assembly.
Fix: use zero instead of a symbol subtraction for Compile Unit 0.
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We generate one line table for each compilation unit in the object file.
Reviewed by Eric and Kevin.
rdar://problem/13067005
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base point of a load, and the overall alignment of the load. This caused infinite loops in DAG combine with the
original application of this patch.
ORIGINAL COMMIT LOG:
When the target-independent DAGCombiner inferred a higher alignment for a load,
it would replace the load with one with the higher alignment. However, it did
not place the new load in the worklist, which prevented later DAG combines in
the same phase (for example, target-specific combines) from ever seeing it.
This patch corrects that oversight, and updates some tests whose output changed
due to slightly different DAGCombine outputs.
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All targets are now adding return value registers as implicit uses on
return instructions, and there is no longer a need for the live out
lists.
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Now that return value registers are return instruction uses, there is no
need for special treatment of return blocks.
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It caused hangups in compiling clang/lib/Parse/ParseDecl.cpp and clang/lib/Driver/Tools.cpp in stage2 on some hosts.
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it would replace the load with one with the higher alignment. However, it did
not place the new load in the worklist, which prevented later DAG combines in
the same phase (for example, target-specific combines) from ever seeing it.
This patch corrects that oversight, and updates some tests whose output changed
due to slightly different DAGCombine outputs.
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Per discussion in rdar://13127907, we should emit a hard error only if
people write code where the requested alignment is larger than achievable
and assumes the low bits are zeros. A warning should be good enough when
we are not sure if the source code assumes the low bits are zeros.
rdar://13127907
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This required disabling a PowerPC optimization that did the following:
input:
x = BUILD_VECTOR <i32 16, i32 16, i32 16, i32 16>
lowered to:
tmp = BUILD_VECTOR <i32 8, i32 8, i32 8, i32 8>
x = ADD tmp, tmp
The add now gets folded immediately and we're back at the BUILD_VECTOR we
started from. I don't see a way to fix this currently so I left it disabled
for now.
Fix some trivially foldable X86 tests too.
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We used to create children DIEs for a scope, then check whether ScopeDIE is
null. If ScopeDIE is null, the children DIEs will be dangling. Other DIEs can
link to those dangling DIEs, which are not emitted at all, causing dwarf error.
The current testing case is 4k lines, from MultiSource/BenchMark/McCat/09-vor.
rdar://problem/13071959
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conditions are met:
1. They share the same operand and are in the same BB.
2. Both outputs are used.
3. The target has a native instruction that maps to ISD::FSINCOS node or
the target provides a sincos library call.
Implemented the generic optimization in sdisel and enabled it for
Mac OSX. Also added an additional optimization for x86_64 Mac OSX by
using an alternative entry point __sincos_stret which returns the two
results in xmm0 / xmm1.
rdar://13087969
PR13204
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The common code in the post-RA scheduler to break anti-dependencies on the
critical path contained a flaw. In the reported case, an anti-dependency
between the overlapping registers %X4 and %R4 exists:
%X29<def> = OR8 %X4, %X4
%R4<def>, %X3<def,dead,tied3> = LBZU 1, %X3<kill,tied1>
The unpatched code breaks the dependency by replacing %R4 and its uses
with %R3, the first register on the available list. However, %R3 and
%X3 overlap, so this creates two overlapping definitions on the same
instruction.
The fix is straightforward, preventing selection of a register that
overlaps any other defined register on the same instruction.
The test case is reduced from the bug report, and verifies that we no
longer produce "lbzu 3, 1(3)" when breaking this anti-dependency.
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Fix that by adding a cast to the shift expander. This came up with vector shifts
on sse-less X86 CPUs.
<2 x i64> = shl <2 x i64> <2 x i64>
-> i64,i64 = shl i64 i64; shl i64 i64
-> i32,i32,i32,i32 = shl_parts i32 i32 i64; shl_parts i32 i32 i64
Now we cast the last two i64s to the right type. Fixes the crash in PR14668.
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with an initial number of elements, instead of DenseMap, which has
zero initial elements, in order to avoid the copying of elements
when the size changes and to avoid allocating space every time
LegalizeTypes is run. This patch will not affect the memory footprint,
because DenseMap will increase the element size to 64
when the first element is added.
Patch by Wan Xiaofei.
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Maintain separate per-node and per-tree book-keeping.
Track all instructions above a DAG node including nested subtrees.
Seperately track instructions within a subtree.
Record subtree parents.
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Allow the strategy to select SchedDFS. Allow the results of SchedDFS
to affect initialization of the scheduler state.
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This is mostly refactoring, along with adding an instruction count
within the subtrees and ensuring we only look at data edges.
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For sanity, create a root when NumDataSuccs >= 4. Splitting large
subtrees will no longer be detrimental after my next checkin to handle
nested tree. A magic number of 4 is fine because single subtrees
seldom rejoin more than this. It makes subtrees easier to visualize
and heuristics more sane.
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Allow schedulers to order DAG edges by critical path. This makes
DFS-based heuristics more stable and effective.
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The requirements of the strong heuristic are:
* A Protector is required for functions which contain an array, regardless of
type or length.
* A Protector is required for functions which contain a structure/union which
contains an array, regardless of type or length. Note, there is no limit to
the depth of nesting.
* A protector is required when the address of a local variable (i.e., stack
based variable) is exposed. (E.g., such as through a local whose address is
taken as part of the RHS of an assignment or a local whose address is taken as
part of a function argument.)
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SSPStrong applies a heuristic to insert stack protectors in these situations:
* A Protector is required for functions which contain an array, regardless of
type or length.
* A Protector is required for functions which contain a structure/union which
contains an array, regardless of type or length. Note, there is no limit to
the depth of nesting.
* A protector is required when the address of a local variable (i.e., stack
based variable) is exposed. (E.g., such as through a local whose address is
taken as part of the RHS of an assignment or a local whose address is taken as
part of a function argument.)
This patch implements the SSPString attribute to be equivalent to
SSPRequired. This will change in a subsequent patch.
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Previously we tried to infer it from the bit width size, with an added
IsIEEE argument for the PPC/IEEE 128-bit case, which had a default
value. This default value allowed bugs to creep in, where it was
inappropriate.
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A SparseMultiSet adds multiset behavior to SparseSet, while retaining SparseSet's desirable properties. Essentially, SparseMultiSet provides multiset behavior by storing its dense data in doubly linked lists that are inlined into the dense vector. This allows it to provide good data locality as well as vector-like constant-time clear() and fast constant time find(), insert(), and erase(). It also allows SparseMultiSet to have a builtin recycler rather than keeping SparseSet's behavior of always swapping upon removal, which allows it to preserve more iterators. It's often a better alternative to a SparseSet of a growable container or vector-of-vector.
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The optimization handles esoteric cases but adds a lot of complexity both to the X86 backend and to other backends.
This optimization disables an important canonicalization of chains of SEXT nodes and makes SEXT and ZEXT asymmetrical.
Disabling the canonicalization of consecutive SEXT nodes into a single node disables other DAG optimizations that assume
that there is only one SEXT node. The AVX mask optimizations is one example. Additionally this optimization does not update the cost model.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@172968 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Further encapsulation of the Attribute object. Don't allow direct access to the
Attribute object as an aggregate.
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changing both the string of the dwo_name to be correct and the type of
the statement list.
Testcases all around.
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Move the early if-conversion pass into this group.
ILP optimizations usually need to find the right balance between
register pressure and ILP using the MachineTraceMetrics analysis to
identify critical paths and estimate other costs. Such passes should run
together so they can share dominator tree and loop info analyses.
Besides if-conversion, future passes to run here here could include
expression height reduction and ARM's MLxExpansion pass.
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of a class. Emit static data member declarations and definitions
through correctly.
Part of PR14471.
Patch by Paul Robinson!
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using the DW_FORM_GNU_addr_index and a separate .debug_addr section which
stays in the executable and is fully linked.
Sneak in two other small changes:
a) Print out the debug_str_offsets.dwo section.
b) Change form we're expecting the entries in the debug_str_offsets.dwo
section to take from ULEB128 to U32.
Add tests for all of this in the fission-cu.ll test.
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The included test case is derived from one of the GCC compatibility tests.
The problem arises after the selection DAG has been converted to type-legalized
form. The combiner first sees a 64-bit load that can be converted into a
pre-increment form. The original load feeds into a SRL that isolates the
upper 32 bits of the loaded doubleword. This looks like an opportunity for
DAGCombiner::ReduceLoadWidth() to replace the 64-bit load with a 32-bit load.
However, this transformation is not valid, as the replacement load is not
a pre-increment load. The pre-increment load produces an extra result,
which feeds a subsequent add instruction. The replacement load only has
one result value, and this value is propagated to all uses of the pre-
increment load, including the add. Because the add is looking for the
second result value as its operand, it ends up attempting to add a constant
to a token chain, resulting in a crash.
So the patch simply disables this transformation for any load with more than
two result values.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@172480 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
When tryEvict() is looking for a cheaper register in the allocation
order, skip the tail of too expensive registers when possible.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@172281 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Remember the minimum cost of the registers in an allocation order and
the number of registers at the end of the allocation order that have the
same cost per use.
This information can be used to limit the search space for
RAGreedy::tryEvict() when looking for a cheaper register.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@172280 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This fixes some of the cycles between libCodeGen and libSelectionDAG. It's still
a complete mess but as long as the edges consist of virtual call it doesn't
cause breakage. BasicTTI did static calls and thus broke some build
configurations.
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the target if it supports the different CAST types. We didn't do this
on X86 because of the different register sizes and types, but on ARM
this makes sense.
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- recognize string "{memory}" in the MI generation
- mark as mayload/maystore when there's a memory clobber constraint.
PR14859.
Patch by Krzysztof Parzyszek
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When calling hasProperty() on an instruction inside a bundle, it should
always behave as if IgnoreBundle was passed, and just return properties
for the current instruction.
Only attempt to aggregate bundle properties whan asked about the bundle
header.
The assertion fires on existing ARM test cases without this fix.
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requirement when creating stack objects in MachineFrameInfo.
Add CreateStackObjectWithMinAlign to throw error when the minimal alignment
can't be achieved and to clamp the alignment when the preferred alignment
can't be achieved. Same is true for CreateVariableSizedObject.
Will not emit error in CreateSpillStackObject or CreateStackObject.
As long as callers of CreateStackObject do not assume the object will be
aligned at the requested alignment, we should not have miscompile since
later optimizations which look at the object's alignment will have the correct
information.
rdar://12713765
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It cahced XOR's operands before calling visitXOR() but failed to update the
operands when visitXOR changed the XOR node.
rdar://12968664
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The bundle flags are used by MachineBasicBlock::print(), they don't need
to clutter up individual MachineInstrs.
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It is possible to build MI bundles that don't begin with a BUNDLE
header. Add support for such bundles, counting all instructions inside
the bundle.
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fp128 is almost but not quite completely illegal as a type on AArch64. As a
result it needs to have a register class (for argument passing mainly), but all
operations need to be lowered to runtime calls. Currently there's no way for
targets to do this (without duplicating code), as the relevant functions are
hidden in SelectionDAG. This patch changes that.
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This was an experimental option, but needs to be defined
per-target. e.g. PPC A2 needs to aggressively hide latency.
I converted some in-order scheduling tests to A2. Hal is working on
more test cases.
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one file where it is called as a static function. Nuke the declaration
and the definition in lib/CodeGen, along with the include of
SelectionDAG.h from this file.
There is no dependency edge from lib/CodeGen to
lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG, so it isn't valid for a routine in lib/CodeGen
to reference the DAG. There is a dependency from
lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG on lib/CodeGen. This breaks one violation of
this layering.
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proposal. This leaves the strings in the skeleton die as strp,
but in all dwo files they're accessed now via DW_FORM_GNU_str_index.
Add support for dumping these sections and modify the fission-cu.ll
testcase to have the correct strings and form. Fix a small bug
in the fixed form sizes routine that involved out of array accesses
for the table and add a FIXME in the extractFast routine to fix
this up.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@171779 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
peculiar headers under include/llvm.
This struct still doesn't make a lot of sense, but it makes more sense
down in TargetLowering than it did before.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@171739 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
TargetTransformInfo rather than TargetLowering, removing one of the
primary instances of the layering violation of Transforms depending
directly on Target.
This is a really big deal because LSR used to be a "special" pass that
could only be tested fully using llc and by looking at the full output
of it. It also couldn't run with any other loop passes because it had to
be created by the backend. No longer is this true. LSR is now just
a normal pass and we should probably lift the creation of LSR out of
lib/CodeGen/Passes.cpp and into the PassManagerBuilder. =] I've not done
this, or updated all of the tests to use opt and a triple, because
I suspect someone more familiar with LSR would do a better job. This
change should be essentially without functional impact for normal
compilations, and only change behvaior of targetless compilations.
The conversion required changing all of the LSR code to refer to the TTI
interfaces, which fortunately are very similar to TargetLowering's
interfaces. However, it also allowed us to *always* expect to have some
implementation around. I've pushed that simplification through the pass,
and leveraged it to simplify code somewhat. It required some test
updates for one of two things: either we used to skip some checks
altogether but now we get the default "no" answer for them, or we used
to have no information about the target and now we do have some.
I've also started the process of removing AddrMode, as the TTI interface
doesn't use it any longer. In some cases this simplifies code, and in
others it adds some complexity, but I think it's not a bad tradeoff even
there. Subsequent patches will try to clean this up even further and use
other (more appropriate) abstractions.
Yet again, almost all of the formatting changes brought to you by
clang-format. =]
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This works fine with GDB for member variable pointers, but GDB's support for
member function pointers seems to be quite unrelated to
DW_TAG_ptr_to_member_type. (see GDB bug 14998 for details)
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a TargetMachine to construct (and thus isn't always available), to an
analysis group that supports layered implementations much like
AliasAnalysis does. This is a pretty massive change, with a few parts
that I was unable to easily separate (sorry), so I'll walk through it.
The first step of this conversion was to make TargetTransformInfo an
analysis group, and to sink the nonce implementations in
ScalarTargetTransformInfo and VectorTargetTranformInfo into
a NoTargetTransformInfo pass. This allows other passes to add a hard
requirement on TTI, and assume they will always get at least on
implementation.
The TargetTransformInfo analysis group leverages the delegation chaining
trick that AliasAnalysis uses, where the base class for the analysis
group delegates to the previous analysis *pass*, allowing all but tho
NoFoo analysis passes to only implement the parts of the interfaces they
support. It also introduces a new trick where each pass in the group
retains a pointer to the top-most pass that has been initialized. This
allows passes to implement one API in terms of another API and benefit
when some other pass above them in the stack has more precise results
for the second API.
The second step of this conversion is to create a pass that implements
the TargetTransformInfo analysis using the target-independent
abstractions in the code generator. This replaces the
ScalarTargetTransformImpl and VectorTargetTransformImpl classes in
lib/Target with a single pass in lib/CodeGen called
BasicTargetTransformInfo. This class actually provides most of the TTI
functionality, basing it upon the TargetLowering abstraction and other
information in the target independent code generator.
The third step of the conversion adds support to all TargetMachines to
register custom analysis passes. This allows building those passes with
access to TargetLowering or other target-specific classes, and it also
allows each target to customize the set of analysis passes desired in
the pass manager. The baseline LLVMTargetMachine implements this
interface to add the BasicTTI pass to the pass manager, and all of the
tools that want to support target-aware TTI passes call this routine on
whatever target machine they end up with to add the appropriate passes.
The fourth step of the conversion created target-specific TTI analysis
passes for the X86 and ARM backends. These passes contain the custom
logic that was previously in their extensions of the
ScalarTargetTransformInfo and VectorTargetTransformInfo interfaces.
I separated them into their own file, as now all of the interface bits
are private and they just expose a function to create the pass itself.
Then I extended these target machines to set up a custom set of analysis
passes, first adding BasicTTI as a fallback, and then adding their
customized TTI implementations.
The fourth step required logic that was shared between the target
independent layer and the specific targets to move to a different
interface, as they no longer derive from each other. As a consequence,
a helper functions were added to TargetLowering representing the common
logic needed both in the target implementation and the codegen
implementation of the TTI pass. While technically this is the only
change that could have been committed separately, it would have been
a nightmare to extract.
The final step of the conversion was just to delete all the old
boilerplate. This got rid of the ScalarTargetTransformInfo and
VectorTargetTransformInfo classes, all of the support in all of the
targets for producing instances of them, and all of the support in the
tools for manually constructing a pass based around them.
Now that TTI is a relatively normal analysis group, two things become
straightforward. First, we can sink it into lib/Analysis which is a more
natural layer for it to live. Second, clients of this interface can
depend on it *always* being available which will simplify their code and
behavior. These (and other) simplifications will follow in subsequent
commits, this one is clearly big enough.
Finally, I'm very aware that much of the comments and documentation
needs to be updated. As soon as I had this working, and plausibly well
commented, I wanted to get it committed and in front of the build bots.
I'll be doing a few passes over documentation later if it sticks.
Commits to update DragonEgg and Clang will be made presently.
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pass into the SelectionDAG itself rather than snooping on the
implementation of that pass as exposed by the TargetMachine. This
removes the last direct client of the ScalarTargetTransformInfo class
outside of the TTI pass implementation.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@171625 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This change essentially reverts r87069 which came without a test case. It
causes no regressions in the GDB 7.5 test suite & fixes 25 xfails (commit
to the test suite to follow). If anyone can present a test case that
demonstrates why this check is necessary I'd be happy to account for it in one
way or another.
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The series of patches leading up to this one makes llc -O0 run 8% faster.
When deallocating a MachineFunction, there is no need to visit all
MachineInstr and MachineOperand objects to deallocate them. All their
memory come from a BumpPtrAllocator that is about to be purged, and they
have empty destructors anyway.
This only applies when deallocating the MachineFunction.
DeleteMachineInstr() should still be used to recycle MI memory during
the codegen passes.
Remove the LeakDetector support for MachineInstr. I've never seen it
used before, and now it definitely doesn't work. With this patch, leaked
MachineInstrs would be much less of a problem since all of their memory
will be reclaimed by ~MachineFunction().
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@171599 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Instead of an std::vector<MachineOperand>, use MachineOperand arrays
from an ArrayRecycler living in MachineFunction.
This has several advantages:
- MachineInstr now has a trivial destructor, making it possible to
delete them in batches when destroying MachineFunction. This will be
enabled in a later patch.
- Bypassing malloc() and free() can be faster, depending on the system
library.
- MachineInstr objects and their operands are allocated from the same
BumpPtrAllocator, so they will usually be next to each other in
memory, providing better locality of reference.
- Reduce MachineInstr footprint. A std::vector is 24 bytes, the new
operand array representation only uses 8+4+1 bytes in MachineInstr.
- Better control over operand array reallocations. In the old
representation, the use-def chains would be reordered whenever a
std::vector reached its capacity. The new implementation never changes
the use-def chain order.
Note that some decisions in the code generator depend on the use-def
chain orders, so this patch may cause different assembly to be produced
in a few cases.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@171598 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This function works like memmove() for MachineOperands, except it also
updates any use-def chains containing the moved operands.
The use-def chains are updated without affecting the order of operands
in the list. That isn't possible when using the
removeRegOperandFromUseList() and addRegOperandToUseList() functions.
Callers to follow soon.
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types and a FIXME for what we should be doing. Should solve the
immediacy of PR12069 where our debug info is crashing another
tool.
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