v4f64 and v8f32 shuffles when they are lane-crossing. We have fully
general lane-crossing permutation functions in AVX2 that make this easy.
Part of this also changes exactly when and how these vectors are split
up when we don't have AVX2. This isn't always a win but it usually is
a win, so on the balance I think its better. The primary regressions are
all things that just need to be fixed anyways such as modeling when
a blend can be completely accomplished via VINSERTF128, etc.
Also, this highlights one of the few remaining big features: we do
a really poor job of inserting elements into AVX registers efficiently.
This completes almost all of the big tricks I have in mind for AVX2. The
only things left that I plan to add:
1) element insertion smarts
2) palignr and other fairly specialized lowerings when they happen to
apply
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256-bit vectors with lane-crossing.
Rather than immediately decomposing to 128-bit vectors, try flipping the
256-bit vector lanes, shuffling them and blending them together. This
reduces our worst case shuffle by a pretty significant margin across the
board.
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lowering where it only used the mask of the low 128-bit lane rather than
the entire mask.
This allows the new lowering to correctly match the unpack patterns for
v8i32 vectors.
For reference, the reason that we check for the the entire mask rather
than checking the repeated mask is because the repeated masks don't
abide by all of the invariants of normal masks. As a consequence, it is
safer to use the full mask with functions like the generic equivalence
test.
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reduce the amount of checking we do here.
The first realization is that only non-crossing cases between 128-bit
lanes are handled by almost the entire function. It makes more sense to
handle the crossing cases first.
THe second is that until we actually are going to generate fancy shared
lowering strategies that use the repeated semantics of the v8i16
lowering, we should waste time checking for repeated masks. It is
simplest to directly test for the entire unpck masks anyways, so we
gained nothing from this.
This also matches the structure of v32i8 more closely.
No functionality changed here.
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lowering.
This completes the basic AVX2 feature support, but there are still some
improvements I'd like to do to really get the last mile of performance
here.
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for this now.
Should prevent folks from running afoul of this and not knowing why
their code won't instruction select the way I just did...
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missing test cases for it.
Unsurprisingly, without test cases, there were bugs here. Surprisingly,
this bug wasn't caught at compile time. Yep, there is an X86ISD::BLENDV.
It isn't wired to anything. Oops. I'll fix than next.
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lowering.
This also implements the fancy blend lowering for v16i16 using AVX2 and
teaches the X86 backend to print shuffle masks for 256-bit PSHUFB
and PBLENDW instructions. It also makes the mask decoding correct for
PBLENDW instructions. The yaks, they are legion.
Tests are updated accordingly. There are some missing tests for the
VBLENDVB lowering, but I'll add those in a follow-up as this commit has
accumulated enough cruft already.
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into unblended shuffles and a blend.
This is the consistent fallback for the lowering paths that have fast
blend operations available, and its getting quite repetitive.
No functionality changed.
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pool data being loaded into a vector register.
The comments take the form of:
# ymm0 = [a,b,c,d,...]
# xmm1 = <x,y,z...>
The []s are used for generic sequential data and the <>s are used for
specifically ConstantVector loads. Undef elements are printed as the
letter 'u', integers in decimal, and floating point values as floating
point values. Suggestions on improving the formatting or other aspects
of the display are very welcome.
My primary use case for this is to be able to FileCheck test masks
passed to vector shuffle instructions in-register. It isn't fantastic
for that (no decoding special zeroing semantics or other tricks), but it
at least puts the mask onto an instruction line that could reasonably be
checked. I've updated many of the new vector shuffle lowering tests to
leverage this in their test cases so that we're actually checking the
shuffle masks remain as expected.
Before implementing this, I tried a *bunch* of different approaches.
I looked into teaching the MCInstLower code to scan up the basic block
and find a definition of a register used in a shuffle instruction and
then decode that, but this seems incredibly brittle and complex.
I talked to Hal a lot about the "right" way to do this: attach the raw
shuffle mask to the instruction itself in some form of unencoded
operands, and then use that to emit the comments. I still think that's
the optimal solution here, but it proved to be beyond what I'm up for
here. In particular, it seems likely best done by completing the
plumbing of metadata through these layers and attaching the shuffle mask
in metadata which could have fully automatic dropping when encoding an
actual instruction.
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attempt didn't work out so well. It looks like it will be much better
for introducing extra logic to find a shuffle mask if the finding logic
is totally separate. This also makes it easy to sink the opcode logic
completely out of the routine so we don't re-dispatch across it.
Still no functionality changed.
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asm. This can be somewhat expensive and there is no reason to do it
outside of tests or debugging sessions. I'm also likely to make it
significantly more expensive to support more styles of shuffles.
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from the MachineInstr into the caller which is already doing a switch
over the instruction.
This will make it more clear how to compute different operands to feed
the comment selection for example.
Also, in a drive-by-fix, don't append an empty comment string (which is
a no-op ultimately).
No functionality changed.
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vector shuffles.
This is just the beginning by hoisting it into its own function and
making use of early exit to dramatically simplify the flow of the
function. I'm going to be incrementally refactoring this until it is
a bit less magical how this applies to other instructions, and I can
teach it how to dig a shuffle mask out of a register. Then I plan to
hook it up to VPERMD so we get our mask comments for it.
No functionality changed yet.
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the native AVX2 instructions.
Note that the test case is really frustrating here because VPERMD
requires the mask to be in the register input and we don't produce
a comment looking through that to the constant pool. I'm going to
attempt to improve this in a subsequent commit, but not sure if I will
succeed.
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detection. It was incorrectly handling undef lanes by actually treating
an undef lane in the first 128-bit lane as a *numeric* shuffle value.
Fortunately, this almost always DTRT and disabled detecting repeated
patterns. But not always. =/ This patch introduces a much more
principled approach and fixes the miscompiles I spotted by inspection
previously.
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shuffles using the AVX2 instructions. This is the first step of cutting
in real AVX2 support.
Note that I have spotted at least one bug in the test cases already, but
I suspect it was already present and just is getting surfaced. Will
investigate next.
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add VPBLENDD to the InstPrinter's comment generation so we get nice
comments everywhere.
Now that we have the nice comments, I can see the bug introduced by
a silly typo in the commit that enabled VPBLENDD, and have fixed it. Yay
tests that are easy to inspect.
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Summary:
AtomicExpand already had logic for expanding wide loads and stores on LL/SC
architectures, and for expanding wide stores on CmpXchg architectures, but
not for wide loads on CmpXchg architectures. This patch fills this hole,
and makes use of this new feature in the X86 backend.
Only one functionnal change: we now lose the SynchScope attribute.
It is regrettable, but I have another patch that I will submit soon that will
solve this for all of AtomicExpand (it seemed better to split it apart as it
is a different concern).
Test Plan: make check-all (lots of tests for this functionality already exist)
Reviewers: jfb
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5404
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VPBLENDD where appropriate even on 128-bit vectors.
According to Agner's tables, this instruction is significantly higher
throughput (can execute on any port) on Haswell chips so we should
aggressively try to form it when available.
Sadly, this loses our delightful shuffle comments. I'll add those back
for VPBLENDD next.
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undef in the shuffle mask. This shows up when we're printing comments
during lowering and we still have an IR-level constant hanging around
that models undef.
A nice consequence of this is *much* prettier test cases where the undef
lanes actually show up as undef rather than as a particular set of
values. This also allows us to print shuffle comments in cases that use
undef such as the recently added variable VPERMILPS lowering. Now those
test cases have nice shuffle comments attached with their details.
The shuffle lowering for PSHUFB has been augmented to use undef, and the
shuffle combining has been augmented to comprehend it.
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trick that I missed.
VPERMILPS has a non-immediate memory operand mode that allows it to do
asymetric shuffles in the two 128-bit lanes. Use this rather than two
shuffles and a blend.
However, it turns out the variable shuffle path to VPERMILPS (and
VPERMILPD, although that one offers no functional differenc from the
immediate operand other than variability) wasn't even plumbed through
codegen. Do such plumbing so that we can reasonably emit
a variable-masked VPERMILP instruction. Also plumb basic comment parsing
and printing through so that the tests are reasonable.
There are still a few tests which don't show the shuffle pattern. These
are tests with undef lanes. I'll teach the shuffle decoding and printing
to handle undef mask entries in a follow-up. I've looked at the masks
and they seem reasonable.
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td pattern). Currently we only model the immediate operand variation of
VPERMILPS and VPERMILPD, we should make that clear in the pseudos used.
Will be adding support for the variable mask variant in my next commit.
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Summary:
This fixes a couple of issues. One is ensuring that AOK_Label rewrite
rules have a lower priority than AOK_Skip rules, as AOK_Skip needs to
be able to skip the brackets properly. The other part of the fix ensures
that we don't overwrite Identifier when looking up the identifier, and
that we use the locally available information to generate the AOK_Label
rewrite in ParseIntelIdentifier. Doing that in CreateMemForInlineAsm
would be problematic since the Start location there may point to the
beginning of a bracket expression, and not necessarily the beginning of
an identifier.
This also means that we don't need to carry around the InternlName field,
which helps simplify the code.
Test Plan: This will be tested on the clang side.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5445
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We generate broadcast instructions on CPUs with AVX2 to load some constant splat vectors.
This patch should preserve all existing behavior with regular optimization levels,
but also use splats whenever possible when optimizing for *size* on any CPU with AVX or AVX2.
The tradeoff is up to 5 extra instruction bytes for the broadcast instruction to save
at least 8 bytes (up to 31 bytes) of constant pool data.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5347
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Summary:
Update segmented-stacks*.ll tests with x32 target case and make
corresponding changes to make them pass.
Test Plan: tests updated with x32 target
Reviewers: nadav, rafael, dschuff
Subscribers: llvm-commits, zinovy.nis
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5245
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The PSHUFB mask decode routine used to assert if the mask index was out of
range (<0 or greater than the size of the vector). The problem is, we can
legitimately have a PSHUFB with a large index using intrinsics. The
instruction only uses the least significant 4 bits. This change removes the
assert and masks the index to match the instruction behaviour.
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The implementation of the callback in clang's Sema will return an
internal name for labels.
Test Plan: Will be tested in clang.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4587
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a more sane approach to AVX2 support.
Fundamentally, there is no useful way to lower integer vectors in AVX.
None. We always end up with a VINSERTF128 in the end, so we might as
well eagerly switch to the floating point domain and do everything
there. This cleans up lots of weird and unlikely to be correct
differences between integer and floating point shuffles when we only
have AVX1.
The other nice consequence is that by doing things this way we will make
it much easier to write the integer lowering routines as we won't need
to duplicate the logic to check for AVX vs. AVX2 in each one -- if we
actually try to lower a 256-bit vector as an integer vector, we have
AVX2 and can rely on it. I think this will make the code much simpler
and more comprehensible.
Currently, I've disabled *all* support for AVX2 so that we always fall
back to AVX. This keeps everything working rather than asserting. That
will go away with the subsequent series of patches that provide
a baseline AVX2 implementation.
Please note, I'm going to implement AVX2 *without access to hardware*.
That means I cannot correctness test this path. I will be relying on
those with access to AVX2 hardware to do correctness testing and fix
bugs here, but as a courtesy I'm trying to sketch out the framework for
the new-style vector shuffle lowering in the context of the AVX2 ISA.
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input v8f32 shuffles which are not 128-bit lane crossing but have
different shuffle patterns in the low and high lanes. This removes most
of the extract/insert traffic that was unnecessary and is particularly
good at lowering cases where only one of the two lanes is shuffled at
all.
I've also added a collection of test cases with undef lanes because this
lowering is somewhat more sensitive to undef lanes than others.
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the new vector shuffle lowering no longer needs to check both symmetric
forms of UNPCK patterns for v4f64.
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lowering when it can use a symmetric SHUFPS across both 128-bit lanes.
This required making the SHUFPS lowering tolerant of other vector types,
and adjusting our canonicalization to canonicalize harder.
This is the last of the clever uses of symmetry I've thought of for
v8f32. The rest of the tricks I'm aware of here are to work around
assymetry in the mask.
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a generic vector shuffle mask into a helper that isn't specific to the
other things that influence which choice is made or the specific types
used with the instruction.
No functionality changed.
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of a single element into a zero vector for v4f64 and v4i64 in AVX.
Ironically, there is less to see here because xor+blend is so crazy fast
that we can't really beat that to zero the high 128-bit lane.
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UNPCKHPS with AVX vectors by recognizing those patterns when they are
repeated for both 128-bit lanes.
With this, we now generate the exact same (really nice) code for
Quentin's avx_test_case.ll which was the most significant regression
reported for the new shuffle lowering. In fact, I'm out of specific test
cases for AVX lowering, the rest were AVX2 I think. However, there are
a bunch of pretty obvious remaining things to improve with AVX...
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important bits of cleverness: to detect and lower repeated shuffle
patterns between the two 128-bit lanes with a single instruction.
This patch just teaches it how to lower single-input shuffles that fit
this model using VPERMILPS. =] There is more that needs to happen here.
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v8f32 shuffles in the new vector shuffle lowering code.
This is very cheap to do and makes it much more clear that anything more
expensive but overlapping with this lowering should be selected
afterward (for example using AVX2's VPERMPS). However, no functionality
changed here as without this code we would fall through to create no-op
shuffles of each input and a blend. =]
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VBLENDPD over using VSHUFPD. While the 256-bit variant of VBLENDPD slows
down to the same speed as VSHUFPD on Sandy Bridge CPUs, it has twice the
reciprocal throughput on Ivy Bridge CPUs much like it does everywhere
for 128-bits. There isn't a downside, so just eagerly use this
instruction when it suffices.
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awkward conditions. The readability improvement of this will be even
more important as I generalize it to handle more types.
No functionality changed.
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128-bit lane crossings, not 'half' crossings. This came up in code
review ages ago, but I hadn't really addresesd it. Also added some
documentation for the helper.
No functionality changed.
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actual support for complex AVX shuffling tricks. We can do independent
blends of the low and high 128-bit lanes of an avx vector, so shuffle
the inputs into place and then do the blend at 256 bits. This will in
many cases remove one blend instruction.
The next step is to permute the low and high halves in-place rather than
extracting them and re-inserting them.
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single-input shuffles with doubles. This allows them to fold memory
operands into the shuffle, etc. This is just the analog to the v4f32
case in my prior commit.
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instruction for single-vector floating point shuffles. This in turn
allows the shuffles to fold a load into the instruction which is one of
the common regressions hit with the new shuffle lowering.
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