Previously, instcombine would only promote an expression tree to
the larger type if doing so eliminated two casts. This is because
a need to manually do the sign extend after the promoted expression
tree with two shifts. Now, we keep track of whether the result of
the computation is going to be properly sign extended already. If
so, we can unconditionally promote the expression, which allows us
to zap more sext's.
This implements rdar://6598839 (aka gcc pr38751)
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The only difference is that EvaluateInDifferentType checks to ensure
they are profitable before doing them :)
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when doing this transform if the GEP is not inbounds. No testcase because
it is very difficult to trigger this: instcombine already canonicalizes
GEP indices to pointer size, so it relies specific permutations of the
instcombine worklist.
Thanks to Duncan for pointing this possible problem out.
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on the example in PR4216. This doesn't trigger in the testsuite,
so I'd really appreciate someone scrutinizing the logic for
correctness.
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occurs in 403.gcc in mode_mask_array, in safe-ctype.c (which
is copied in multiple apps) in _sch_istable, etc.
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when a consequtive sequence of elements all satisfies the
predicate. Like the double compare case, this generates better
code than the magic constant case and generalizes to more than
32/64 element array lookups.
Here are some examples where it triggers. From 403.gcc, most
accesses to the rtx_class array are handled, e.g.:
@rtx_class = constant [153 x i8] c"xxxxxmmmmmmmmxxxxxxxxxxxxmxxxxxxiiixxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxooxooooooxxoooooox3x2c21c2222ccc122222ccccaaaaaa<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<111111111111bbooxxxxxxxxxxcc2211x", align 32 ; <[153 x i8]*> [#uses=547]
%142 = icmp eq i8 %141, 105
@rtx_class = constant [153 x i8] c"xxxxxmmmmmmmmxxxxxxxxxxxxmxxxxxxiiixxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxooxooooooxxoooooox3x2c21c2222ccc122222ccccaaaaaa<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<111111111111bbooxxxxxxxxxxcc2211x", align 32 ; <[153 x i8]*> [#uses=543]
%165 = icmp eq i8 %164, 60
Also, most of the 59-element arrays (mode_class/rid_to_yy, etc)
optimized before are actually range compares. This lets 32-bit
machines optimize them.
400.perlbmk has stuff like this:
400.perlbmk: PL_regkind, even for 32-bit:
@PL_regkind = constant [62 x i8] c"\00\00\02\02\02\06\06\06\06\09\09\0B\0B\0D\0E\0E\0E\11\12\12\14\14\16\16\18\18\1A\1A\1C\1C\1E\1F !!!$$&'((((,-.///88886789:;8$", align 32 ; <[62 x i8]*> [#uses=4]
%811 = icmp ne i8 %810, 33
@PL_utf8skip = constant [256 x i8] c"\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\01\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\02\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\03\04\04\04\04\04\04\04\04\05\05\05\05\06\06\07\0D", align 32 ; <[256 x i8]*> [#uses=94]
%12 = icmp ult i8 %10, 2
etc.
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two elements match or don't match with two comparisons. For
example, the testcase compiles into:
define i1 @test5(i32 %X) {
%1 = icmp eq i32 %X, 2 ; <i1> [#uses=1]
%2 = icmp eq i32 %X, 7 ; <i1> [#uses=1]
%R = or i1 %1, %2 ; <i1> [#uses=1]
ret i1 %R
}
This generalizes the previous xforms when the array is larger than
64 elements (and this case matches) and generates better code for
cases where it overlaps with the magic bitshift case.
This generalizes more cases than you might expect. For example,
400.perlbmk has:
@PL_utf8skip = constant [256 x i8] c"\01\01\01\...
%15 = icmp ult i8 %7, 7
403.gcc has:
@rid_to_yy = internal constant [114 x i16] [i16 259, i16 260, ...
%18 = icmp eq i16 %16, 295
and xalancbmk has a bunch of examples, such as
_ZN11xercesc_2_5L15gCombiningCharsE and _ZN11xercesc_2_5L10gBaseCharsE.
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arrays with variable indices into a comparison of the index
with a constant. The most common occurrence of this that
I see by far is stuff like:
if ("foobar"[i] == '\0') ...
which we compile into: if (i == 6), saving a load and
materialization of the global address. This also exposes
loop trip count information to later passes in many cases.
This triggers hundreds of times in xalancbmk, which is where I first
noticed it, but it also triggers in many other apps. Here are a few
interesting ones from various apps:
@must_be_connected_without = internal constant [8 x i8*] [i8* getelementptr inbounds ([3 x i8]* @.str64320, i64 0, i64 0), i8* getelementptr inbounds ([3 x i8]* @.str27283, i64 0, i64 0), i8* getelementptr inbounds ([4 x i8]* @.str71327, i64 0, i64 0), i8* getelementptr inbounds ([4 x i8]* @.str72328, i64 0, i64 0), i8* getelementptr inbounds ([3 x i8]* @.str18274, i64 0, i64 0), i8* getelementptr inbounds ([6 x i8]* @.str11267, i64 0, i64 0), i8* getelementptr inbounds ([3 x i8]* @.str32288, i64 0, i64 0), i8* null], align 32 ; <[8 x i8*]*> [#uses=2]
%scevgep.i = getelementptr [8 x i8*]* @must_be_connected_without, i64 0, i64 %indvar.i ; <i8**> [#uses=1]
%17 = load ...
%18 = icmp eq i8* %17, null ; <i1> [#uses=1]
-> icmp eq i64 %indvar.i, 7
@yytable1095 = internal constant [84 x i8] c"\12\01(\05\06\07\08\09\0A\0B\0C\0D\0E1\0F\10\11266\1D: \10\11,-,0\03'\10\11B6\04\17&\18\1945\05\06\07\08\09\0A\0B\0C\0D\0E\1E\0F\10\11*\1A\1B\1C$3+>#%;<IJ=ADFEGH9KL\00\00\00C", align 32 ; <[84 x i8]*> [#uses=2]
%57 = getelementptr inbounds [84 x i8]* @yytable1095, i64 0, i64 %56 ; <i8*> [#uses=1]
%mode.0.in = getelementptr inbounds [9 x i32]* @mb_mode_table, i64 0, i64 %.pn ; <i32*> [#uses=1]
load ...
%64 = icmp eq i8 %58, 4 ; <i1> [#uses=1]
-> icmp eq i64 %.pn, 35 ; <i1> [#uses=0]
@gsm_DLB = internal constant [4 x i16] [i16 6554, i16 16384, i16 26214, i16 32767]
%scevgep.i = getelementptr [4 x i16]* @gsm_DLB, i64 0, i64 %indvar.i ; <i16*> [#uses=1]
%425 = load %scevgep.i
%426 = icmp eq i16 %425, -32768 ; <i1> [#uses=0]
-> false
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pointer to int casts that confuse later optimizations. See PR3351
for details.
This improves but doesn't complete fix 483.xalancbmk because llvm-gcc
does this xform in GCC's "fold" routine as well. Clang++ will do
better I guess.
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a constantexpr gep on the 'base' side of the expression.
This completes comment #4 in PR3351, which comes from
483.xalancbmk.
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implement some optimizations for MIN(MIN()) and MAX(MAX()) and
MIN(MAX()) etc. This substantially improves the code in PR5822 but
doesn't kick in much elsewhere. 2 max's were optimized in
pairlocalalign and one in smg2000.
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Use the presence of NSW/NUW to fold "icmp (x+cst), x" to a constant in
cases where it would otherwise be undefined behavior.
Surprisingly (to me at least), this triggers hundreds of the times in
a few benchmarks: lencode, ldecode, and 466.h264ref seem to *really*
like this.
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a bunch in lencode, ldecod, spass, 176.gcc, 252.eon, among others. It is
also the first part of PR5822
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where instcombine would have to split a critical edge due to a
phi node of an invoke. Since instcombine can't change the CFG,
it has to bail out from doing the transformation.
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to memcpy. (Such a memcpy is technically illegal, but in practice is safe
and is generated by struct self-assignment in C code.)
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generates store to undef and some generates store to null as the idiom
for undefined behavior. Since simplifycfg zaps both, don't remove the
undefined behavior in instcombine.
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ConstantExpr, not just the top-level operator. This allows it to
fold many more constants.
Also, make GlobalOpt call ConstantFoldConstantExpression on
GlobalVariable initializers.
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llvm.invariant.start to be used without necessarily being paired with a call
to llvm.invariant.end. If you run the entire optimization pipeline then such
calls are in fact deleted (adce does it), but that's actually a good thing since
we probably do want them to be zapped late in the game. There should really be
an integration test that checks that the llvm.invariant.start call lasts long
enough that all passes that do interesting things with it get to do their stuff
before it is deleted. But since no passes do anything interesting with it yet
this will have to wait for later.
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when both the source and dest are illegal types, since it would cause
the phi to grow (for example, we shouldn't transform test14b's phi to
a phi on i320). This fixes an infinite loop on i686 bootstrap with
phi slicing turned on, so turn it back on.
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not turn a PHI in a legal type into a PHI of an illegal type, and
add a new optimization that breaks up insane integer PHI nodes into
small pieces (PR3451).
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(eliminating some extends) if the new type of the
computation is legal or if both the source and dest
are illegal. This prevents instcombine from changing big
chains of computation into i64 on 32-bit targets for
example.
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to EmitGEPOffset.
Implement some new transforms for optimizing
subtracts of two pointer to ints into the same vector. This happens
for C++ iterator idioms for example, stringmap takes a const char*
that points to the start and end of a string. Once inlined, we want
the pointer difference to turn back into a length.
This is rdar://7362831.
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I don't know what Dan wants to do with phi-merge-gep.ll, I'll let
him deal with it because instcombine may end up sinking these.
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not the max. This didn't matter until the previous patch because
instcombine would refuse to sink loads with differenting alignments.
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phis, it didn't preserve the alignment of the load. This is a missed
optimization of the alignment is high and a miscompilation when the
alignment is low.
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Update all analysis passes and transforms to treat free calls just like FreeInst.
Remove RaiseAllocations and all its tests since FreeInst no longer needs to be raised.
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Most changes are cleanup, but there is 1 correctness fix:
I fixed InstCombine so that the icmp is removed only if the malloc call is removed (which requires explicit removal because the Worklist won't DCE any calls since they can have side-effects).
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in the PHI's Basic Block. This uses a conservative approach, because we don't
have dominator info in instcombine.
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Update testcases that rely on malloc insts being present.
Also prematurely remove MallocInst handling from IndMemRemoval and RaiseAllocations to help pass tests in this incremental step.
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