version uses a new algorithm for evaluating the binomial coefficients
which is significantly more efficient for AddRecs of more than 2 terms
(see the comments in the code for details on how the algorithm works).
It also fixes some bugs: it removes the arbitrary length restriction for
AddRecs, it fixes the silent generation of incorrect code for AddRecs
which require a wide calculation width, and it fixes an issue where we
were incorrectly truncating the iteration count too far when evaluating
an AddRec expression narrower than the induction variable.
There are still a few related issues I know of: I think there's
still an issue with the SCEVExpander expansion of AddRec in terms of
the width of the induction variable used. The hack to avoid generating
too-wide integers shouldn't be necessary; instead, the callers should be
considering the cost of the expansion before expanding it (in addition
to not expanding too-wide integers, we might not want to expand
expressions that are really expensive, especially when optimizing for
size; calculating an length-17 32-bit AddRec currently generates about 250
instructions of straight-line code on X86). Also, for long 32-bit
AddRecs on X86, CodeGen really sucks at scheduling the code. I'm planning on
filing follow-up PRs for these issues.
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subreg form on x86-64, to avoid the problem with x86-32
having GPRs that don't have 8-bit subregs.
Also, change several 16-bit instructions to use
equivalent 32-bit instructions. These have a smaller
encoding and avoid partial-register updates.
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to different address spaces. This alters the naming scheme for those
intrinsics, e.g., atomic.load.add.i32 => atomic.load.add.i32.p0i32
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time applying to the implicit comparison in smin expressions. The
correct way to transform an inequality into the opposite
inequality, either signed or unsigned, is with a not expression.
I looked through the SCEV code, and I don't think there are any more
occurrences of this issue.
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SGT exit condition. Essentially, the correct way to flip an inequality
in 2's complement is the not operator, not the negation operator.
That said, the difference only affects cases involving INT_MIN.
Also, enhance the pre-test search logic to be a bit smarter about
inequalities flipped with a not operator, so it can eliminate the smax
from the iteration count for simple loops.
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to be marked invalid regardless of whether it is
a debug, an exception handling or (hopefully) a
GC label.
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partially unroll a loop when fully unrolling would not fit under the threshold.
Patch by Mikael Lepistö.
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that says "unconditional loads from this argument are safe", we now keep track
of the safety per set of indices from which loads happen. This prevents
ArgPromotion from promoting loads that aren't really valid. As an added effect,
this will now disregard the the type of the indices passed to a GEP, so
"load GEP %A, i32 1" and "load GEP %A, i64 1" will result in a single argument,
not two.
This fixes PR2598, for which a testcase has been added as well.
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which is represented in codegen as an 'and' operation. This matches them
with movz instructions, instead of leaving them to be matched by and
instructions with an immediate field.
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because opt exited while llvm-as was still
writing to the pipe, causing it to get a
SIGPIPE. It seems best to change things to
avoid the race altogether.
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mmx needs its own fancy shuffle logic based on unpack; for now we get correct but awful code.
Also commit Mon Ping's VSETCC patch
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and knowledge of PseudoSourceValues. This unfortunately isn't sufficient to allow
constants to be rematerialized in PIC mode -- the extra indirection is a
complication.
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command-line option, and disable it by default. It introduced performance
regressions because CodeGen is currently not able to remat such loads.
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case for this.
This allows instructions like loads from global variables declared to
be constant to be moved out of loops."
Patch by Stefanus Du Toit!
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Remove the GetResultInst instruction. It is still accepted in LLVM assembly
and bitcode, where it is now auto-upgraded to ExtractValueInst. Also, remove
support for return instructions with multiple values. These are auto-upgraded
to use InsertValueInst instructions.
The IRBuilder still accepts multiple-value returns, and auto-upgrades them
to InsertValueInst instructions.
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leads into a cycle involving a different PHI, LSR got stuck running
around that cycle looking for the original PHI. To avoid this, keep
track of visited PHIs and stop searching if we see one more than once.
This fixes PR2570.
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force evaluation (ComputeIterationCountExhaustively) should be turned off.
It doesn't apply to trip-count2.ll because this file tests the brute force
evaluation.
The test for PR2364 (2008-05-25-NegativeStepToZero.ll) currently fails
showing that the patch for this bug doesn't work. I'll fix it in a few hours
with a patch for PR2088.
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multiply to be done as unsigned, so that they have well defined
behavior on overflow. This fixes PR2408.
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replacement of multiple values. This is slightly more efficient
than doing multiple ReplaceAllUsesOfValueWith calls, and theoretically
could be optimized even further. However, an important property of this
new function is that it handles the case where the source value set and
destination value set overlap. This makes it feasible for isel to use
SelectNodeTo in many very common cases, which is advantageous because
SelectNodeTo avoids a temporary node and it doesn't require CSEMap
updates for users of values that don't change position.
Revamp MorphNodeTo, which is what does all the work of SelectNodeTo, to
handle operand lists more efficiently, and to correctly handle a number
of corner cases to which its new wider use exposes it.
This commit also includes a change to the encoding of post-isel opcodes
in SDNodes; now instead of being sandwiched between the target-independent
pre-isel opcodes and the target-dependent pre-isel opcodes, post-isel
opcodes are now represented as negative values. This makes it possible
to test if an opcode is pre-isel or post-isel without having to know
the size of the current target's post-isel instruction set.
These changes speed up llc overall by 3% and reduce memory usage by 10%
on the InstructionCombining.cpp testcase with -fast and -regalloc=local.
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of all sizes from i1 to i256. The code is not
always that great, for example (x86)
movw %di, %ax
movw %ax, i17_s
where the store could be directly from %di.
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sizes from i1 to i256. The generated code is
like one huge bug report of things that the DAG
combiner fails to simplify!
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simply does the atomic.cmp.swap on the larger type,
which means it blows away whatever is sitting in
the bytes just after the memory location, i.e.
causes a buffer overflow. This really requires
target specific code, which is why LegalizeTypes
doesn't try to handle this case generically. The
existing (wrong) code in LegalizeDAG will go away
automatically once the type legalization code is
removed from LegalizeDAG so I'm leaving it there
for the moment. Meanwhile, don't test for this
feature.
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allowed to canonicalize return values).
Add a test that checks if return value and function attributes are not removed.
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return values that are still (partially) live. Instead of updating all uses of
a call instruction after removing some elements, it now just rebuilds the
original struct (With undef gaps where the unused values were) and leaves it to
instcombine to clean this up.
The added testcase still fails currently, but this is due to instcombine which
isn't good enough yet. I will fix that part next.
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In LegalizeDAG the value is zero-extended to
the new type before byte swapping. It doesn't
matter how the extension is done since the new
bits are shifted off anyway after the swap, so
extend by any old rubbish bits. This results
in the final assembler for the testcase being
one line shorter.
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the second half of link-global-to-func.ll and causes some minor changes in
messages.
There are two TODOs here. First, this causes a regression in
2008-07-06-AliasWeakDest.ll, which is now failing (so I xfailed it). Anton,
I would really appreciate it if you could take a look at this. It should be
a matter of adding proper alias support to GetLinkageResult, and was probably
already a latent bug that would manifest with globals.
The second todo is to reimplement LinkAlias in the same pattern as
function and global linking. This should be pretty straight-forward for
someone who knows aliases, but isn't a requirement for correctness.
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(replacing a function with a global). This is needed when building
llvm itself with LTO on darwin, because of the EXPLICIT_SYMBOL hack
in lib/system/DynamicLibrary.cpp.
Implementation of linking the other way will need to wait for a
cleanup of LinkFunctionProtos.
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8 %reg1024<def> = IMPLICIT_DEF
12 %reg1024<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %reg1024<kill>, %reg1025, 2
The live range [12, 14) are not part of the r1024 live interval since it's defined by an implicit def. It will not conflicts with live interval of r1025. Now suppose both registers are spilled, you can easily see a situation where both registers are reloaded before the INSERT_SUBREG and both target registers that would overlap.
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was using the algorithm for folding unsigned comparisons which is
completely wrong. This has been broken since the signless types change.
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This cause a regression in InstCombine/JavaCompare, which was doing the right
thing on accident. To handle the missed case, generalize the comparisons based
on masked bits a little bit to handle comparisons against the max value. For
example, we can now xform (slt i32 (and X, 4), 4) -> (setne i32 (and X, 4), 4)
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Rewrite the DeadArgumentElimination pass, to use a more explicit tracking of
dependencies between return values and/or arguments. Also make the handling of
arguments and return values the same.
The pass now looks properly inside returned structs, but only at the first
level (ie, not inside nested structs).
This version fixed a few more bugs and was cleaned up a bit. It now passes all
of LLVM's testing, and should still pass SPEC2006. There is still a minor bug
with regard to returning nested structs. Since there is currently nothing that
emits such IR, I will fix that in a seperate commit (partly because it requires
a non-trivial fix).
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1) evaluate [v]fcmp true/false with undefs to true or false instead
of undef.
2) fix vector comparisons with undef to return a vector result instead
of i1
3) fix vector comparisons with evaluatable results to return vector
true/false instead of i1 true/false (PR2529)
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getTargetNode and SelectNodeTo to reduce duplication, and to
make some of the getTargetNode code available to SelectNodeTo.
Use SelectNodeTo instead of getTargetNode in several new
interesting cases, as it mutates nodes in place instead of
creating new ones.
This triggers some scheduling behavior differences due to nodes
being presented to the scheduler in a different order. Some of the
arbitrary scheduling decisions it makes are now arbitrarily made
differently. This is visible in CodeGen/PowerPC/LargeAbsoluteAddr.ll,
where a trivial scheduling difference led to a trivial register
allocation difference.
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1. LSR runOnLoop is always returning false regardless if any transformation is made.
2. AddUsersIfInteresting can create new instructions that are added to DeadInsts. But there is a later early exit which prevents them from being freed.
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shift.
- Add a readme entry for a missing vector_shuffle optimization that results in
awful codegen.
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Added abstract class MemSDNode for any Node that have an associated MemOperand
Changed atomic.lcs => atomic.cmp.swap, atomic.las => atomic.load.add, and
atomic.lss => atomic.load.sub
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test (doesn't work for any MMX vector types, it's
not me). Rewritten to use v2i16 which is generic
and going to stay that way; I think that preserves
the point of the test.
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,------.
| |
| v
| t2 = phi ... t1 ...
| |
| v
| t1 = ...
| ... = ... t1 ...
| |
`------'
where there is a use in a PHI node that's a predecessor to the defining
block. We don't want to mark all predecessors as having the value "alive" in
this case. Also, the assert was too restrictive and didn't handle this case.
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in the presence of out-of-loop users of in-loop values and the trip
count is not a known multiple of the unroll count, and to be a bit
simpler overall. This fixes PR2253.
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structures. Its default threshold is to promote things that are
smaller than 128 bytes, which is sane. However, it is not sane
to do this for things that turn into 128 *registers*. Add a cap
on the number of registers introduced, defaulting to 128/4=32.
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This is a fixed version that no longer uses multimap::equal_range, which
resulted in a pointer invalidation problem.
Also, DAE::InspectedFunctions was not really necessary, so it got removed.
Lastly, this version no longer applies the extra arg hack on functions who did
not have any arguments to start with.
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shuffle could be skipped. The check is invalid because the loop index i
doesn't correspond to the element actually inserted. The correct check is
already done a few lines earlier, for whether the element is already in
the right spot, so this shouldn't have any effect on the codegen for
code that was already correct.
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dependencies between return values and/or arguments. Also make the handling of
arguments and return values the same.
The pass now looks properly inside returned structs, but only at the first
level (ie, not inside nested structs).
Also add a testcase for testing various variations of (multiple) dead rerturn
values.
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time. Sorry for the trouble!
This time, also add a testcase, which I should have done in the first place...
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individually.
Also learn IPConstProp how returning first class aggregates work, in addition
to old style multiple return instructions.
Modify the return-constants testscase to confirm this behaviour.
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when changing the stride of a comparison so that it's slightly
more precise, by having it scan the instruction list to determine
if there is a use of the condition after the point where the
condition will be inserted.
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pointer derived from a local allocation, if the local allocation
never escapes, the pointers can't alias. This implements PR2436
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take into account the instrucion pointed by InsertPt. Thanks to it,
returning the new value of InsertPt to the InsertBinop() caller can be
avoided. The bug was, actually, in visitAddRecExpr() method which wasn't
correctly handling changes of InsertPt. There shouldn't be any
performance regression, as -gvn pass (run after -indvars) removes any
redundant binops.
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wrong for volatile loads and stores. In fact this
is almost all of them! There are three types of
problems: (1) it is wrong to change the width of
a volatile memory access. These may be used to
do memory mapped i/o, in which case a load can have
an effect even if the result is not used. Consider
loading an i32 but only using the lower 8 bits. It
is wrong to change this into a load of an i8, because
you are no longer tickling the other three bytes. It
is also unwise to make a load/store wider. For
example, changing an i16 load into an i32 load is
wrong no matter how aligned things are, since the
fact of loading an additional 2 bytes can have
i/o side-effects. (2) it is wrong to change the
number of volatile load/stores: they may be counted
by the hardware. (3) it is wrong to change a volatile
load/store that requires one memory access into one
that requires several. For example on x86-32, you
can store a double in one processor operation, but to
store an i64 requires two (two i32 stores). In a
multi-threaded program you may want to bitcast an i64
to a double and store as a double because that will
occur atomically, and be indivisible to other threads.
So it would be wrong to convert the store-of-double
into a store of an i64, because this will become two
i32 stores - no longer atomic. My policy here is
to say that the number of processor operations for
an illegal operation is undefined. So it is alright
to change a store of an i64 (requires at least two
stores; but could be validly lowered to memcpy for
example) into a store of double (one processor op).
In short, if the new store is legal and has the same
size then I say that the transform is ok. It would
also be possible to say that transforms are always
ok if before they were illegal, whether after they
are illegal or not, but that's more awkward to do
and I doubt it buys us anything much.
However this exposed an interesting thing - on x86-32
a store of i64 is considered legal! That is because
operations are marked legal by default, regardless of
whether the type is legal or not. In some ways this
is clever: before type legalization this means that
operations on illegal types are considered legal;
after type legalization there are no illegal types
so now operations are only legal if they really are.
But I consider this to be too cunning for mere mortals.
Better to do things explicitly by testing AfterLegalize.
So I have changed things so that operations with illegal
types are considered illegal - indeed they can never
map to a machine operation. However this means that
the DAG combiner is more conservative because before
it was "accidentally" performing transforms where the
type was illegal because the operation was nonetheless
marked legal. So in a few such places I added a check
on AfterLegalize, which I suppose was actually just
forgotten before. This causes the DAG combiner to do
slightly more than it used to, which resulted in the X86
backend blowing up because it got a slightly surprising
node it wasn't expecting, so I tweaked it.
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with code that was expecting different bit widths for different values.
Make getTruncateOrZeroExtend a method on ScalarEvolution, and use it.
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variable expansions involving the $ character.
This fixes 4 tests that were not running properly before.
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cases quoting of <{ didn't work out, so I changed the grep to check for }>
instead.
This fixes 7 testcases that were not properly running before.
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Also, use > %t instead of -o %t for output in one test since that also works
when %t already exists.
This fixes 6 testcases.
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declarations. These are the fixes that I was pretty confident about, there are
still a lot of other llvm-gcc warnings of which I'm not sure if they can be
safely ignored or fixed, without breaking the test case.
This fixes 11 testcases.
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don't fail when (expected) error output is produced. This fixes 17 tests.
While I was there, I also made all RUN lines of the form "not llvm-as..." a bit
more consistent, they now all redirect stderr and stdout to /dev/null and use
input redirect to read their input.
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tests. This breaks 80 tests in the tree.
The interesting part here is that this no longer ignores syntax errors
in RUN command lines. Some tests have not been working all the time because of
this.
The tricky part is that it now also views any stderr output as an error. This
can be suppressed in tcl 8.5, but let's not add this dependency. Instead, all
testcases should be changed to redirect stderr if they expect stderr output.
This holds in particular for lines like:
; RUN: not llvm-as < %s
where an error is expected (but I think I can solve this by modifying the not
script). Also, compilations resulting in warnings will now also fail (so
the warnings should be fixed, disabled or redirected...).
I'll continue with fixing the testcases that are broken now.
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types on functions, with adjustments so that it accepts both
new-style aggregate returns and old-style MRV returns, including those
with only a single member.
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work and how to replace them into individual values. Also, when trying to
replace an aggregrate that is used by load or store with a single (large)
integer, don't crash (but don't replace the aggregrate either).
Also adds a testcase for both structs and arrays.
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are the same as in unpacked structs, only field
positions differ. This only matters for structs
containing x86 long double or an apint; it may
cause backwards compatibility problems if someone
has bitcode containing a packed struct with a
field of one of those types.
The issue is that only 10 bytes are needed to
hold an x86 long double: the store size is 10
bytes, but the ABI size is 12 or 16 bytes (linux/
darwin) which comes from rounding the store size
up by the alignment. Because it seemed silly not
to pack an x86 long double into 10 bytes in a
packed struct, this is what was done. I now
think this was a mistake. Reserving the ABI size
for an x86 long double field even in a packed
struct makes things more uniform: the ABI size is
now always used when reserving space for a type.
This means that developers are less likely to
make mistakes. It also makes life easier for the
CBE which otherwise could not represent all LLVM
packed structs (PR2402).
Front-end people might need to adjust the way
they create LLVM structs - see following change
to llvm-gcc.
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issue is operand promotion for setcc/select... but looks like the fundamental
stuff is implemented for CellSPU.
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and insertvalue and extractvalue instructions.
First-class array values are not trivial because C doesn't
support them. The approach I took here is to wrap all arrays
in structs. Feedback is welcome.
The 2007-01-15-NamedArrayType.ll test needed to be modified
because it has a "not grep" for a string that now exists,
because array types now have associated struct types, and
those struct types have names.
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in DAGISelEmitter output. This bug was recently uncovered by the
addition of patterns for CALL32m and CALL64m, which are nodes
that now have both MemOperands and variadic_ops.
This bug was especially visible with PIC in various configurations,
because the new patterns are matching the indirect call code used
in many PIC configurations.
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is longer than the second one) should stop after finding one. Added break
instruction guarantees it. It also changes difference between offsets to
absolute value of this difference in the condition.
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the conditions for performing the transform when only the
function declaration is available: no longer allow turning
i32 into i64 for example. Only allow changing between
pointer types, and between pointer types and integers of
the same size. For return values ptr -> intptr was already
allowed; I added ptr -> ptr and intptr -> ptr while there.
As shown by a recent objc testcase, changing the way
parameters/return values are passed can be fatal when calling
code written in assembler that directly manipulates call
arguments and return values unless the transform has no
impact on the way they are passed at the codegen level.
While it is possible to imagine an ABI that treats integers
of pointer size differently to pointers, I don't think LLVM
supports any so the transform should now be safe while still
being useful.
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we did not truncate the value down to i1 with (x&1). This caused a problem
when the computation of x was nontrivial, for example, "add i1 1, 1" would
return 2 instead of 0.
This makes the testcase compile into:
...
llvm_cbe_t = (((llvm_cbe_r == 0u) + (llvm_cbe_r == 0u))&1);
llvm_cbe_u = (((unsigned int )(bool )llvm_cbe_t));
...
instead of:
...
llvm_cbe_t = ((llvm_cbe_r == 0u) + (llvm_cbe_r == 0u));
llvm_cbe_u = (((unsigned int )(bool )llvm_cbe_t));
...
This fixes a miscompilation of mediabench/adpcm/rawdaudio/rawdaudio and
403.gcc with the CBE, regressions from LLVM 2.2. Tanya, please pull
this into the release branch.
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insertvalue and extractvalue to use constant indices instead of
Value* indices. And begin updating LangRef.html.
There's definately more to come here, but I'm checking this
basic support in now to make it available to people who are
interested.
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cases due to an isel deficiency already noted in
lib/Target/X86/README.txt, but they can be matched in this fold-call.ll
testcase, for example.
This is interesting mainly because it exposes a tricky tblgen bug;
tblgen was incorrectly computing the starting index for variable_ops
in the case of a complex pattern.
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the one case that ADCE catches that normal DCE doesn't: non-induction variable
loop computations.
This implementation handles this problem without using postdominators.
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sometimes a "mov %ebp, %esp" in the epilogue.
Force these tests that rely on counting 'mov' to use i686-apple-darwin8.8.0
where they were written.
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Analysis/ConstantFolding to fold ConstantExpr's, then make instcombine use it
to try to use targetdata to fold constant expressions on void instructions.
Also extend the icmp(inttoptr, inttoptr) folding to handle the case where
int size != ptr size.
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The SimplifyCFG pass looks at basic blocks that contain only phi nodes,
followed by an unconditional branch. In a lot of cases, such a block (BB) can
be merged into their successor (Succ).
This merging is performed by TryToSimplifyUncondBranchFromEmptyBlock. It does
this by taking all phi nodes in the succesor block Succ and expanding them to
include the predecessors of BB. Furthermore, any phi nodes in BB are moved to
Succ and expanded to include the predecessors of Succ as well.
Before attempting this merge, CanPropagatePredecessorsForPHIs checks to see if
all phi nodes can be properly merged. All functional changes are made to
this function, only comments were updated in
TryToSimplifyUncondBranchFromEmptyBlock.
In the original code, CanPropagatePredecessorsForPHIs looks quite convoluted
and more like stack of checks added to handle different kinds of situations
than a comprehensive check. In particular the first check in the function did
some value checking for the case that BB and Succ have a common predecessor,
while the last check in the function simply rejected all cases where BB and
Succ have a common predecessor. The first check was still useful in the case
that BB did not contain any phi nodes at all, though, so it was not completely
useless.
Now, CanPropagatePredecessorsForPHIs is restructured to to look a lot more
similar to the code that actually performs the merge. Both functions now look
at the same phi nodes in about the same order. Any conflicts (phi nodes with
different values for the same source) that could arise from merging or moving
phi nodes are detected. If no conflicts are found, the merge can happen.
Apart from only restructuring the checks, two main changes in functionality
happened.
Firstly, the old code rejected blocks with common predecessors in most cases.
The new code performs some extra checks so common predecessors can be handled
in a lot of cases. Wherever common predecessors still pose problems, the
blocks are left untouched.
Secondly, the old code rejected the merge when values (phi nodes) from BB were
used in any other place than Succ. However, it does not seem that there is any
situation that would require this check. Even more, this can be proven.
Consider that BB is a block containing of a single phi node "%a" and a branch
to Succ. Now, since the definition of %a will dominate all of its uses, BB
will dominate all blocks that use %a. Furthermore, since the branch from BB to
Succ is unconditional, Succ will also dominate all uses of %a.
Now, assume that one predecessor of Succ is not dominated by BB (and thus not
dominated by Succ). Since at least one use of %a (but in reality all of them)
is reachable from Succ, you could end up at a use of %a without passing
through it's definition in BB (by coming from X through Succ). This is a
contradiction, meaning that our original assumption is wrong. Thus, all
predecessors of Succ must also be dominated by BB (and thus also by Succ).
This means that moving the phi node %a from BB to Succ does not pose any
problems when the two blocks are merged, and any use checks are not needed.
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and/or to handle more cases (such as this add-sitofp.ll testcase), and
port it to selectiondag's ComputeNumSignBits.
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and bitcode support for the extractvalue and insertvalue
instructions and constant expressions.
Note that this does not yet include CodeGen support.
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get inline asm working as well as it did previously with the CBE
with the new MRV support for inline asm.
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BB1:
vr1025 = copy vr1024
..
BB2:
vr1024 = op
= op vr1025
<loop eventually branch back to BB1>
Even though vr1025 is copied from vr1024, it's not safe to coalesced them since live range of vr1025 intersects the def of vr1024. This happens when vr1025 is assigned the value of the previous iteration of vr1024 in the loop.
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If local spiller optimization turns some instruction into an identity copy, it will be removed. If the output register happens to be dead (and source is obviously killed), transfer the kill / dead information to last use / def in the same MBB.
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to accurately represent the integer. This triggers 9 times in 471.omnetpp,
though 8 of those seem to be inlined from the same place.
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type and the other operand is a constant into integer comparisons.
This happens surprisingly frequently (e.g. 10 times in 471.omnetpp),
which are things like this:
%tmp8283 = sitofp i32 %tmp82 to double
%tmp1013 = fcmp ult double %tmp8283, 0.0
Clearly comparing tmp82 against i32 0 is cheaper here.
this also triggers 8 times in gobmk, including this one:
%tmp375376 = sitofp i32 %tmp375 to double
%tmp377 = fcmp ogt double %tmp375376, 8.150000e+01
which is comparing an integer against 81.5 :).
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intersecting bits. This triggers all over the place, for example in lencode,
with adds of stuff like:
%tmp580 = mul i32 %tmp579, 2
%tmp582 = and i32 %b8, 1
and
%tmp28 = shl i32 %abs.i, 1
%sign.0 = select i1 %tmp23, i32 1, i32 0
and
%tmp344 = shl i32 %tmp343, 2
%tmp346 = and i32 %tmp96, 3
etc.
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whether or not -funit-at-a-time is used (C++ uses
it, C doesn't) - it was working before only when
not doing unit-at-a-time.
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a potentially infinite loop, which is undesirable. Instead, test the LICM behavior
that we're really interested in.
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test/Verifier/2002-11-05-GetelementptrPointers.ll, which was incorrect.
Instead, fix getIndexedType to not follow pointer types, as
PointerType is a subclass of CompositeType.
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use-before-def. The problem comes up in code with multiple PHIs where
one PHI is being rewritten in terms of the other, but the other needs
to be casted first. LLVM rules requre the cast instruction to be
inserted after any PHI instructions, but when instructions were
inserted to replace the second PHI value with a function of the first,
they were ended up going before the cast instruction. Avoid this
problem by remembering the location of the cast instruction, when one
is needed, and inserting the expansion of the new value after it.
This fixes a bug that surfaced in 255.vortex on x86-64 when
instcombine was removed from the middle of the loop optimization
passes.
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is bitcast to return a floating point value. The result of the instruction may
not be used by the program afterwards, and LLVM will happily remove all
instructions except the call. But, on some platforms, if a value is returned as
a floating point, it may need to be removed from the stack (like x87). Thus, we
can't get rid of the bitcast even if there isn't a use of the value.
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Makes it possible to use options with names like "Wa,".
Also fixes the -Wall option handling as a side-effect.
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