which have trapping constant exprs in them due to PHI nodes.
Eliminating them can cause the constant expr to be evalutated
on new paths if the input edges are critical.
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on the DragonEgg self-host bot. Unfortunately, the testcase is pretty messy and doesn't reduce well due to
interactions with other parts of InstCombine.
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a null endptr argument, because they may write to errno.
This fixes a seflhost miscompile observed on Linux targets when TBAA
was enabled.
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dragonegg self-host buildbot. Original commit message:
Add an InstCombine transform to recognize instances of manual overflow-safe addition
(performing the addition in a wider type and explicitly checking for overflow), and
fold them down to intrinsics. This currently only supports signed-addition, but could
be generalized if someone works out the magic constant formulas for other operations.
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(performing the addition in a wider type and explicitly checking for overflow), and
fold them down to intrinsics. This currently only supports signed-addition, but could
be generalized if someone works out the magic constant formulas for other operations.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8558713>.
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When it sees a promising select it now tries to figure out whether the condition of the select is known in any of the predecessors and if so it maps the operands appropriately.
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which is simpler than finding a place to insert in BB.
- Don't perform the 'if condition hoisting' xform on certain
i1 PHIs, as it interferes with switch formation.
This re-fixes "example 7", without breaking the world hopefully.
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first, it can kick in on blocks whose conditions have been
folded to a constant, even though one of the edges will be
trivially folded.
second, it doesn't clean up the "if diamond" that it just
eliminated away. This is a problem because other simplifycfg
xforms kick in depending on the order of block visitation,
causing pointless work.
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when simplifying, allowing them to be eagerly turned into switches. This
is the last step required to get "Example 7" from this blog post:
http://blog.regehr.org/archives/320
On X86, we now generate this machine code, which (to my eye) seems better
than the ICC generated code:
_crud: ## @crud
## BB#0: ## %entry
cmpb $33, %dil
jb LBB0_4
## BB#1: ## %switch.early.test
addb $-34, %dil
cmpb $58, %dil
ja LBB0_3
## BB#2: ## %switch.early.test
movzbl %dil, %eax
movabsq $288230376537592865, %rcx ## imm = 0x400000017001421
btq %rax, %rcx
jb LBB0_4
LBB0_3: ## %lor.rhs
xorl %eax, %eax
ret
LBB0_4: ## %lor.end
movl $1, %eax
ret
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(x & 2^n) ? 2^m+C : C
we can offset both arms by C to get the "(x & 2^n) ? 2^m : 0" form, optimize the
select to a shift and apply the offset afterwards.
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(if available) as we go so that we get simple constantexprs not insane ones.
This fixes the failure of clang/test/CodeGenCXX/virtual-base-ctor.cpp
that the previous iteration of this patch had.
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memcpy's like:
memcpy(A, B)
memcpy(A, C)
we cannot delete the first memcpy as dead if A and C might be aliases.
If so, we actually get:
memcpy(A, B)
memcpy(A, A)
which is not correct to transform into:
memcpy(A, A)
This patch was heavily influenced by Jakub Staszak's patch in PR8728, thanks
Jakub!
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20040709-1.c from the gcc testsuite. I was using the size of a
pointer instead of the pointee. This fixes rdar://8713376
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may-aliasing stores that partially overlap with different base
pointers. This implements PR6043 and the non-variable part of
PR8657
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now that DSE hacks on them. This fixes a regression I introduced,
by generalizing DSE to hack on transfers.
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about pairs of AA::Location's instead of looking for MemDep's
"Def" predicate. This is more powerful and general, handling
memset/memcpy/store all uniformly, and implementing PR8701 and
probably obsoleting parts of memcpyoptimizer.
This also fixes an obscure bug with init.trampoline and i8
stores, but I'm not surprised it hasn't been hit yet. Enhancing
init.trampoline to carry the size that it stores would allow
DSE to be much more aggressive about optimizing them.
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contains "ref".
Enhance DSE to use a modref query instead of a store-specific hack
to generalize the "ignore may-alias stores" optimization to handle
memset and memcpy.
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fairly systematic way in instcombine. Some of these cases were already dealt
with, in which case I removed the existing code. The case of Add has a bunch of
funky logic which covers some of this plus a few variants (considers shifts to be
a form of multiplication), which I didn't touch. The simplification performed is:
A*B+A*C -> A*(B+C). The improvement is to do this in cases that were not already
handled [such as A*B-A*C -> A*(B-C), which was reported on the mailing list], and
also to do it more often by not checking for "only one use" if "B+C" simplifies.
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folding improvements: if P points to a type of size zero, turn "gep P, N" into "P".
More generally, if a gep index type has size zero, instcombine could replace the
index with zero, but that is not done here.
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void a(int x) { if (((1<<x)&8)==0) b(); }
into "x != 3", which occurs over 100 times in 403.gcc but in no
other program in llvm-test.
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allowing the memcpy to be eliminated.
Unfortunately, the requirements on byval's without explicit
alignment are really weak and impossible to predict in the
mid-level optimizer, so this doesn't kick in much with current
frontends. The fix is to change clang to set alignment on all
byval arguments.
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preserves LCSSA form out of ScalarEvolution and into the LoopInfo
class. Use it to check that SimplifyInstruction simplifications
are not breaking LCSSA form. Fixes PR8622.
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this was a tree of hashtables, and a query recursed into the table for the immediate dominator ad infinitum
if the initial lookup failed. This led to really bad performance on tall, narrow CFGs.
We can instead replace it with what is conceptually a multimap of value numbers to leaders (actually
represented by a hashtable with a list of Value*'s as the value type), and then
determine which leader from that set to use very cheaply thanks to the DFS numberings maintained by
DominatorTree. Because there are typically few duplicates of a given value, this scan tends to be
quite fast. Additionally, we use a custom linked list and BumpPtr allocation to avoid any unnecessary
allocation in representing the value-side of the multimap.
This change brings with it a 15% (!) improvement in the total running time of GVN on 403.gcc, which I
think is pretty good considering that includes all the "real work" being done by MemDep as well.
The one downside to this approach is that we can no longer use GVN to perform simple conditional progation,
but that seems like an acceptable loss since we now have LVI and CorrelatedValuePropagation to pick up
the slack. If you see conditional propagation that's not happening, please file bugs against LVI or CVP.
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refusing to optimize two memcpy's like this:
copy A <- B
copy C <- A
if it couldn't prove that noalias(B,C). We can eliminate
the copy by producing a memmove instead of memcpy.
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if it is passed as a byval argument. The byval argument will just be a
read, so it is safe to read from the original global instead. This allows
us to promote away the %agg.tmp alloca in PR8582
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over a phi node by applying it to each operand may be wrong if the
operation and the phi node are mutually interdependent (the testcase
has a simple example of this). So only do this transform if it would
be correct to perform the operation in each predecessor of the block
containing the phi, i.e. if the other operands all dominate the phi.
This should fix the FFMPEG snow.c regression reported by İsmail Dönmez.
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offload the work to hasConstantValue rather than do something more
complicated (such handling mutually recursive phis) because (1) it is
not clear it is worth it; and (2) if it is worth it, maybe such logic
would be better placed in hasConstantValue. Adjust some GVN tests
which are now cleaned up much further (eg: all phi nodes are removed).
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SimplifyAssociativeOrCommutative) "(A op C1) op C2" -> "A op (C1 op C2)",
which previously was only done if C1 and C2 were constants, to occur whenever
"C1 op C2" simplifies (a la InstructionSimplify). Since the simplifying operand
combination can no longer be assumed to be the right-hand terms, consider all of
the possible permutations. When compiling "gcc as one big file", transform 2
(i.e. using right-hand operands) fires about 4000 times but it has to be said
that most of the time the simplifying operands are both constants. Transforms
3, 4 and 5 each fired once. Transform 6, which is an existing transform that
I didn't change, never fired. With this change, the testcase is now optimized
perfectly with one run of instcombine (previously it required instcombine +
reassociate + instcombine, and it may just have been luck that this worked).
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testing for dereferenceable pointers into a helper function,
isDereferenceablePointer. Teach it how to reason about GEPs
with simple non-zero indices.
Also eliminate ArgumentPromtion's IsAlwaysValidPointer,
which didn't check for weak externals or out of range gep
indices.
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references. For example, this allows gvn to eliminate the load in
this example:
void foo(int n, int* p, int *q) {
p[0] = 0;
p[1] = 1;
if (n) {
*q = p[0];
}
}
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nodes can be used in loops, this could result in infinite looping
if there is no recursion limit, so add such a limit. It is also
used for the SelectInst case because in theory there could be an
infinite loop there too if the basic block is unreachable.
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to optionally look for constant or local (alloca) memory.
Teach BasicAliasAnalysis::pointsToConstantMemory to look through Select
and Phi nodes, and to support looking for local memory.
Remove FunctionAttrs' PointsToLocalOrConstantMemory function, now that
AliasAnalysis knows all the tricks that it knew.
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of a select instruction, see if doing the compare with the
true and false values of the select gives the same result.
If so, that can be used as the value of the comparison.
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consider it to be readonly. In fact, don't even consider it to be
readonly if it does a volatile load from an AllocaInst either (it
is debatable as to whether readonly would be correct or not in this
case; play safe for the moment). This fixes PR8279.
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This code had previously used 2*N, where N is the mask length, to represent
undef. That is not safe because the shufflevector operands may have more
than N elements -- they don't have to match the result type.
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Allow splats even if they don't match either of the original shuffles,
possibly due to undef entries in the shuffles masks. Radar 8597790.
Also fix some 80-column violations.
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it isn't unreachable and should not be zapped. The check for the entry block
was missing in one case: a block containing a unwind instruction. While there,
do some small cleanups: "M" is not a great name for a Function* (it would be
more appropriate for a Module*), change it to "Fn"; use Fn in more places.
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does normal initialization and normal chaining. Change the default
AliasAnalysis implementation to NoAlias.
Update StandardCompileOpts.h and friends to explicitly request
BasicAliasAnalysis.
Update tests to explicitly request -basicaa.
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logic to use the new APInt methods. Among other things this
implements rdar://8501501 - llvm.smul.with.overflow.i32 should constant fold
which comes from "clang -ftrapv", originally brought to my attention from PR8221.
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Anyone interested in more general PRE would be better served by implementing it separately, to get real
anticipation calculation, etc.
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code size (making this transform code size neutral), and it allows us to hoist values out of loops, which is always
a good thing.
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Because of this, we cannot use the Simplify* APIs, as they can assert-fail on unreachable code. Since it's not easy to determine
if a given threading will cause a block to become unreachable, simply defer simplifying simplification to later InstCombine and/or
DCE passes.
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Usually we wouldn't do this anyway because llvm_fenv_testexcept would return an
exception, but we have seen some cases where neither errno nor fenv detect an
exception on arm-linux.
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Splitting critical edges at the merge point only addressed part of the issue; it is also possible for non-post-domination
to occur when the path from the load to the merge has branches in it. Unfortunately, full anticipation analysis is
time-consuming, so for now approximate it. This is strictly more conservative than real anticipation, so we will miss
some cases that real PRE would allow, but we also no longer insert loads into paths where they didn't exist before. :-)
This is a very slight net positive on SPEC for me (0.5% on average). Most of the benchmarks are largely unaffected, but
when it pays off it pays off decently: 181.mcf improves by 4.5% on my machine.
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so that it detects errors on platforms where libm doesn't set errno.
It's still subject to host libm details though.
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a Constant into a ConstantRange. Handle this conservatively for now, rather than asserting. The testcase is
more complex that I would like, but the manifestation of the problem is sensitive to iteration orders and the state of the
LVI cache, and I have not been able to reproduce it with manually constructed or simplified cases.
Fixes PR8162.
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deleted. Fix this by doing the copyValue's before we delete stuff!
The testcase only repros the problem on my system with valgrind.
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to expose greater opportunities for store narrowing in codegen. This patch fixes a potential
infinite loop in instcombine caused by one of the introduced transforms being overly aggressive.
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This can result in increased opportunities for store narrowing in code generation. Update a number of
tests for this change. This fixes <rdar://problem/8285027>.
Additionally, because this inverts the order of ors and ands, some patterns for optimizing or-of-and-of-or
no longer fire in instances where they did originally. Add a simple transform which recaptures most of these
opportunities: if we have an or-of-constant-or and have failed to fold away the inner or, commute the order
of the two ors, to give the non-constant or a chance for simplification instead.
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unrolling threshold to the optimize-for-size threshold. Basically, for loops containing calls, unrolling
can still be profitable as long as the loop is REALLY small.
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turning (fptrunc (sqrt (fpext x))) -> (sqrtf x) is great, but we have
to delete the original sqrt as well. Not doing so causes us to do
two sqrt's when building with -fmath-errno (the default on linux).
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in the duplicated block instead of duplicating them.
Duplicating them into the end of the loop and the preheader
means that we got a phi node in the header of the loop,
which prevented LICM from hoisting them. GVN would
usually come around later and merge the duplicated
instructions so we'd get reasonable output... except that
anything dependent on the shoulda-been-hoisted value can't
be hoisted. In PR5319 (which this fixes), a memory value
didn't get promoted.
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location is being re-stored to the memory location. We would get
a dangling pointer from the SSAUpdate data structure and miss a
use. This fixes PR8068
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on llvmdev: SRoA is introducing MMX datatypes like <1 x i64>,
which then cause random problems because the X86 backend is
producing mmx stuff without inserting proper emms calls.
In the short term, force off MMX datatypes. In the long term,
the X86 backend should not select generic vector types to MMX
registers. This is being worked on, but won't be done in time
for 2.8. rdar://8380055
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I have not been able to find a way to test each in isolation, for a few reasons:
1) The ability to look-through non-i1 BinaryOperator's requires the ability to look through non-constant
ICmps in order for it to ever trigger.
2) The ability to do LVI-powered PHI value determination only matters in cases that ProcessBranchOnPHI
can't handle. Since it already handles all the cases without other instructions in the def-use chain
between the PHI and the branch, it requires the ability to look through ICmps and/or BinaryOperators
as well.
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This actually exposed an infinite recursion bug in ComputeValueKnownInPredecessors which theoretically already existed (in JumpThreading's
handling of and/or of i1's), but never manifested before. This patch adds a tracking set to prevent this case.
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A = shl x, 42
...
B = lshr ..., 38
which can be transformed into:
A = shl x, 4
...
iff we can prove that the would-be-shifted-in bits
are already zero. This eliminates two shifts in the testcase
and allows eliminate of the whole i128 chain in the real example.
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framework, which is good at ripping through bitfield
operations. This generalize a bunch of the existing
xforms that instcombine does, such as
(x << c) >> c -> and
to handle intermediate logical nodes. This is useful for
ripping up the "promote to large integer" code produced by
SRoA.
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computation can be truncated if it is fed by a sext/zext that doesn't
have to be exactly equal to the truncation result type.
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by the SRoA "promote to large integer" code, eliminating
some type conversions like this:
%94 = zext i16 %93 to i32 ; <i32> [#uses=2]
%96 = lshr i32 %94, 8 ; <i32> [#uses=1]
%101 = trunc i32 %96 to i8 ; <i8> [#uses=1]
This also unblocks other xforms from happening, now clang is able to compile:
struct S { float A, B, C, D; };
float foo(struct S A) { return A.A + A.B+A.C+A.D; }
into:
_foo: ## @foo
## BB#0: ## %entry
pshufd $1, %xmm0, %xmm2
addss %xmm0, %xmm2
movdqa %xmm1, %xmm3
addss %xmm2, %xmm3
pshufd $1, %xmm1, %xmm0
addss %xmm3, %xmm0
ret
on x86-64, instead of:
_foo: ## @foo
## BB#0: ## %entry
movd %xmm0, %rax
shrq $32, %rax
movd %eax, %xmm2
addss %xmm0, %xmm2
movapd %xmm1, %xmm3
addss %xmm2, %xmm3
movd %xmm1, %rax
shrq $32, %rax
movd %eax, %xmm0
addss %xmm3, %xmm0
ret
This seems pretty close to optimal to me, at least without
using horizontal adds. This also triggers in lots of other
code, including SPEC.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@112278 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8