optimized code are:
(non-negative number)+(power-of-two) != 0 -> true
and
(x | 1) != 0 -> true
Instcombine knows about the second one of course, but only does it if X|1
has only one use. These fire thousands of times in the testsuite.
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with BasicAA's DecomposeGEPExpression, which recently began
using a TargetData. This fixes PR8968, though the testcase
is awkward to reduce.
Also, update several off GetUnderlyingObject's users
which happen to have a TargetData handy to pass it in.
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computation, the Ancestor field is always set to the Parent, so we can remove
the explicit link entirely and merge the Parent and Ancestor fields. Instead of
checking for whether an ancestor exists for a node or not, we simply check
whether the node has already been processed. This is simpler if Compress is
inlined into Eval, so I did that as well.
This is about a 3% speedup running -domtree on test-suite + SPEC2000 & SPEC2006,
but it also opens up some opportunities for further improvement.
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flags. They are still not enable in this revision.
Added TargetInstrInfo::isZeroCost() to fix a fundamental problem with
the scheduler's model of operand latency in the selection DAG.
Generalized unit tests to work with sched-cycles.
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TargetInstrInfo:
Change produceSameValue() to take MachineRegisterInfo as an optional argument.
When in SSA form, targets can use it to make more aggressive equality analysis.
Machine LICM:
1. Eliminate isLoadFromConstantMemory, use MI.isInvariantLoad instead.
2. Fix a bug which prevent CSE of instructions which are not re-materializable.
3. Use improved form of produceSameValue.
ARM:
1. Teach ARM produceSameValue to look pass some PIC labels.
2. Look for operands from different loads of different constant pool entries
which have same values.
3. Re-implement PIC GA materialization using movw + movt. Combine the pair with
a "add pc" or "ldr [pc]" to form pseudo instructions. This makes it possible
to re-materialize the instruction, allow machine LICM to hoist the set of
instructions out of the loop and make it possible to CSE them. It's a bit
hacky, but it significantly improve code quality.
4. Some minor bug fixes as well.
With the fixes, using movw + movt to materialize GAs significantly outperform the
load from constantpool method. 186.crafty and 255.vortex improved > 20%, 254.gap
and 176.gcc ~10%.
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checks enabled:
1) Use '<' to compare integers in a comparison function rather than '<='.
2) Use the uniqued set DefBlocks rather than Info.DefiningBlocks to initialize
the priority queue.
The speedup of scalarrepl on test-suite + SPEC2000 + SPEC2006 is a bit less, at
just under 16% rather than 17%.
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eliminating a potentially quadratic data structure, this also gives a 17%
speedup when running -scalarrepl on test-suite + SPEC2000 + SPEC2006. My initial
experiment gave a greater speedup around 25%, but I moved the dominator tree
level computation from dominator tree construction to PromoteMemToReg.
Since this approach to computing IDFs has a much lower overhead than the old
code using precomputed DFs, it is worth looking at using this new code for the
second scalarrepl pass as well.
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half a million non-local queries, each of which would otherwise have triggered a
linear scan over a basic block.
Also fix a fixme for memory intrinsics which dereference pointers. With this,
we prove that a pointer is non-null because it was dereferenced by an intrinsic
112 times in llvm-test.
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these would try hard to match constants by inverting the bits
and recursively matching. There are two problems with this:
1) some patterns would match when we didn't want them to (theoretical)
2) this is insanely expensive to do, and most often pointless.
This was apparently useful in just 2 instcombine cases, which I
added code to handle explicitly. This change speeds up 'opt'
time on 176.gcc by 1% and produces bitwise identical code.
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early in the cleanup code and one late interlaced with the inliner. The second one is
important because inlining and other scalar optzns can unpin allocas, allowing them to
be split up and promoted. While important for performance, this is also relatively
rare, and we would previously force a (non-lazy) computation of DomFrontiers, which
happened even if nothing became unpinned.
With this patch, the first pass of scalarrepl still promotes the vast bulk of allocas
in programs, but hte second pass has changed to use SSAUpdater, which is more "sparse"
and lazy. This speeds up opt -O3 time on kimwitu++ (a c++ app) by about 1%. The
numbers are interesting: the first pass promotes ~17500 allocas. The second pass
promotes about 1600. For non-C++ codes, the compile time win should be greater,
because the second pass of scalarrepl does less.
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- Fixed :upper16: fix up routine. It should be shifting down the top 16 bits first.
- Added support for Thumb2 :lower16: and :upper16: fix up.
- Added :upper16: and :lower16: relocation support to mach-o object writer.
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most important simplifications, as well as resolving phase ordering issues where instcombine
would inhibit important CSE'ing opportunities, for instance on BitBench/drop3.
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While there, I noticed that the transform "undef >>a X -> undef" was wrong.
For example if X is 2 then the top two bits must be equal, so the result can
not be anything. I fixed this in the constant folder as well. Also, I made
the transform for "X << undef" stronger: it now folds to undef always, even
though X might be zero. This is in accordance with the LangRef, but I must
admit that it is fairly aggressive. Also, I added "i32 X << 32 -> undef"
following the LangRef and the constant folder, likewise fairly aggressive.
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Add methods for accessing the (single) entry / exit edge of a region. If no such
edge exists, null is returned. Both accessors return the start block of the
corresponding edge. The edge can finally be formed by utilizing
Region::getEntry() or Region::getExit();
Contributed by: Andreas Simbuerger <simbuerg@fim.uni-passau.de>
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in the right direction. It eliminated some hacks and will unblock codegen
work. But it's far from being done. It doesn't reject illegal expressions,
e.g. (FOO - :lower16:BAR). It also doesn't work in Thumb2 mode at all.
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"this" pointer for any subclass of User, you could static_cast it to
User* and then reinterpret_cast that to Use* to get the end of the
operand list. This isn't a safe assumption in general, because the
static_cast might adjust the "this" pointer. Fixed by having these
OperandTraits classes take an extra template parameter, which is the
subclass of User. This is groundwork for PR889.
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phi nodes. It is called from MergeBlockIntoPredecessor which is
called from GVN, which claims to preserve these.
I'm skeptical that this is the actual problem behind PR8954, but
this is a stab in the right direction.
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These functions not longer assert when passed 0, but simply return false instead.
No functional change intended.
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Fix the TargetRegisterInfo::NoRegister places where someone preferred
typing 'TargetRegisterInfo::NoRegister' instead of typing '0'.
Note that TableGen is already emitting xx::NoRegister in xxGenRegisterNames.inc.
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The numbering plan is now:
0 NoRegister.
[1;2^30) Physical registers.
[2^30;2^31) Stack slots.
[2^31;2^32) Virtual registers. (With -1u and -2u used by DenseMapInfo.)
Each segment is filled from the left, so any mistaken interpretation should
quickly cause crashes.
FirstVirtualRegister has been removed. TargetRegisterInfo provides predicates
conversion functions that should be used instead of interpreting register
numbers manually.
It is now legal to pass NoRegister to isPhysicalRegister() and
isVirtualRegister(). The result is false in both cases.
It is quite rare to represent stack slots in this way, so isPhysicalRegister()
and isVirtualRegister() require that isStackSlot() be checked first if it can
possibly return true. This allows a very fast implementation of the common
predicates.
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void f(int* begin, int* end) { std::fill(begin, end, 0); }
which turns into a != exit expression where one pointer is
strided and (thanks to step #1) known to not overflow, and
the other is loop invariant.
The observation here is that, though the IV is strided by
4 in this case, that the IV *has* to become equal to the
end value. It cannot "miss" the end value by stepping over
it, because if it did, the strided IV expression would
eventually wrap around.
Handle this by turning A != B into "A-B != 0" where the A-B
part is known to be NUW.
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when no virtual registers have been allocated.
It was only used to resize IndexedMaps, so provide an IndexedMap::resize()
method such that
Map.grow(MRI.getLastVirtReg());
can be replaced with the simpler
Map.resize(MRI.getNumVirtRegs());
This works correctly when no virtuals are allocated, and it bypasses the to/from
index conversions.
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physical register numbers.
This makes the hack used in LiveInterval official, and lets LiveInterval be
oblivious of stack slots.
The isPhysicalRegister() and isVirtualRegister() predicates don't know about
this, so when a variable may contain a stack slot, isStackSlot() should always
be tested first.
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config.h was generated, so it had no effect on it.
Thanks to arrowdodger for pointing out this and a tentative patch.
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of using a Location class with the same information.
When making a copy of a MachineOperand that was already stored in a
MachineInstr, it is necessary to clear the parent pointer on the copy. Otherwise
the register use-def lists become inconsistent.
Add MachineOperand::clearParent() to do that. An alternative would be a custom
MachineOperand copy constructor that cleared ParentMI. I didn't want to do that
because of the performance impact.
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Print virtual registers numbered from 0 instead of the arbitrary
FirstVirtualRegister. The first virtual register is printed as %vreg0.
TRI::NoRegister is printed as %noreg.
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depending on TRI::FirstVirtualRegister.
Also use TRI::printReg instead of printing virtual registers directly.
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Provide MRI::getNumVirtRegs() and TRI::index2VirtReg() functions to allow
iteration over virtual registers without depending on the representation of
virtual register numbers.
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Add a unnamed_addr bit to global variables and functions. This will be used
to indicate that the address is not significant and therefore the constant
or function can be merged with others.
If an optimization pass can show that an address is not used, it can set this.
Examples of things that can have this set by the FE are globals created to
hold string literals and C++ constructors.
Adding unnamed_addr to a non-const global should have no effect unless
an optimization can transform that global into a constant.
Aliases are not allowed to have unnamed_addr since I couldn't figure
out any use for it.
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1. Take a flags argument instead of a bool. This makes
it more clear to the reader what it is used for.
2. Add a flag that says that "remapping a value not in the
map is ok".
3. Reimplement MapValue to share a bunch of code and be a lot
more efficient. For lookup failures, don't drop null values
into the map.
4. Using the new flag a bunch of code can vaporize in LinkModules
and LoopUnswitch, kill it.
No functionality change.
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Instead encode llvm IR level property "HasSideEffects" in an operand (shared
with IsAlignStack). Added MachineInstrs::hasUnmodeledSideEffects() to check
the operand when the instruction is an INLINEASM.
This allows memory instructions to be moved around INLINEASM instructions.
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