This is a minor extension of SROA to handle a special case that is
important for some ARM NEON operations. Some of the NEON intrinsics
return multiple values, which are handled as struct types containing
multiple elements of the same vector type. The corresponding return
types declared in the arm_neon.h header have equivalent arrays. We
need SROA to recognize that it can split up those arrays and structs
into separate vectors, even though they are not always accessed with
the same type. SROA already handles loads and stores of an entire
alloca by using insertvalue/extractvalue to access the individual
pieces, and that code works the same regardless of whether the type
is a struct or an array. So, all that needs to be done is to check
for compatible arrays and homogeneous structs.
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SROA only split up structs and arrays one level at a time, so padding can
only cause trouble if it is located in between the struct or array elements.
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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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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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are the same. I had already fixed a similar problem where the source and
destination were different bitcasts derived from the same alloca, but the
previous fix still did not handle the case where both operands are exactly
the same value. Radar 7552893.
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missing check that an array reference doesn't go past the end of the array,
and remove some redundant checks for in-bound array and vector references
that are no longer needed.
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bootstrap. This also replaces the WeakVH references that Chris objected to
with normal Value references.
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problem", this broke llvm-gcc bootstrap for release builds on
x86_64-apple-darwin10.
This reverts commit db22309800b224a9f5f51baf76071d7a93ce59c9.
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found last time. Instead of trying to modify the IR while iterating over it,
I've change it to keep a list of WeakVH references to dead instructions, and
then delete those instructions later. I also added some special case code to
detect and handle the situation when both operands of a memcpy intrinsic are
referencing the same alloca.
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While scanning through the uses of an alloca, keep track of the current offset
relative to the start of the alloca, and check memory references to see if
the offset & size correspond to a component within the alloca. This has the
nice benefit of unifying much of the code from isSafeUseOfAllocation,
isSafeElementUse, and isSafeUseOfBitCastedAllocation. The code to rewrite
the uses of a promoted alloca, after it is determined to be safe, is
reorganized in the same way.
Also, when rewriting GEP instructions, mark them as "in-bounds" since all the
indices are known to be safe.
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array indexes. The "complex" case of SRoA still handles them, and correctly.
This fixes a weirdness where we'd correctly avoid transforming A[0][42] if
the 42 was too large, but we'd only do it if it was one gep, not two separate
ones.
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input filename so that opt doesn't print the input filename in the
output so that grep lines in the tests don't unintentionally match
strings in the input filename.
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integer and floating-point opcodes, introducing
FAdd, FSub, and FMul.
For now, the AsmParser, BitcodeReader, and IRBuilder all preserve
backwards compatability, and the Core LLVM APIs preserve backwards
compatibility for IR producers. Most front-ends won't need to change
immediately.
This implements the first step of the plan outlined here:
http://nondot.org/sabre/LLVMNotes/IntegerOverflow.txt
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RewriteStoreUserOfWholeAlloca deal with tail padding because
isSafeUseOfBitCastedAllocation expects them to. Otherwise, we crash
trying to erase the bitcast.
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method, fixing a crash on PR4146. While the store will
ultimately overwrite the "padded size" number of bits in memory,
the stored value may be a subset of this size. This function
only wants to handle the case where all bits are stored.
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accessed at least once as a vector. This prevents it from
compiling the example in not-a-vector into:
define double @test(double %A, double %B) {
%tmp4 = insertelement <7 x double> undef, double %A, i32 0
%tmp = insertelement <7 x double> %tmp4, double %B, i32 4
%tmp2 = extractelement <7 x double> %tmp, i32 4
ret double %tmp2
}
instead, producing the integer code. Producing vectors when they
aren't otherwise in the program is dangerous because a lot of other
code treats them carefully and doesn't want to break them down.
OTOH, many things want to break down tasty i448's.
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