local frame causes problem.
For example:
void f(StructToPass s) {
g(&s, sizeof(s));
}
will cause problem with tail-call since part of s is passed via registers and
saved in f's local frame. When g tries to access s, part of s may be corrupted
since f's local frame is popped out before the tail-call.
The current fix is to disable tail-call if getVarArgsRegSaveSize is not 0 for
the caller. This is a conservative approach, if we can prove the address of
s or part of s is not taken and passed to g, it should be okay to perform
tail-call.
rdar://12442472
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165853 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Completely update one interval at a time instead of collecting live
range fragments to be updated. This avoids building data structures,
except for a single SmallPtrSet of updated intervals.
Also share code between handleMove() and handleMoveIntoBundle().
Add support for moving dead defs across other live values in the
interval. The MI scheduler can do that.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165824 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
PHIElimination inserts IMPLICIT_DEF instructions to guarantee that all
PHI predecessors have a live-out value. These IMPLICIT_DEF values are
not considered to be real interference when coalescing virtual
registers:
%vreg1 = IMPLICIT_DEF
%vreg2 = MOV32r0
When joining %vreg1 and %vreg2, the IMPLICIT_DEF instruction and its
value number should simply be erased since the %vreg2 value number now
provides a live-out value for the PHI predecesor block.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165813 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
On PowerPC, a bitcast of <16 x i8> to i128 may run through a code
path in ExpandRes_BITCAST that attempts to do an intermediate
bitcast to a <4 x i32> vector, and then construct the Hi and Lo parts
of the resulting i128 by pairing up two of those i32 vector elements
each. The code already recognizes that on a big-endian system, the
first two vector elements form the Hi part, and the final two vector
elements form the Lo part (vice-versa from the little-endian situation).
However, we also need to take endianness into account when forming each
of those separate pairs: on a big-endian system, vector element 0 is
the *high* part of the pair making up the Hi part of the result, and
vector element 1 is the low part of the pair. The code currently always
uses vector element 0 as the low part and vector element 1 as the high
part, as is appropriate for little-endian platforms only.
This patch fixes this by swapping the vector elements as they are
paired up as appropriate.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165802 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
DependenceAnalysis.cpp:1164:32: warning: implicit truncation from 'int' to bitfield changes value from -5 to 3
[-Wconstant-conversion]
Result.DV[Level].Direction &= ~Dependence::DVEntry::GT;
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Patch from Preston Briggs <preston.briggs@gmail.com>.
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not legal. However, it should use a div instruction + mul + sub if divide is
legal. The rem legalization code was missing a check and incorrectly uses a
divrem libcall even when div is legal.
rdar://12481395
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165778 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
isa<> et al. automatically infer when the cast is an upcast (including a
self-cast), so these are no longer necessary.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165767 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This classof() is effectively saying that a MachineCodeEmitter "is-a"
JITEmitter, but JITEmitter is in fact a descendant of
MachineCodeEmitter, so this is not semantically correct. Consequently,
none of the assertions that rely on these classof() actualy check
anything.
Remove the RTTI (which didn't actually check anything) and use
static_cast<> instead.
Post-Mortem Bug Analysis
========================
Cause of the bug
----------------
r55022 appears to be the source of the classof() and assertions removed
by this commit. It aimed at removing some dynamic_cast<> that were
solely in the assertions. A typical diff hunk from that commit looked
like:
- assert(dynamic_cast<JITEmitter*>(MCE) && "Unexpected MCE?");
- JITEmitter *JE = static_cast<JITEmitter*>(getCodeEmitter());
+ assert(isa<JITEmitter>(MCE) && "Unexpected MCE?");
+ JITEmitter *JE = cast<JITEmitter>(getCodeEmitter());
Hence, the source of the bug then seems to be an attempt to replace
dynamic_cast<> with LLVM-style RTTI without properly setting up the
class hierarchy for LLVM-style RTTI. The bug therefore appears to be
simply a "thinko".
What initially indicated the presence of the bug
------------------------------------------------
After implementing automatic upcasting for isa<>, classof() functions of
the form
static bool classof(const Foo *) { return true; }
were removed, since they only serve the purpose of optimizing
statically-OK upcasts. A subsequent recompilation triggered a build
failure on the isa<> tests within the removed asserts, since the
automatic upcasting (correctly) failed to substitute this classof().
Key to pinning down the root cause of the bug
---------------------------------------------
After being alerted to the presence of the bug, some thought about the
semantics which were being asserted by the buggy classof() revealed that
it was incorrect.
How the bug could have been prevented
-------------------------------------
This bug could have been prevented by better documentation for how to
set up LLVM-style RTTI. This should be solved by the recently added
documentation HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI. However, this bug suggests that
the documentation should clearly explain the contract that classof()
must fulfill. The HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI already explains this
contract, but it is a little tucked away. A future patch will expand
that explanation and make it more prominent.
There does not appear to be a simple way to have the compiler prevent
this bug, since fundamentally it boiled down to a spurious classof()
where the programmer made an erroneous statement about the conversion.
This suggests that perhaps the interface to LLVM-style RTTI of classof()
is not the best. There is already some evidence for this, since in a
number of places Clang has classof() forward to classofKind(Kind K)
which evaluates the cast in terms of just the Kind. This could probably
be generalized to simply a `static const Kind MyKind;` field in leaf
classes and `static const Kind firstMyKind, lastMyKind;` for non-leaf
classes, and have the rest of the work be done inside Casting.h,
assuming that the Kind enum is laid out in a preorder traversal of the
inheritance tree.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165764 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
When all cases of a switch statement are dead, the weights vector only has one
element, and we will get an ssertion failure when calling createBranchWeights.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165759 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
to the instruction position. The old encoding would give an absolute
ID which counts up within a function, and only resets at the next function.
I.e., Instead of having:
... = icmp eq i32 n-1, n-2
br i1 ..., label %bb1, label %bb2
it will now be roughly:
... = icmp eq i32 1, 2
br i1 1, label %bb1, label %bb2
This makes it so that ids remain relatively small and can be encoded
in fewer bits.
With this encoding, forward reference operands will be given
negative-valued IDs. Use signed VBRs for the most common case
of forward references, which is phi instructions.
To retain backward compatibility we bump the bitcode version
from 0 to 1 to distinguish between the different encodings.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165739 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Not all instructions define a virtual register in their first operand.
Specifically, INLINEASM has a different format.
<rdar://problem/12472811>
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For function calls on the 64-bit PowerPC SVR4 target, each parameter
is mapped to as many doublewords in the parameter save area as
necessary to hold the parameter. The first 13 non-varargs
floating-point values are passed in registers; any additional
floating-point parameters are passed in the parameter save area. A
single-precision floating-point parameter (32 bits) must be mapped to
the second (rightmost, low-order) word of its assigned doubleword
slot.
Currently LLVM violates this ABI requirement by mapping such a
parameter to the first (leftmost, high-order) word of its assigned
doubleword slot. This is internally self-consistent but will not
interoperate correctly with libraries compiled with an ABI-compliant
compiler.
This patch corrects the problem by adjusting the parameter addressing
on both sides of the calling convention.
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Note: [D]M{T,F}CP2 is just a recommended encoding. Vendors often provide a
custom CP2 that interprets instructions differently and may wish to add their
own instructions that use this opcode. We should ensure that this is easy to
do. I will probably add a 'has custom CP{0-3}' subtarget flag to make this
easy: We want to avoid the GCC situation where every MIPS vendor makes a custom
fork that breaks every other MIPS CPU and so can't be merged upstream.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165711 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Patch from Preston Briggs <preston.briggs@gmail.com>.
This is an updated version of the dependence-analysis patch, including an MIV
test based on Banerjee's inequalities.
It's a fairly complete implementation of the paper
Practical Dependence Testing
Gina Goff, Ken Kennedy, and Chau-Wen Tseng
PLDI 1991
It cannot yet propagate constraints between coupled RDIV subscripts (discussed
in Section 5.3.2 of the paper).
It's organized as a FunctionPass with a single entry point that supports testing
for dependence between two instructions in a function. If there's no dependence,
it returns null. If there's a dependence, it returns a pointer to a Dependence
which can be queried about details (what kind of dependence, is it loop
independent, direction and distance vector entries, etc). I haven't included
every imaginable feature, but there's a good selection that should be adequate
for supporting many loop transformations. Of course, it can be extended as
necessary.
Included in the patch file are many test cases, commented with C code showing
the loops and array references.
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value but later turns out to be a function.
Unfortunately, we can't fold tests into a single file because we only get one
error out of llvm-as.
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Original message:
The attached is the fix to radar://11663049. The optimization can be outlined by following rules:
(select (x != c), e, c) -> select (x != c), e, x),
(select (x == c), c, e) -> select (x == c), x, e)
where the <c> is an integer constant.
The reason for this change is that : on x86, conditional-move-from-constant needs two instructions;
however, conditional-move-from-register need only one instruction.
While the LowerSELECT() sounds to be the most convenient place for this optimization, it turns out to be a bad place. The reason is that by replacing the constant <c> with a symbolic value, it obscure some instruction-combining opportunities which would otherwise be very easy to spot. For that reason, I have to postpone the change to last instruction-combining phase.
The change passes the test of "make check-all -C <build-root/test" and "make -C project/test-suite/SingleSource".
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165661 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
the compiler makes use of GPR0. However, there are two flavors of
GPR0 defined by the target: the 32-bit GPR0 (R0) and the 64-bit GPR0
(X0). The spill/reload code makes use of R0 regardless of whether we
are generating 32- or 64-bit code.
This patch corrects the problem in the obvious manner, using X0 and
ADDI8 for 64-bit and R0 and ADDI for 32-bit.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165658 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
the Altivec extensions were introduced. Its use is optional, and
allows the compiler to communicate to the operating system which
vector registers should be saved and restored during a context switch.
In practice, this information is ignored by the various operating
systems using the SVR4 ABI; the kernel saves and restores the entire
register state. Setting the VRSAVE register is no longer performed by
the AIX XL compilers, the IBM i compilers, or by GCC on Power Linux
systems. It seems best to avoid this logic within LLVM as well.
This patch avoids generating code to update and restore VRSAVE for the
PowerPC SVR4 ABIs (32- and 64-bit). The code remains in place for the
Darwin ABI.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165656 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
The minimum set of required instructions is ISD::AND, ISD::OR, ISD::SETO(or ISD::SETOEQ) and ISD::SETUO(or ISD::SETUNE). Everything is expanded into one of two patterns:
Pattern 1: (LHS CC1 RHS) Opc (LHS CC2 RHS)
Pattern 2: (LHS CC1 LHS) Opc (RHS CC2 RHS)
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165655 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Some of these dyn_cast<>'s would be better phrased as isa<> or cast<>.
That will happen in a future patch.
There are also two dyn_cast_or_null<>'s slipped in instead of
dyn_cast<>'s, since they were causing crashes with just dyn_cast<>.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165646 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
- Due to the current matching vector elements constraints in
ISD::FP_ROUND, rounding from v2f64 to v4f32 (after legalization from
v2f32) is scalarized. Add a customized v2f32 widening to convert it
into a target-specific X86ISD::VFPROUND to work around this
constraints.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165631 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
- Due to the current matching vector elements constraints in ISD::FP_EXTEND,
rounding from v2f32 to v2f64 is scalarized. Add a customized v2f32 widening
to convert it into a target-specific X86ISD::VFPEXT to work around this
constraints. This patch also reverts a previous attempt to fix this issue by
recovering the scalarized ISD::FP_EXTEND pattern and thus significantly
reduces the overhead of supporting non-power-2 vector FP extend.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165625 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
SDNode for LDRB_POST_IMM is invalid: number of registers added to SDNode fewer
that described in .td.
7 ops is needed, but SDNode with only 6 is created.
In more details:
In ARMInstrInfo.td, in multiclass AI2_ldridx, in definition _POST_IMM, offset
operand is defined as am2offset_imm. am2offset_imm is complex parameter type,
and actually it consists from dummy register and imm itself. As I understood
trick with dummy reg was made for AsmParser. In ARMISelLowering.cpp, this dummy
register was not added to SDNode, and it cause crash in Peephole Optimizer pass.
The problem fixed by setting up additional dummy reg when emitting
LDRB_POST_IMM instruction.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165617 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
SchedulerDAGInstrs::buildSchedGraph ignores dependencies between FixedStack
objects and byval parameters. So loading byval parameters from stack may be
inserted *before* it will be stored, since these operations are treated as
independent.
Fix:
Currently ARMTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments saves byval registers with
FixedStack MachinePointerInfo. To fix the problem we need to store byval
registers with MachinePointerInfo referenced to first the "byval" parameter.
Also commit adds two new fields to the InputArg structure: Function's argument
index and InputArg's part offset in bytes relative to the start position of
Function's argument. E.g.: If function's argument is 128 bit width and it was
splitted onto 32 bit regs, then we got 4 InputArg structs with same arg index,
but different offset values.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165616 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
checkRegMaskInterference only initializes the bitmask on the first interference.
This fixes PR14027 and (re)fixes PR13945.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165608 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Allows the new machine model to be used for NumMicroOps and OutputLatency.
Allows the HazardRecognizer to be disabled along with itineraries.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165603 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This wasn't contributing anything significant to postRA heuristics except compile time (by my measurements) and will be replaced by a more general heuristic for cross-region dependencies within the scheduler itself.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165563 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This patch provides initial implementation of load address
macro instruction for Mips. We have implemented two kinds
of expansions with their variations depending on the size
of immediate operand:
1) load address with immediate value directly:
* la d,j => addiu d,$zero,j (for -32768 <= j <= 65535)
* la d,j => lui d,hi16(j)
ori d,d,lo16(j) (for any other 32 bit value of j)
2) load load address with register offset value
* la d,j(s) => addiu d,s,j (for -32768 <= j <= 65535)
* la d,j(s) => lui d,hi16(j) (for any other 32 bit value of j)
ori d,d,lo16(j)
addu d,d,s
This patch does not cover the case when the address is loaded
from the value of the label or function.
Contributer: Vladimir Medic
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165561 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
- Teach it about dadd[i] instructions and move pseudo-instruction
- Make it parse the register names correctly (for N32 / N64)
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165506 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
The next step is to update the optimizers to allow them to optimize the different address spaces with this information.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165505 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
DeadArgumentElimination pass can replace one LLVM function with another,
invalidating a pointer stored in debug info metadata entry for this function.
To fix this, we collect debug info descriptors for functions before
running a DeadArgumentElimination pass and "patch" pointers in metadata nodes
if we replace a function.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165490 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
We use the enums to query whether an Attributes object has that attribute. The
opaque layer is responsible for knowing where that specific attribute is stored.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165488 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Thanks to Benjamin for the raw test case. This one took about 50 times
longer to reduce than to fix. =/
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This class is used by LSR and a number of places in the codegen.
This is the first step in de-coupling LSR from TLI, and creating
a new interface in between them.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165455 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
When the CFG contains a loop with multiple entry blocks, the traces
computed by MachineTraceMetrics don't always have the same nice
properties. Loop back-edges are normally excluded from traces, but
MachineLoopInfo doesn't recognize loops with multiple entry blocks, so
those back-edges may be included.
Avoid asserting when that happens by adding an isEarlierInSameTrace()
function that accurately determines if a dominating block is part of the
same trace AND is above the currrent block in the trace.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165434 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Start using the AttributesImpl object to hold the value of the attributes. All
queries go through the interfaces now.
This has one unfortunate consequence. I needed to move the AttributesImpl.h file
into include/llvm. But this is only temporary! Otherwise, the changes needed to
support this would be too large.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165433 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Vector compare using altivec 'vcmpxxx' instructions have as third argument
a vector register instead of CR one, different from integer and float-point
compares. This leads to a failure in code generation, where 'SelectSETCC'
expects a DAG with a CR register and gets vector register instead.
This patch changes the behavior by just returning a DAG with the
vector compare instruction based on the type. The patch also adds a testcase
for all vector types llvm defines.
It also included a fix on signed 5-bits predicates printing, where
signed values were not handled correctly as signed (char are unsigned by
default for PowerPC). This generates 'vspltisw' (vector splat)
instruction with SIM out of range.
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Without this change, when the estimated cost for inlining a function with
an "alwaysinline" attribute was lower than the inlining threshold, the
getInlineCost function was returning that estimated cost rather than the
special InlineCost::AlwaysInlineCost value. That is fine in the normal
inlining case, but it can fail when the inliner considers the opportunity
cost of inlining into an internal or linkonce-odr function. It may decide
not to inline the always-inline function in that case. The fix here is just
to make getInlineCost always return the special value for always-inline
functions. I ran into this building clang with libc++. Tablegen failed to
link because of an always-inline function that was not inlined. I have been
unable to reduce the testcase down to a reasonable size.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165367 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
into separate versions for the Darwin and 64-bit SVR4 ABIs. This will
facilitate doing more major surgery on the 64-bit SVR4 ABI in the near future.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165336 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
have an alloca or a parameter, since then the alloca test should make sense
to readers, while before it probably appears too specific. No functionality
change.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165306 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
The internal representation of the Attributes class will be opaque. All of the
query methods will need to query the opaque class. Therefore, these methods need
to be out-of-line.
No functionality change intended.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165305 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Use isa<> or cast<> when semantically that is what is happening. Also
some trivial "style" cleanups at fix sites.
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This is a mechanical change of dynamic_cast<> to dyn_cast<>. A number of
these uses are actually more like isa<> or cast<>, and will be changed
to the semanticaly appropriate one in a future patch.
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are in fact identity operations. We detect these and kill their
partitions so that even splitting is unaffected by them. This is
particularly important because Clang relies on emitting identity memcpy
operations for struct copies, and these fold away to constants very
often after inlining.
Fixes the last big performance FIXME I have on my plate.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165285 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
the rewrite visitor to make the fact that the speculation is completely
independent a bit more clear.
I promise that this is just a cut/paste of the one visitor and adding
the annonymous namespace wrappings. The diff may look completely
preposterous, it does in git for some reason.
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Make sure functions located in user specified text sections (via the
section attribute) are located together with the default text sections.
Otherwise, for large object files, the relocations for call instructions
are more likely to be out of range. This becomes even more likely in the
presence of LTO.
rdar://12402636
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a) frame setup instructions define the prologue
b) we shouldn't change our location mid-stream
Add a test to make sure that the stack adjustment stays within
the prologue.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165250 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
- Add 'HwEncoding' for X86 registers and call getEncodingValue() to
retrieve their encoding values.
- This's the first step to adopt new scheme. Furthur revising is onging.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165241 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
"Instruction 'foo' has no tokens" errors during llvm-tblgen
-gen-asm-matcher attempts. At this time, the added
tokens are "#comment" style rather than the actual mnemonic. This will
be revisited once the rest of the base asmparser bits get straightened
out for ppc64-elf-linux.
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We conservatively only check the first use to avoid walking long use chains.
This catches the common case of having both a load and a store to a pointer
supplied by a PHI node.
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cpyDest can be mutated in some cases, which would then cause a crash later if
indeed the memory was underaligned. This brought down several buildbots, so
I guess the underaligned case is much more common than I thought!
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Currently, we re-visit allocas when something changes about the way they
might be *split* to allow better scalarization to take place. However,
we weren't handling the case when the *promotion* is what would change
the behavior of SROA. When an address derived from an alloca is stored
into another alloca, we consider the first to have escaped. If the
second is ever promoted to an SSA value, we will suddenly be able to run
the SROA pass on the first alloca.
This patch adds explicit support for this form if iteration. When we
detect a store of a pointer derived from an alloca, we flag the
underlying alloca for reprocessing after promotion. The logic works hard
to only do this when there is definitely going to be promotion and it
might remove impediments to the analysis of the alloca.
Thanks to Nick for the great test case and Benjamin for some sanity
check review.
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was less aligned than the old. In the testcase this results in an overaligned
memset: the memset alignment was correct for the original memory but is too much
for the new memory. Fix this by either increasing the alignment of the new
memory or bailing out if that isn't possible. Should fix the gcc-4.7 self-host
buildbot failure.
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Sorry for this being broken so long. =/
As part of this, switch all of the existing tests to be Little Endian,
which is the behavior I was asserting in them anyways! Add in a new
big-endian test that checks the interesting behavior there.
Another part of this is to tighten the rules abotu when we perform the
full-integer promotion. This logic now rejects cases where there fully
promoted integer is a non-multiple-of-8 bitwidth or cases where the
loads or stores touch bits which are in the allocated space of the
alloca but are not loaded or stored when accessing the integer. Sadly,
these aren't really observable today as the rest of the pass will
already ensure the invariants hold. However, the latter situation is
likely to become a potential concern in the future.
Thanks to Benjamin and Duncan for early review of this patch. I'm still
looking into whether there are further endianness issues, please let me
know if anyone sees BE failures persisting past this.
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macro instruction (li) in the assembler.
We have identified three possible expansions depending on
the size of immediate operand:
1) for 0 ≤ j ≤ 65535.
li d,j =>
ori d,$zero,j
2) for −32768 ≤ j < 0.
li d,j =>
addiu d,$zero,j
3) for any other value of j that is representable as a 32-bit integer.
li d,j =>
lui d,hi16(j)
ori d,d,lo16(j)
All of the above have been implemented in ths patch.
Contributer: Vladimir Medic
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.set option
The patch implements following options
at - lets the assembler use the $at register for macros,
but generates warnings if the source program uses $at
noat - let source programs use $at without issuingwarnings.
noreorder - prevents the assembler from reordering machine
language instructions.
nomacro - causes the assembler to print a warning whenever
an assembler operation generates more than one
machine language instruction.
macro - lets the assembler generate multiple machine instructions
from a single assembler instruction
reorder - lets the assembler reorder machine language
instructions to improve performance
The above variants are parsed and their boolean values set or unset.
The code to actually use them will come later.
Following options are not implemented yet:
nomips16
nomicromips
move
nomove
Contributer: Vladimir Medic
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in the Intel syntax.
The MC layer supports emitting in the Intel syntax, but this would require the
inline assembly MachineInstr to be lowered to an MCInst before emission. This
is potential future work, but for now emitting directly from the MachineInstr
suffices.
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for the number of bytes in a particular instruction
to using
const MCInstrDesc &Desc = MCII.get(TmpInst.getOpcode());
Desc.getSize()
This is necessary with the advent of 16 bit instructions with
mips16 and micromips. It is also puts Mips in compliance with
the other targets for getting instruction size.
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In order to avoid rev-lock with Clang when moving to the new API, also
preserve the current API temporarily and insert a shim to implement the
new API in terms of the old.
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multiple stores with a single load. We create the wide loads and stores (and their chains)
before we remove the scalar loads and stores and fix the DAG chain. We attempted to merge
loads with a different chain. When that happened, the assumption that it is safe to RAUW
broke and a cycle was introduced.
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instruction (for Intel Atom) was not being done by Clang, because
the type context used by Clang is not the default context.
It fixes the problem by getting the global context types for each div/rem
instruction in order to compare them against the types in the BypassTypeMap.
Tests for this will be done as a separate patch to Clang.
Patch by Tyler Nowicki.
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is not profitable in many cases because modern processors perform multiple stores
in parallel and merging stores prior to merging requires extra work. We handle two main cases:
1. Store of multiple consecutive constants:
q->a = 3;
q->4 = 5;
In this case we store a single legal wide integer.
2. Store of multiple consecutive loads:
int a = p->a;
int b = p->b;
q->a = a;
q->b = b;
In this case we load/store either ilegal vector registers or legal wide integer registers.
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Corrects a problem whereby MCSchedModel was not being set up when
the CPU type was auto-detected.
Patch by Andy Zhang.
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a memcpy to reflect that '0' has a different meaning when applied to
a load or store. Now we correctly use underaligned loads and stores for
the test case added.
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necessary during rewriting. As part of this, fix a real think-o here
where we might have left off an alignment specification when the address
is in fact underaligned. I haven't come up with any way to trigger this,
as there is always some other factor that reduces the alignment, but it
certainly might have been an observable bug in some way I can't think
of. This also slightly changes the strategy for placing explicit
alignments on loads and stores to only do so when the alignment does not
match that required by the ABI. This causes a few redundant alignments
to go away from test cases.
I've also added a couple of tests that really push on the alignment that
we end up with on loads and stores. More to come here as I try to fix an
underlying bug I have conjectured and produced test cases for, although
it's not clear if this bug is the one currently hitting dragonegg's
gcc47 bootstrap.
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Enable the pass by default for targets that request it, and change the
-enable-early-ifcvt to the opposite -disable-early-ifcvt.
There are still some x86 regressions when enabling early if-conversion
because of the missing machine models. Disable the pass for x86 until
machine models are added.
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preserves the values of the relocated entries, unlikely remove_if. This
allows walking them and erasing them.
Also flesh out the predicate we are using for this to support the
various constraints actually imposed on a UnaryPredicate -- without this
we can't compose it with std::not1.
Thanks to Sean Silva for the review here and noticing the issue with
std::remove_if.
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X86DAGToDAGISel::PreprocessISelDAG(), isel is moving load inside
callseq_start / callseq_end so it can be folded into a call. This can
create a cycle in the DAG when the call is glued to a copytoreg. We
have been lucky this hasn't caused too many issues because the pre-ra
scheduler has special handling of call sequences. However, it has
caused a crash in a specific tailcall case.
rdar://12393897
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If the code is generated as assembler, this transformation does not occur assuming that it will occur later in the assembler.
This code was originally called from MipsAsmPrinter.cpp and we needed to check for OutStreamer.hasRawTextSupport(). This was not a good place for it and has been moved to MCTargetDesc/MipsMCCodeEmitter.cpp where both direct object and the assembler use it it automagically.
The test cases have been checked in for a number of weeks now.
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scheduled for processing on the worklist eventually gets deleted while
we are processing another alloca, fixing the original test case in
PR13990.
To facilitate this, add a remove_if helper to the SetVector abstraction.
It's not easy to use the standard abstractions for this because of the
specifics of SetVectors types and implementation.
Finally, a nice small test case is included. Thanks to Benjamin for the
fantastic reduced test case here! All I had to do was delete some empty
basic blocks!
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Reserved register live ranges look like a set of dead defs - any uses of
reserved registers are ignored.
Instead of skipping the updating of reserved register operands entirely,
just ignore the use operands and treat the def operands normally.
No test case, handleMove() is not commonly used yet.
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of operand is specific to MS-style inline assembly and should not be generated
when parsing normal assembly.
The purpose of the wildcard operands are to allow the AsmParser to match
multiple instructions (i.e., MCInsts) to a given ms-style asm statement. For
the time being the matcher just returns the first match. This patch only
implements wildcard matches for memory operands. Support for register
wildcards will be added in the near future.
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JoinVals::pruneValues() calls LIS->pruneValue() to avoid conflicts when
overlapping two different values. This produces a set of live range end
points that are used to reconstruct the live range (with SSA update)
after joining the two registers.
When a value is pruned twice, the set of end points was insufficient:
v1 = DEF
v1 = REPLACE1
v1 = REPLACE2
KILL v1
The end point at KILL would only reconstruct the live range from
REPLACE2 to KILL, leaving the range REPLACE1-REPLACE2 dead.
Add REPLACE2 as an end point in this case so the full live range is
reconstructed.
This fixes PR13999.
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We require that the indices into the use lists are stable in order to
build fast lookup tables to locate a particular partition use from an
operand of a PHI or select. This is (obviously in hind sight)
incompatible with erasing elements from the array. Really, we don't want
to erase anyways. It is expensive, and a rare operation. Instead, simply
weaken the contract of the PartitionUse structure to allow null Use
pointers to represent dead uses. Now we can clear out the pointer to
mark things as dead, and all it requires is adding some 'continue'
checks to the various loops.
I'm still reducing a test case for this, as the test case I have is
huge. I think this one I can get a nice test case for though, as it was
much more deterministic.
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This adds 'elf' as a recognized target triple environment value and overrides the default generated object format on Windows platforms if that value is present. This patch also enables MCJIT tests on Windows using the new environment value.
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being separate was that it can grow the use list. As a consequence, we
can't use the iterator-pair interface, we need an index based interface.
Expose such an interface from the AllocaPartitioning, and use it in the
speculator.
This should at least fix a use-after-free bug found by Duncan, and may
fix some of the other crashers.
I don't have a nice deterministic test case yet, but if I get a good
one, I'll add it.
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the add/sub case since in the case of multiplication you also have to check that
the operation in the larger type did not overflow.
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map constraints and MCInst operands to inline asm operands. This replaces the
getMCInstOperandNum() function.
The logic to determine the constraints are not in place, so we still default to
a register constraint (i.e., "r"). Also, we no longer build the MCInst but
rather return just the opcode to get the MCInstrDesc.
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The target backend can support data-in-code load commands even when
the assembler doesn't, or vice-versa. Allow targets to opt-in for
direct-to-object.
PR13973.
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Reduces runtime of i386-large-relocations.s by 10x in Release builds, even more
in Debug+Asserts builds.
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alignment requirements of the new alloca. As one consequence which was
reported as a bug by Duncan, we overaligned memcpy calls to ranges of
allocas after they were rewritten to types with lower alignment
requirements. Other consquences are possible, but I don't have any test
cases for them.
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could probably be factored still further to hoist this logic into
a generic helper, but currently I don't have particularly clean ideas
about how to handle that.
This at least allows us to drop custom load rewriting from the
speculation logic, which in turn allows the existing load rewriting
logic to fire. In theory, this could enable vector promotion or other
tricks after speculation occurs, but I've not dug into such issues. This
is primarily just cleaning up the factoring of the code and the
resulting logic.
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a pair of instructions, one for the used pointer and the second for the
user. This simplifies the representation and also makes it more dense.
This was noticed because of the miscompile in PR13926. In that case, we
were running up against a fundamental "bad idea" in the speculation of
PHI and select instructions: the speculation and rewriting are
interleaved, which requires phi speculation to also perform load
rewriting! This is bad, and causes us to miss opportunities to do (for
example) vector rewriting only exposed after PHI speculation, etc etc.
It also, in the old system, required us to insert *new* load uses into
the current partition's use list, which would then be ignored during
rewriting because we had already extracted an end iterator for the use
list. The appending behavior (and much of the other oddities) stem from
the strange de-duplication strategy in the PartitionUse builder.
Amusingly, all this went without notice for so long because it could
only be triggered by having *different* GEPs into the same partition of
the same alloca, where both different GEPs were operands of a single
PHI, and where the GEP which was not encountered first also had multiple
uses within that same PHI node... Hence the insane steps required to
reproduce.
So, step one in fixing this fundamental bad idea is to make the
PartitionUse actually contain a Use*, and to make the builder do proper
deduplication instead of funky de-duplication. This is enough to remove
the appending behavior, and fix the miscompile in PR13926, but there is
more work to be done here. Subsequent commits will lift the speculation
into its own visitor. It'll be a useful step toward potentially
extracting all of the speculation logic into a generic utility
transform.
The existing PHI test case for repeated operands has been made more
extreme to catch even these issues. This test case, run through the old
pass, will exactly reproduce the miscompile from PR13926. ;] We were so
close here!
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source of false positives due to globals being declared in a header with some
kind of incomplete (small) type, but the actual definition being bigger.
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because moden processos can store multiple values in parallel, and preparing the consecutive store requires
some work. We only handle these cases:
1. Consecutive stores where the values and consecutive loads. For example:
int a = p->a;
int b = p->b;
q->a = a;
q->b = b;
2. Consecutive stores where the values are constants. Foe example:
q->a = 4;
q->b = 5;
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alignment could lose it due to the alloca type moving down to a much
smaller alignment guarantee.
Now SROA will actively compute a proper alignment, factoring the target
data, any explicit alignment, and the offset within the struct. This
will in some cases lower the alignment requirements, but when we lower
them below those of the type, we drop the alignment entirely to give
freedom to the code generator to align it however is convenient.
Thanks to Duncan for the lovely test case that pinned this down. =]
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buildbots. Original commit message:
A DAGCombine optimization for merging consecutive stores. This optimization is not profitable in many cases
because moden processos can store multiple values in parallel, and preparing the consecutive store requires
some work. We only handle these cases:
1. Consecutive stores where the values and consecutive loads. For example:
int a = p->a;
int b = p->b;
q->a = a;
q->b = b;
2. Consecutive stores where the values are constants. Foe example:
q->a = 4;
q->b = 5;
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because moden processos can store multiple values in parallel, and preparing the consecutive store requires
some work. We only handle these cases:
1. Consecutive stores where the values and consecutive loads. For example:
int a = p->a;
int b = p->b;
q->a = a;
q->b = b;
2. Consecutive stores where the values are constants. Foe example:
q->a = 4;
q->b = 5;
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2. As part of this, added assembly format FEXT_RI16_SP_explicit_ins and
moved other lines for FEXT_RI16 formats to be in the right place in the code.
3. Added mayLoad and mayStore assignements for the load/store instructions added and for ones already there that did not have this assignment.
4. Another patch will deal with the problem of load/store byte/halfword to the stack. This is a particular Mips16 problem.
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The new coalescer can turn a full virtual register definition into a
partial redef by merging another value into an unused vector lane.
Make sure to clear the <read-undef> flag on such defs.
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The fix is obvious and the only test case I have is horrible, so I am
not including it. The problem shows up when self-hosting clang on i386
with -new-coalescer enabled.
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If the width is very large it gets truncated from uint64_t to uint32_t when
passed to TD->fitsInLegalInteger. The truncated value can fit in a register.
This manifested in massive memory usage or crashes (PR13946).
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This is a preliminary step towards ELF support; currently ARMFastISel hasn't
been used for ELF object files yet.
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The hasFnAttr method has been replaced by querying the Attributes explicitly. No
intended functionality change.
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If the offset is more than 24-bits, it won't fit in a scattered
relocation offset field, so we fall back to using a non-scattered
relocation.
rdar://12358909
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This opaque class will contain all of the attributes. All attribute queries will
go through this object. This object will also be uniqued in the LLVMContext.
Currently not used, so no implementation change.
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teach the callgraph logic to not create callgraph edges to intrinsics for invoke
instructions; it already skips this for call instructions. Fixes PR13903.
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- Put statistics in alphabetical order
- Don't use getZextValue when building TableInt, just use APInts
- Introduce Create{Z,S}ExtOrTrunc in IRBuilder.
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contrived for these yet, as I spotted them by inspection and the test
cases are a bit more tricky to phrase.
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alignment guarantees attached, re-compute the alignment so that we
consider offsets which impact alignment.
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rewriter in SROA to carry a proper alignment. This involves
interrogating various sources of alignment, etc. This is a more complete
and principled fix to PR13920 as well as related bugs pointed out by Eli
in review and by inspection in the area.
Also by inspection fix the integer and vector promotion paths to create
aligned loads and stores. I still need to work up test cases for
these... Sorry for the delay, they were found purely by inspection.
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tables in bitmaps when they fit in a target-legal register.
This saves some space, and it also allows for building tables that would
otherwise be deemed too sparse.
One interesting case that this hits is example 7 from
http://blog.regehr.org/archives/320. We currently generate good code
for this when lowering the switch to the selection DAG: we build a
bitmask to decide whether to jump to one block or the other. My patch
will result in the same bitmask, but it removes the need for the jump,
as the return value can just be retrieved from the mask.
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For example, under a Linux chroot, /proc/ might not be mounted.
Therefor, we test if this file exist. If it is the case, use it (the current
behavior). Otherwise, we fall back to the detection used by *BSD.
The issue has been reported initially on the Debian bug tracker:
http://bugs.debian.org/674588
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This should really, really fix PR13916. For real this time. The
underlying bug is... a bit more subtle than I had imagined.
The setup is a code pattern that leads to an @llvm.memcpy call with two
equal pointers to an alloca in the source and dest. Now, not any pattern
will do. The alloca needs to be formed just so, and both pointers should
be wrapped in different bitcasts etc. When this precise pattern hits,
a funny sequence of events transpires. First, we correctly detect the
potential for overlap, and correctly optimize the memcpy. The first
time. However, we do simplify the set of users of the alloca, and that
causes us to run the alloca back through the SROA pass in case there are
knock-on simplifications. At this point, a curious thing has happened.
If we happen to have an i8 alloca, we have direct i8 pointer values. So
we don't bother creating a cast, we rewrite the arguments to the memcpy
to dircetly refer to the alloca.
Now, in an unrelated area of the pass, we have clever logic which
ensures that when visiting each User of a particular pointer derived
from an alloca, we only visit that User once, and directly inspect all
of its operands which refer to that particular pointer value. However,
the mechanism used to detect memcpy's with the potential to overlap
relied upon getting visited once per *Use*, not once per *User*. This is
always true *unless* the same exact value is both source and dest. It
turns out that almost nothing actually produces that pattern though.
We can hand craft test cases that more directly test this behavior of
course, and those are included. Also, note that there is a significant
missed optimization here -- we prove in many cases that there is
a non-volatile memcpy call with identical source and dest addresses. We
shouldn't prevent splitting the alloca in that case, and in fact we
should just remove such memcpy calls eagerly. I'll address that in
a subsequent commit.
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scalar-to-vector conversion that we cannot handle. For instance, when an invalid
constraint is used in an inline asm statement.
<rdar://problem/12284092>
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- Instead of embedding 'lock' into each mnemonic of atomic
instructions except 'xchg', we teach X86 assembly printer to output 'lock'
prefix similar to or consistent with code emitter.
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scalar-to-vector conversion that we cannot handle. For instance, when an invalid
constraint is used in an inline asm statement.
<rdar://problem/12284092>
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only a missed optimization opportunity if the store is over-aligned, but a
miscompile if the store's new type has a higher natural alignment than the
memcpy did. Fixes PR13920!
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reason we were getting two of the same alloca is because of a memmove/memcpy
which had the same alloca in both the src and dest. Now we detect that case
directly. This has the same testcase as before, but fixes a clang test
CodeGenObjC/exceptions.m which runs clang -O2.
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Chandler, it's not obvious that it's okay that this alloca gets into the list
twice to begin with. Please review and see whether this is the fix you really
want, but I wanted to get a fix checked in quickly.
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Provide interface in TargetLowering to set or get the minimum number of basic
blocks whereby jump tables are generated for switch statements rather than an
if sequence.
getMinimumJumpTableEntries() defaults to 4.
setMinimumJumpTableEntries() allows target configuration.
This patch changes the default for the Hexagon architecture to 5
as it improves performance on some benchmarks.
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When a BL/BLX references a symbol in the same translation unit that is
out of range, use an external relocation. The linker will use this to
generate a branch island rather than a direct reference, allowing the
relocation to resolve correctly.
rdar://12359919
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to chains or cycles between PHIs and/or selects. Also add a couple of
really nice test cases reduced from Kostya's reports in PR13905 and
PR13906. Both are fixed by this patch.
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Previously it was only be able to detect problems if the pointer was a numerical
value (eg inttoptr i32 1 to i32*), but not if it was an alloca or globa. The
reason was the use of ComputeMaskedBits: imagine you have "alloca i8, align 2",
and ask ComputeMaskedBits what it knows about the bits of the alloca pointer.
It can tell you that the bottom bit is known zero (due to align 2) but it can't
tell you that bit 1 is known one. That's because the address could be an even
multiple of 2 rather than an odd multiple, eg it might be a multiple of 4. Thus
trying to use KnownOne is ineffective in the case of an alloca as it will never
have any bits set. Instead look explicitly for constant offsets from allocas
and globals.
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David (I think), but I would appreciate folks verifying that this fixes
the big crasher.
I'm still working on a reduced test case, but because this was causing
problems I wanted to get the fix checked in quickly.
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Even out-of-line jump tables can be in the code section, so mark them
as data-regions for those targets which support the directives.
rdar://12362871&12362974
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store when handling byval arguments. Thus preventing reordering of the store
with load with post-RA scheduler.
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integer promotion analogous to vector promotion. When there is an
integer alloca being accessed both as its integer type and as a narrower
integer type, promote the narrower access to "insert" and "extract" the
smaller integer from the larger one, and make the integer alloca
a candidate for promotion.
In the new formulation, we don't care about target legal integer or use
thresholds to control things. Instead, we only perform this promotion to
an integer type which the frontend has already emitted a load or store
for. This bounds the scope and prevents optimization passes from
coalescing larger and larger entities into a single integer.
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across the uses of the alloca. It's entirely possible for negative
numbers to come up here, and in some rare cases simply doing the 2's
complement arithmetic isn't the correct decision. Notably, we can't zext
the index of the GEP. The definition of GEP is that these offsets are
sign extended or truncated to the size of the pointer, and then wrapping
2's complement arithmetic used.
This patch fixes an issue that comes up with *no* input from the
buildbots or bootstrap afaict. The only place where it manifested,
disturbingly, is Clang's own regression test suite. A reduced and
targeted collection of tests are added to cope with this. Note that I've
tried to pin down the potential cases of overflow, but may have missed
some cases. I've tried to add a few cases to test this, but its hard
because LLVM has quite limited support for >64bit constructs.
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As before with load instructions, oddities like "asr #32", "rrx" could
be printed incorrectly.
Patch by Chris Lidbury.
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This patch fixes load/store instructions to handle less common cases
like "asr #32", "rrx" properly throughout the MC layer.
Patch by Chris Lidbury.
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selects with a constant condition. This resulted in the operands
remaining live through the SROA rewriter. Most of the time, this just
caused some dead allocas to persist and get zapped by later passes, but
in one case found by Joerg, it caused a crash when we tried to *promote*
the alloca despite it having this dead use. We already have the
mechanisms in place to handle this, just wire select up to them.
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whether or not we want to print out backtrace information. Useful
for libraries that don't need backtrace information on a crash.
rdar://11844710
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care about it being an argument variable so that we can decide
that captured block and lambda vars that don't happen to
be arguments could be an argument pointer.
Add the object pointer for one case onto the subprogram die.
rdar://12001329
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because LiveStackAnalysis was not preserved by VirtRegWriter. This caused
big stack usage regression in some cases.
rdar://12340383
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We rely on it when doing the transforms. This can happen when there is an
indirectbr in the loop.
Fixes PR13892.
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We inserted a placeholder that was never replaced because the function was
already visited. Assert that all placeholders have been resolved when tearing
down the bitcode reader.
Fixes PR13895.
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- Rewirte most atomic instructions in templates for both better
maintenance and future extensions, such as HLE in TSX.
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The expression based expansion too often results in IR level optimizations
splitting the intermediate values into separate basic blocks, preventing
the formation of the VBSL instruction as the code author intended. In
particular, LICM would often hoist part of the computation out of a loop.
rdar://11011471
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A PHI can't create interference on its own. If two live ranges interfere
at a PHI, they must also interfere when leaving one of the PHI
predecessors.
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The old-fashioned many-to-one value mapping doesn't always work when
merging vector lanes. A value can map to multiple different values, and
it can even be necessary to insert new PHIs.
When a value number is defined by a copy from a value number that
required SSa update, include the live range of the copied value number
in the SSA update as well. It is not necessarily a copy of the original
value number any longer.
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We already have HoistThenElseCodeToIf, this patch implements
SinkThenElseCodeToEnd. When END block has only two predecessors and each
predecessor terminates with unconditional branches, we compare instructions in
IF and ELSE blocks backwards and check whether we can sink the common
instructions down.
rdar://12191395
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