--- Reverse-merging r129235 into '.':
D test/Feature/bb_attrs.ll
U include/llvm/BasicBlock.h
U include/llvm/Bitcode/LLVMBitCodes.h
U lib/VMCore/AsmWriter.cpp
U lib/VMCore/BasicBlock.cpp
U lib/AsmParser/LLParser.cpp
U lib/AsmParser/LLLexer.cpp
U lib/AsmParser/LLToken.h
U lib/Bitcode/Reader/BitcodeReader.cpp
U lib/Bitcode/Writer/BitcodeWriter.cpp
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* Add a "landing pad" attribute to the BasicBlock.
* Modify the bitcode reader and writer to handle said attribute.
Later: The verifier will ensure that the landing pad attribute is used in the
appropriate manner. I.e., not applied to the entry block, and applied only to
basic blocks that are branched to via a `dispatch' instruction.
(This is a work-in-progress.)
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It is common for large live ranges to have few basic blocks with register uses
and many live-through blocks without any uses. This approach grows the Hopfield
network incrementally around the use blocks, completely avoiding checking
interference for some through blocks.
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Teach 32-bit section loading to use the Memory Manager interface, just like
the 64-bit loading does. Tidy up a few other things here and there.
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with the newer, cleaner model. It uses the IAPrinter class to hold the
information that is needed to match an instruction with its alias. This also
takes into account the available features of the platform.
There is one bit of ugliness. The way the logic determines if a pattern is
unique is O(N**2), which is gross. But in reality, the number of items it's
checking against isn't large. So while it's N**2, it shouldn't be a massive time
sink.
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induction variable. The preRA scheduler is unaware of induction vars,
so we look for potential "virtual register cycles" instead.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8946719> Bad scheduling prevents coalescing
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Start teaching the runtime Dyld interface to use the memory manager API
for allocating space. Rather than mapping directly into the MachO object,
we extract the payload for each object and copy it into a dedicated buffer
allocated via the memory manager. For now, just do Segment64, so this works
on x86_64, but not yet on ARM.
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developers can see if their driver changed any cl::Option's. The
current implementation isn't perfect but handles most kinds of
options. This is nice to have when decomposing the stages of
compilation and moving between different drivers. It's also a good
sanity check when comparing results produced by different command line
invocations that are expected to produce the comparable results.
Note: This is not an attempt to prolong the life of cl::Option. On the
contrary, it's a placeholder for a feature that must exist when
cl::Option is replaced by a more appropriate framework. A new
framework needs: a central option registry, dynamic name lookup,
non-global containers of option values (e.g. per-module,
per-function), *and* the ability to print options values and their defaults at
any point during compilation.
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This allows us to always keep the smaller slot for an instruction which is what
we want when a register has early clobber defines.
Drop the UsingInstrs set and the UsingBlocks map. They are no longer needed.
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inlined path for the common case.
Most basic blocks don't contain a call that may throw, so the last split point
os simply the first terminator.
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It needed to be moved closer to the setjmp statement, because the code directly
after the setjmp needs to know about values that are on the stack. Also, the
'bitcast' of the function context was causing a dead load. This wouldn't be too
horrible, except that at -O0 it wasn't optimized out, and because it wasn't
using the correct base pointer (if there is a VLA), it would try to access a
value from a garbage address.
<rdar://problem/9130540>
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The JITMemory manager references LLVM IR constructs directly, while the
runtime Dyld works at a lower level and can handle objects which may not
originate from LLVM IR. Introduce a new layer for the memory manager to
handle the interface between them. For the MCJIT, this layer will be almost
entirely simply a call-through w/ translation between the IR objects and
symbol names.
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after the given instruction; make sure to handle that case correctly.
(It's difficult to trigger; the included testcase involves a dead
block, but I don't think that's a requirement.)
While I'm here, get rid of the unnecessary warning about
SimplifyInstructionsInBlock, since it should work correctly as far as I know.
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When the greedy register allocator is splitting multiple global live ranges, it
tends to look at the same interference data many times. The InterferenceCache
class caches queries for unaltered LiveIntervalUnions.
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transformations in target-specific DAG combines without causing DAGCombiner to
delete the same node twice. If you know of a better way to avoid this (see my
next patch for an example), please let me know.
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StringMap was not properly updating NumTombstones after a clear or rehash.
This was not fatal until now because the table was growing faster than
NumTombstones could, but with the previous change of preventing infinite
growth of the table the invariant (NumItems + NumTombstones <= NumBuckets)
stopped being observed, causing infinite loops in certain situations.
Patch by José Fonseca!
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When the hash function uses object pointers all free entries eventually
become tombstones as they are used at least once, regardless of the size.
DenseMap cannot function with zero empty keys, so it double size to get
get ridof the tombstones.
However DenseMap never shrinks automatically unless it is cleared, so
the net result is that certain tables grow infinitely.
The solution is to make a fresh copy of the table without tombstones
instead of doubling size, by simply calling grow with the current size.
Patch by José Fonseca!
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The idea is, that if an ieee 754 float is divided by a power of two, we can
turn the division into a cheaper multiplication. This function sees if we can
get an exact multiplicative inverse for a divisor and returns it if possible.
This is the hard part of PR9587.
I tested many inputs against llvm-gcc's frotend implementation of this
optimization and didn't find any difference. However, floating point is the
land of weird edge cases, so any review would be appreciated.
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was lowering them to sext / uxt + mul instructions. Unfortunately the
optimization passes may hoist the extensions out of the loop and separate them.
When that happens, the long multiplication instructions can be broken into
several scalar instructions, causing significant performance issue.
Note the vmla and vmls intrinsics are not added back. Frontend will codegen them
as intrinsics vmull* + add / sub. Also note the isel optimizations for catching
mul + sext / zext are not changed either.
First part of rdar://8832507, rdar://9203134
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otool(1), this time with the needed fix for case sensitive file systems :) .
This is a work in progress as the interface for producing symbolic operands is
not done. But a hacked prototype using information from the object file's
relocation entiries and replacing immediate operands with MCExpr's has been
shown to work with no changes to the instrucion printer. These APIs will be
moved into a dynamic library at some point.
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Correctly terminate the range of register DBG_VALUEs when the register is
clobbered or when the basic block ends.
The code is now ready to deal with variables that are sometimes in a register
and sometimes on the stack. We just need to teach emitDebugLoc to say 'stack
slot'.
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This is a work in progress as the interface for producing symbolic operands is
not done. But a hacked prototype using information from the object file's
relocation entiries and replacing immediate operands with MCExpr's has been
shown to work with no changes to the instrucion printer. These APIs will be
moved into a dynamic library at some point.
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The MC asm lexer wasn't honoring a non-default (anything but ';') statement
separator. Fix that, and generalize a bit to support multi-character
statement separators.
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Move the dynamic linking functionality of the llvm-rtdyld program into an
ExecutionEngine support library. Update llvm-rtdyld to just load an object
file into memory, use the library to process it, then run the _main()
function, if one is found.
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the alias of an InstAlias instead of the thing being aliased. Because we need to
know the features that are valid for an InstAlias.
This is part of a work-in-progress.
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to have single return block (at least getting there) for optimizations. This
is general goodness but it would prevent some tailcall optimizations.
One specific case is code like this:
int f1(void);
int f2(void);
int f3(void);
int f4(void);
int f5(void);
int f6(void);
int foo(int x) {
switch(x) {
case 1: return f1();
case 2: return f2();
case 3: return f3();
case 4: return f4();
case 5: return f5();
case 6: return f6();
}
}
=>
LBB0_2: ## %sw.bb
callq _f1
popq %rbp
ret
LBB0_3: ## %sw.bb1
callq _f2
popq %rbp
ret
LBB0_4: ## %sw.bb3
callq _f3
popq %rbp
ret
This patch teaches codegenprep to duplicate returns when the return value
is a phi and where the phi operands are produced by tail calls followed by
an unconditional branch:
sw.bb7: ; preds = %entry
%call8 = tail call i32 @f5() nounwind
br label %return
sw.bb9: ; preds = %entry
%call10 = tail call i32 @f6() nounwind
br label %return
return:
%retval.0 = phi i32 [ %call10, %sw.bb9 ], [ %call8, %sw.bb7 ], ... [ 0, %entry ]
ret i32 %retval.0
This allows codegen to generate better code like this:
LBB0_2: ## %sw.bb
jmp _f1 ## TAILCALL
LBB0_3: ## %sw.bb1
jmp _f2 ## TAILCALL
LBB0_4: ## %sw.bb3
jmp _f3 ## TAILCALL
rdar://9147433
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Proof-of-concept code that code-gens a module to an in-memory MachO object.
This will be hooked up to a run-time dynamic linker library (see: llvm-rtdyld
for similarly conceptual work for that part) which will take the compiled
object and link it together with the rest of the system, providing back to the
JIT a table of available symbols which will be used to respond to the
getPointerTo*() queries.
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For example, on 32-bit architecture, don't promote all uses of the IV
to 64-bits just because one use is a 64-bit cast.
Alternate implementation of the patch by Arnaud de Grandmaison.
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SCEV may generate expressions composed of multiple pointers, which can
lead to invalid GEP expansion. Until we can teach SCEV to follow strict
pointer rules, make sure no bad GEPs creep into IR.
Fixes rdar://problem/9038671.
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I have convinced myself that it can only happen when a phi value dies. When it
happens, allocate new virtual registers for the components.
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rather than an int. Thankfully, this only causes LLVM to miss optimizations, not
generate incorrect code.
This just fixes the zext at the return. We still insert an i32 ZextAssert when
reading a function's arguments, but it is followed by a truncate and another i8
ZextAssert so it is not optimized.
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doesn't return, so just go back to using the old runtime function instead
of trying to use abort() when __builtin_unreachable (or an equivalent) isn't
supported.
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where none was before. Just don't declare it and hope it's declared
in every translation unit that needs it.
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properties.
Added the self-wrap flag for SCEV::AddRecExpr.
A slew of temporary FIXMEs indicate the intention of the no-self-wrap flag
without changing behavior in this revision.
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llvm-gcc-i386-linux-selfhost and llvm-x86_64-linux-checks buildbots.
The original log entry:
Remove optimization emitting a reference insted of label difference, since
it can create more relocations. Removed isBaseAddressKnownZero method,
because it is no longer used.
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It generates output that lools like
8 times line number info lost by Scalar Replacement of Aggregates (SSAUp)
1 times line number info lost by Simplify well-known library calls
12 times variable info lost by Jump Threading
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flexible.
If it returns a register class that's different from the input, then that's the
register class used for cross-register class copies.
If it returns a register class that's the same as the input, then no cross-
register class copies are needed (normal copies would do).
If it returns null, then it's not at all possible to copy registers of the
specified register class.
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the value splatted into every element. Extend this to getTrue and getFalse which
by providing new overloads that take Types that are either i1 or <N x i1>. Use
it in InstCombine to add vector support to some code, fixing PR8469!
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This is just very first approximation how the stuff should be done
(e.g. ARM-only for now). More to follow.
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This makes lookup slightly more expensive but it's worth it, unused
DenseMaps are common in LLVM code apparently.
1% speedup on clang -O3 bzip2.c
4% speedup on clang -O3 oggenc.c (Release build of clang on i386/linux)
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regs. This is the only change in this checkin that may affects the
default scheduler. With better register tracking and heuristics, it
doesn't make sense to artificially lower the register limit so much.
Added -sched-high-latency-cycles and X86InstrInfo::isHighLatencyDef to
give the scheduler a way to account for div and sqrt on targets that
don't have an itinerary. It is currently defaults to 10 (the actual
number doesn't matter much), but only takes effect on non-default
schedulers: list-hybrid and list-ilp.
Added several heuristics that can be individually disabled for the
non-default sched=list-ilp mode. This helps us determine how much
better we can do on a given benchmark than the default
scheduler. Certain compute intensive loops run much faster in this
mode with the right set of heuristics, and it doesn't seem to have
much negative impact elsewhere. Not all of the heuristics are needed,
but we still need to experiment to decide which should be disabled by
default for sched=list-ilp.
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Initially, slot indexes are quad-spaced. There is room for inserting up to 3
new instructions between the original instructions.
When we run out of indexes between two instructions, renumber locally using
double-spaced indexes. The original quad-spacing means that we catch up quickly,
and we only have to renumber a handful of instructions to get a monotonic
sequence. This is much faster than renumbering the whole function as we did
before.
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it. It's been assumed up til now that it would be in its immediate
successor. However, this isn't necessarily the case. It could be in one of its
successor's successors.
Modify the code to more thoroughly check for an 'eh.selector' call in
successors. It only looks at a successor if we get there as a result of an
unconditional branch.
Testcase ObjC/exceptions-4.m in r126968.
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and iprintf is available on the target. Currently iprintf is only
marked as being available on the XCore.
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This is much faster than using a pointer to a ManagedStatic object accessed with
a function call. The greedy register allocator is 5% faster overall just from
the SlotIndex default constructor savings.
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The SlotIndex created by the default construction does not represent a position
in the function, and it doesn't make sense to compare it to other indexes.
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uses.
The result produced by the streamer is used to give the linker more accurate
information and to add to llvm.compiler.used. The second improvement removes
the need for the user to add __attribute__((used)) to functions only used in
inline asm. The first one lets us build firefox with LTO on Darwin :-)
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This method could probably be used by LiveIntervalAnalysis::shrinkToUses, and
now it can use extendIntervalEndTo() which coalesces ranges.
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Use 8 bits from line number field to keep track of argument ordering while encoding debug info for an argument. That leaves 24 bit for line no, DebugLoc also allocates 24 bit for line numbers. If a function has more than 255 arguments then rest of the arguments will be ordered by llvm.dbg.* intrinsics' ordering in IR.
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a StringRef, for the benefit of clients that want the result as a
nul-terminated string. Clients that expect a StringRef will get one via
the implicit conversion.
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