be the first encoded as the first feature. It then uses the CPU name to look up
features / scheduling itineray even though clients know full well the CPU name
being used to query these properties.
The fix is to just have the clients explictly pass the CPU name!
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@134127 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Some x86-32 calls pop values off the stack, and we need to readjust the
stack pointer after the call. This happens when ADJCALLSTACKUP is
eliminated.
It could happen that spill code was inserted between the CALL and
ADJCALLSTACKUP instructions, and we would compute wrong stack pointer
offsets for those frame index references.
Fix this by inserting the stack pointer adjustment immediately after the
call instead of where the ADJCALLSTACKUP instruction was erased.
I don't have a test case since we don't currently insert code in that
position. We will soon, though. I am testing a regalloc patch that
didn't work on Linux because of this.
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sink them into MC layer.
- Added MCInstrInfo, which captures the tablegen generated static data. Chang
TargetInstrInfo so it's based off MCInstrInfo.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@134021 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Drop the FpMov instructions, use plain COPY instead.
Drop the FpSET/GET instruction for accessing fixed stack positions.
Instead use normal COPY to/from ST registers around inline assembly, and
provide a single new FpPOP_RETVAL instruction that can access the return
value(s) from a call. This is still necessary since you cannot tell from
the CALL instruction alone if it returns anything on the FP stack. Teach
fast isel to use this.
This provides a much more robust way of handling fixed stack registers -
we can tolerate arbitrary FP stack instructions inserted around calls
and inline assembly. Live range splitting could sometimes break x87 code
by inserting spill code in unfortunate places.
As a bonus we handle floating point inline assembly correctly now.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@134018 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This allows for more live scratch registers which is needed to handle
live ST registers before return and inline asm instructions.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@133903 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Move the target-specific RecordRelocation logic out of the generic MC
MachObjectWriter and into the target-specific object writers. This allows
nuking quite a bit of target knowledge from the supposedly target-independent
bits in lib/MC.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@133844 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
target machine from those that are only needed by codegen. The goal is to
sink the essential target description into MC layer so we can start building
MC based tools without needing to link in the entire codegen.
First step is to refactor TargetRegisterInfo. This patch added a base class
MCRegisterInfo which TargetRegisterInfo is derived from. Changed TableGen to
separate register description from the rest of the stuff.
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to emit "movd" across the board to continue supporting a Darwin assembler bug.
This is the reincarnation of r133452.
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This simplifies many of the target description files since it is common
for register classes to be related or contain sequences of numbered
registers.
I have verified that this doesn't change the files generated by TableGen
for ARM and X86. It alters the allocation order of MBlaze GPR and Mips
FGR32 registers, but I believe the change is benign.
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optimizations when emitting calls to the function; instead those calls may
use faster relocations which require the function to be immediately resolved
upon loading the dynamic object featuring the call. This is useful when it
is known that the function will be called frequently and pervasively and
therefore there is no merit in delaying binding of the function.
Currently only implemented for x86-64, where it turns into a call through
the global offset table.
Patch by Dan Gohman, who assures me that he's going to add LangRef documentation
for this once it's committed.
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we try to branch to them.
Before we were creating successor lists with duplicated entries. Fixing that
found a bug in isBlockOnlyReachableByFallthrough that would causes it to
return the wrong answer for
-----------
...
jne foo
jmp bar
foo:
----------
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@132882 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
functionality change.
Later on, we'll use the flag to emit SEH pseudo-ops that describe how the
call frame was built.
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memcpy/memset symbol doesn't get marked up correctly in PIC modes otherwise.
Should fix llvm-x86_64-linux-checks buildbot. Followup to r132864.
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The register allocators automatically filter out reserved registers and
place the callee saved registers last in the allocation order, so custom
methods are no longer necessary just for that.
Some targets still use custom allocation orders:
ARM/Thumb: The high registers are removed from GPR in thumb mode. The
NEON allocation orders prefer to use non-VFP2 registers first.
X86: The GR8 classes omit AH-DH in x86-64 mode to avoid REX trouble.
SystemZ: Some of the allocation orders are omitting R12 aliases without
explanation. I don't understand this target well enough to fix that. It
looks like all the boilerplate could be removed by reserving the right
registers.
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floating-point comparison, generate a mask of 0s or 1s, and generally
DTRT with NaNs. Only profitable when the user wants a materialized 0
or 1 at runtime. rdar://problem/5993888
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Add TargetRegisterInfo::hasSubClassEq and use it to check for compatible
register classes instead of trying to list all register classes in
X86's getLoadStoreRegOpcode.
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same dwarf number. This will be used for creating a dwarf number to register
mapping.
The only case that needs this so far is the XMM/YMM registers that unfortunately
do have the same numbers.
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was saying that the matching superregister class of GR32_NOREX in GR64_NOREX_NOSP
is GR64_NOREX, which drops the NOSP constraint. This fixes PR10032.
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The register allocators know to filter reserved registers from the allocation
orders, so we don't need all of this boilerplate.
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crc32.[8|16|32] have been renamed to .crc32.32.[8|16|32] and
crc64.[8|16|32] have been renamed to .crc32.64.[8|64].
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The practical effects here are that x86-64 fast-isel can now handle trunc from i8 to i1, and ARM fast-isel can handle many more constructs involving integers narrower than 32 bits (including loads, stores, and many integer casts).
rdar://9437928 .
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LTO friendly as we can now correctly merge files compiled with or without
-fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
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scheme uses internally. Implement it for x86 (the only architecture that LLVM
supports for which this matters right now).
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non-zero.
- Teach X86 cmov optimization to eliminate the cmov from ctlz, cttz extension
when the source of X86ISD::BSR / X86ISD::BSF is proven to be non-zero.
rdar://9490949
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It is OK for B to be any GR8_ABCD_H superclass, the returned register class
doesn't have to map surjectively onto B.
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after folding ADD32ri to ADD32mi, so don't do that.
This only happens when the greedy register allocator gets itself in trouble and
spills %vreg9 here:
16L %vreg9<def> = MOVPC32r 0, %ESP<imp-use>; GR32:%vreg9
48L %vreg9<def> = ADD32ri %vreg9, <es:_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_>[TF=1], %EFLAGS<imp-def,dead>; GR32:%vreg9
That should never happen, the live range should be split instead.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@130625 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Currently the output should be almost identical to the one produced by CodeGen
to make the transition easier.
The only two differences I know of are:
* Some files get an extra advance loc of size 0. This will be fixed when
relaxations are enabled.
* The optimization of declaring an EH symbol as an external variable is not
implemented. This is a subset of adding the nounwind attribute, so we if really
this at -O0 we should probably do it at the IL level.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@130623 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
give it a bit more responsibility. Also implement it for MachO.
If hacked to use cfi, 32 bit MachO will produce
.cfi_personality 155, L___gxx_personality_v0$non_lazy_ptr
and 64 bit will produce
.cfi_presonality ___gxx_personality_v0
The general idea is that .cfi_personality gets passed the final symbol. It is
up to codegen to produce it if using indirect representation (like 32 bit
MachO), but it is up to MC to decide which relocations to create.
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The hook will be used by the register allocator when recomputing register
classes after removing constraints.
Thumb1 code doesn't allow anything larger than tGPR, and x86 needs to ensure
that the spill size doesn't change.
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This tends to happen a lot with bitfield code generated by clang. A simple example for x86_64 is
uint64_t foo(uint64_t x) { return (x&1) << 42; }
which used to compile into bloated code:
shlq $42, %rdi ## encoding: [0x48,0xc1,0xe7,0x2a]
movabsq $4398046511104, %rax ## encoding: [0x48,0xb8,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x04,0x00,0x00]
andq %rdi, %rax ## encoding: [0x48,0x21,0xf8]
ret ## encoding: [0xc3]
with this patch we can fold the immediate into the and:
andq $1, %rdi ## encoding: [0x48,0x83,0xe7,0x01]
movq %rdi, %rax ## encoding: [0x48,0x89,0xf8]
shlq $42, %rax ## encoding: [0x48,0xc1,0xe0,0x2a]
ret ## encoding: [0xc3]
It's possible to save another byte by using 'andl' instead of 'andq' but I currently see no way of doing
that without making this code even more complicated. See the TODOs in the code.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129990 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
On the x86-64 and thumb2 targets, some registers are more expensive to encode
than others in the same register class.
Add a CostPerUse field to the TableGen register description, and make it
available from TRI->getCostPerUse. This represents the cost of a REX prefix or a
32-bit instruction encoding required by choosing a high register.
Teach the greedy register allocator to prefer cheap registers for busy live
ranges (as indicated by spill weight).
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129864 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
llvm is built with unsigned chars where an immediate such as 0xff would be zero
extended to 64-bits, turning "cmp $0xff,%eax" into
"cmp $0xffffffffffffffff,%eax".
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129845 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
en-mass for C++ PODs. On my c++ test file, this cuts the fast isel rejects by 10x
and shrinks the generated .s file by 5%
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129755 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
when they are a truncate from something else. This eliminates fully half of all the
fastisel rejections on a test c++ file I'm working with, which should make a substantial
improvement for -O0 compile of c++ code.
This fixed rdar://9297003 - fast isel bails out on all functions taking bools
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129752 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Before we would bail out on i1 arguments all together, now we just bail on
non-constant ones. Also, we used to emit extraneous code. e.g. test12 was:
movb $0, %al
movzbl %al, %edi
callq _test12
and test13 was:
movb $0, %al
xorl %edi, %edi
movb %al, 7(%rsp)
callq _test13f
Now we get:
movl $0, %edi
callq _test12
and:
movl $0, %edi
callq _test13f
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129751 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
the generated FastISel. X86 doesn't need to generate code to match ADD16ri8
since ADD16ri will do just fine. This is a small codesize win in the generated
instruction selector.
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simplifying them and exposing more information to tblgen. It would be nice
if other target authors adopted this as well, particularly arm since it has fastisel.
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kind of predicate: one that is specific to imm nodes. The predicate function
specified here just checks an int64_t directly instead of messing around with
SDNode's. The virtue of this is that it means that fastisel and other things
can reason about these predicates.
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structure and fix some fixmes. We now have a TreePredicateFn class
that handles all of the decoding of these things. This is an internal
cleanup that has no impact on the code generated by tblgen.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129670 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2. implement rdar://9289501 - fast isel should fold trivial multiplies to shifts
3. teach tblgen to handle shift immediates that are different sizes than the
shifted operands, eliminating some code from the X86 fast isel backend.
4. Have FastISel::SelectBinaryOp use (the poorly named) FastEmit_ri_ function
instead of FastEmit_ri to simplify code.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129666 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
when we have a global variable base an an index. Instead, just give up on
folding the global variable.
Before we'd geenrate:
_test: ## @test
## BB#0:
movq _rtx_length@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax
leaq (%rax), %rax
addq %rdi, %rax
movzbl (%rax), %eax
ret
now we generate:
_test: ## @test
## BB#0:
movq _rtx_length@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax
movzbl (%rax,%rdi), %eax
ret
The difference is even more significant when there is a scale
involved.
This fixes rdar://9289558 - total fail with addr mode formation at -O0/x86-64
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129664 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
less trivial things) into a dummy lea. Before we generated:
_test: ## @test
movq _G@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax
leaq (%rax), %rax
ret
now we produce:
_test: ## @test
movq _G@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax
ret
This is part of rdar://9289558
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Change ELF systems to use CFI for producing the EH tables. This reduces the
size of the clang binary in Debug builds from 690MB to 679MB.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129571 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Now that we have a first-class way to represent unaligned loads, the unaligned
load intrinsics are superfluous.
First part of <rdar://problem/8460511>.
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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.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@129110 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Define most shift masks incrementally to reduce the redundant
hard-coding. Introduce new shift for the VEX flags to replace the
magic constant 32 in various places.
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I'm backing this out for the second time. It was supposed to be fixed by r128164, but the mingw self-host must be defeating the fix.
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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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not have native support for this operation (such as X86).
The legalized code uses two vector INT_TO_FP operations and is faster
than scalarizing.
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comparisons on x86. Essentially, the way this works is that SUB+SBB sets
the relevant flags the same way a double-width CMP would.
This is a substantial improvement over the generic lowering in LLVM. The output
is also shorter than the gcc-generated output; I haven't done any detailed
benchmarking, though.
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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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in the instruction tables and fixed a few bugs that
were causing decode conflicts. Rudimentary tests
are coming up in the next patch.
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instruction set. This code adds support for the VEX prefix
and for the YMM registers accessible on AVX-enabled
architectures. Instruction table support that enables AVX
instructions for the disassembler is in an upcoming patch.
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corresponding testcases back to the previous versions.
Fixes some performance regressions only seen on 32-bit.
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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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testcases accordingly. Some are currently xfailed and will be filed
as bugs to be fixed or understood.
Performance results:
roughly neutral on SPEC
some micro benchmarks in the llvm suite are up between 100 and 150%, only
a pair of regressions that are due to be investigated
john-the-ripper saw:
10% improvement in traditional DES
8% improvement in BSDI DES
59% improvement in FreeBSD MD5
67% improvement in OpenBSD Blowfish
14% improvement in LM DES
Small compile time impact.
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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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missing patterns for them.
Add a SIMD test subdirectory to hold tests for SIMD instruction
selection correctness and quality.
'
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and 256-bit forms. Because the number of elements in a vector
does not determine the vector type (4 elements could be v4f32 or
v4f64), pass the full type of the vector to decode routines.
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It improves Win64's prologue/epilogue but it would not affect ia32 and amd64 (lack of nonvolatile XMMs).
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In other words, do not keep track of argument's location. The debugger (gdb) is not prepared to see line table entries for arguments. For the debugger, "second" line table entry marks beginning of function body.
This requires some coordination with debugger to get this working.
- The debugger needs to be aware of prolog_end attribute attached with line table entries.
- The compiler needs to accurately mark prolog_end in line table entries (at -O0 and at -O1+)
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X86 instruction decode structure was being interpreted as
being in units of bits, although it is actually stored in
units of bytes.
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"dllimport" function must not be GlobalVariable, but Function. It is enough to check with GlobalValue.
test/CodeGen/X86/dll-linkage.ll is updated to check llc -O0.
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of a constant had a minor typo introduced when copying it from the book, which
caused it to favor negative approximations over positive approximations in many
cases. Positive approximations require fewer operations beyond the multiplication.
In the case of division by 3, we still generate code that is a single instruction
larger than GCC's code.
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since one needs to be a register operand. Just use movss instead of forcing
an operand into a register.
Fixes PR9239
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of testing for its presence at cmake time.
This way the build automatically regenerates the makefiles when a svn
update brings in a new sublibrary.
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(LLVMX86Utils.a) to break cyclic library dependencies between
LLVMX86CodeGen.a and LLVMX86AsmParser.a. Previously this code was in
a header file and marked static but AVX requires some additional
functionality here that won't be used by all clients. Since including
unused static functions causes a gcc compiler warning, keeping it as a
header would break builds that use -Werror. Putting this in its own
library solves both problems at once.
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No one uses *-mingw64. mingw-w64 is represented as {i686|x86_64}-w64-mingw32. In llvm side, i686 and x64 can be treated as similar way.
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have their low bits set to zero. This allows us to optimize
out explicit stack alignment code like in stack-align.ll:test4 when
it is redundant.
Doing this causes the code generator to start turning FI+cst into
FI|cst all over the place, which is general goodness (that is the
canonical form) except that various pieces of the code generator
don't handle OR aggressively. Fix this by introducing a new
SelectionDAG::isBaseWithConstantOffset predicate, and using it
in places that are looking for ADD(X,CST). The ARM backend in
particular was missing a lot of addressing mode folding opportunities
around OR.
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These are just FXSAVE and FXRSTOR with REX.W prefixes. These versions use
64-bit pointer values instead of 32-bit pointer values in the memory map they
dump and restore.
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anything but the simplest of cases, lower a 256-bit BUILD_VECTOR by
splitting it into 128-bit parts and recombining.
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This allows us to easily support 256-bit operations that don't have
native 256-bit support. This applies to integer operations, certain
types of shuffles and various othher things.
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infrastructure. This makes lowering 256-bit vectors to 128-bit
vectors simple when 256-bit vector support is not available.
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matching EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR to VEXTRACTF128 along with support routines
to examine and translate index values. VINSERTF128 comes next. With
these two in place we can begin supporting more AVX operations as
INSERT/EXTRACT can be used as a fallback when 256-bit support is not
available.
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Reversing the operands allows us to fold, but doesn't force us to. Also, at
this point the DAG is still being optimized, so the check for hasOneUse is not
very precise.
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prefix would be misinterpreted in some cases on 32-bit
x86 platforms. Thanks to Olivier Meurant for identifying
the bug.
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default implementation for x86, going through the stack in a similr
fashion to how the codegen implements BUILD_VECTOR. Eventually this
will get matched to VINSERTF128 if AVX is available.
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implementation of EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR for x86, going through the stack
in a similr fashion to how the codegen implements BUILD_VECTOR.
Eventually this will get matched to VEXTRACTF128 if AVX is available.
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clang's -Wuninitialized-experimental warning.
While these don't look like real bugs, clang's
-Wuninitialized-experimental analysis is stricter
than GCC's, and these fixes have the benefit
of being general nice cleanups.
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into and/shift would cause nodes to move around and a dangling pointer
to happen. The code tried to avoid this with a HandleSDNode, but
got the details wrong.
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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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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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The theory is it's still faster than a pair of movq / a quad of movl. This
will probably hurt older chips like P4 but should run faster on current
and future Intel processors. rdar://8817010
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etc. takes an option OptSize. If OptSize is true, it would return
the inline limit for functions with attribute OptSize.
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beginning of the "main" function. The assembler complains about the invalid
suffix for the 'call' instruction. The right instruction is "callq __main".
Patch by KS Sreeram!
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The analysis will be needed by both the greedy register allocator and the
X86FloatingPoint pass. It only needs to be computed once when the CFG doesn't
change.
This pass is very fast, usually showing up as 0.0% wall time.
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prologue and epilogue if the adjustment is 8. Similarly, use pushl / popl if
the adjustment is 4 in 32-bit mode.
In the epilogue, takes care to pop to a caller-saved register that's not live
at the exit (either return or tailcall instruction).
rdar://8771137
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This allows us to compile:
void test(char *s, int a) {
__builtin_memset(s, a, 15);
}
into 1 mul + 3 stores instead of 3 muls + 3 stores.
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