integer to a (transitive) bitcast the alloca and if that integer
has the full size of the alloca, then it clobbers the whole thing.
Handle this by extracting pieces out of the stored integer and
filing them away in the SROA'd elements.
This triggers fairly frequently because the CFE uses integers to
pass small structs by value and the inliner exposes these. For
example, in kimwitu++, I see a bunch of these with i64 stores to
"%struct.std::pair<std::_Rb_tree_const_iterator<kc::impl_abstract_phylum*>,bool>"
In 176.gcc I see a few i32 stores to "%struct..0anon".
In the testcase, this is a difference between compiling test1 to:
_test1:
subl $12, %esp
movl 20(%esp), %eax
movl %eax, 4(%esp)
movl 16(%esp), %eax
movl %eax, (%esp)
movl (%esp), %eax
addl 4(%esp), %eax
addl $12, %esp
ret
vs:
_test1:
movl 8(%esp), %eax
addl 4(%esp), %eax
ret
The second half of this will be to handle loads of the same form.
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In fact this also deletes those with linkonce linkage,
however this is currently dead because for the moment
aliases aren't allowed to have this linkage type.
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the argument to be stored to an alloca by tracking uses
of the alloca. This occurs 4 times (out of 7121, 0.05%)
in MultiSource/Applications, so may not be worth it. On
the other hand, it is easy to do and fairly cheap. The
functions it helps are: W_addcom and W_addlit in spiff;
process_args (argv) in d (make_dparser); ercPixConcealIMB
in JM/ldecod.
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and clean recursive descent parser.
This change has a couple of ramifications:
1. The parser code is about 400 lines shorter (in what we maintain, not
including what is autogenerated).
2. The code should be significantly faster than the old code because we
don't have to work around bison's poor handling of datatypes with
ctors/dtors. This also makes the code much more resistant to memory
leaks.
3. We now get caret diagnostics from the .ll parser, woo.
4. The actual diagnostics emited from the parser are completely different
so a bunch of testcases had to be updated.
5. I now disallow "%ty = type opaque %ty = type i32". There was no good
reason to support this, it was just an accident of the old
implementation. I have no reason to think that anyone is actually using
this.
6. The syntax for sticking a global variable has changed to make it
unambiguous. I don't think anyone is depending on this since only clang
supports this and it is not solid yet, so I'm not worried about anything
breaking.
7. This gets rid of the last use of bison, and along with it the .cvs files.
I'll prune this from the makefiles as a subsequent commit.
There are a few minor cleanups that can be done after this commit (suggestions
welcome!) but this passes dejagnu testing and is ready for its time in the
limelight.
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reason. Two functions which mutually require each other to be nocapture
are not currently supported.
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functions that don't write can't leak a pointer except through
the return value, so a void readonly function is implicitly nocapture.
Test these, and add a test that verifies that f1 calling f2 with an
otherwise dead pointer gets both of them marked nocapture.
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to work out (in a very simplistic way) which function
arguments (pointer arguments only) are only dereferenced
and so do not escape. Mark such arguments 'nocapture'.
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constants, since doing so is irrelevant for aliasing
purposes. While this doesn't increase the total number
of functions marked readonly or readnone in MultiSource/
Applications (3089), it does result in 12 functions being
marked readnone rather than readonly.
Before:
readnone: 820
readonly: 2269
After:
readnone: 832
readonly: 2257
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nodes. This allows it to do fairly general phi insertion if a
load from a pointer global wants to be SRAd but the load is used
by (recursive) phi nodes. This fixes a pessimization on ppc
introduced by Load PRE.
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consistently for deleting branches. In addition to being slightly
more readable, this makes SimplifyCFG a bit better
about cleaning up after itself when it makes conditions unused.
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visited set before they are used. If used, their blocks need to be
added to the visited set so that subsequent queries don't use conflicting
pointer values in the cache result blocks.
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cleans up the generated code a bit. This should have the added benefit of
not randomly renaming functions/globals like my previous patch did. :)
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memdep keeps track of how PHIs affect the pointer in dep queries, which
allows it to eliminate the load in cases like rle-phi-translate.ll, which
basically end up being:
BB1:
X = load P
br BB3
BB2:
Y = load Q
br BB3
BB3:
R = phi [P] [Q]
load R
turning "load R" into a phi of X/Y. In addition to additional exposed
opportunities, this makes memdep safe in many cases that it wasn't before
(which is required for load PRE) and also makes it substantially more
efficient. For example, consider:
bb1: // has many predecessors.
P = some_operator()
load P
In this example, previously memdep would scan all the predecessors of BB1
to see if they had something that would mustalias P. In some cases (e.g.
test/Transforms/GVN/rle-must-alias.ll) it would actually find them and end
up eliminating something. In many other cases though, it would scan and not
find anything useful. MemDep now stops at a block if the pointer is defined
in that block and cannot be phi translated to predecessors. This causes it
to miss the (rare) cases like rle-must-alias.ll, but makes it faster by not
scanning tons of stuff that is unlikely to be useful. For example, this
speeds up GVN as a whole from 3.928s to 2.448s (60%)!. IMO, scalar GVN
should be enhanced to simplify the rle-must-alias pointer base anyway, which
would allow the loads to be eliminated.
In the future, this should be enhanced to phi translate through geps and
bitcasts as well (as indicated by FIXMEs) making memdep even more powerful.
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llvm[2]: Linking Release executable opt (without symbols)
...
Undefined symbols:
"llvm::APFloat::IEEEsingle", referenced from:
__ZN4llvm7APFloat10IEEEsingleE$non_lazy_ptr in libLLVMCore.a(Constants.o)
__ZN4llvm7APFloat10IEEEsingleE$non_lazy_ptr in libLLVMCore.a(AsmWriter.o)
__ZN4llvm7APFloat10IEEEsingleE$non_lazy_ptr in libLLVMCore.a(ConstantFold.o)
"llvm::APFloat::IEEEdouble", referenced from:
__ZN4llvm7APFloat10IEEEdoubleE$non_lazy_ptr in libLLVMCore.a(Constants.o)
__ZN4llvm7APFloat10IEEEdoubleE$non_lazy_ptr in libLLVMCore.a(AsmWriter.o)
__ZN4llvm7APFloat10IEEEdoubleE$non_lazy_ptr in libLLVMCore.a(ConstantFold.o)
ld: symbol(s) not found
This is in release mode. To replicate, compile llvm and llvm-gcc in optimized
mode. Then build llvm, in optimized mode, with the newly created compiler.
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tricks based on readnone/readonly functions.
Teach memdep to look past readonly calls when analyzing
deps for a readonly call. This allows elimination of a
few more calls from 403.gcc:
before:
63 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
153986 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
50069 gvn - Number of loads deleted
after:
63 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
153991 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
50069 gvn - Number of loads deleted
5 calls isn't much, but this adds plumbing for the next change.
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doesn't do its own local caching, and is slightly more aggressive about
free/store dse (see testcase). This eliminates the last external client
of MemDep::getDependenceFrom().
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This fixes many bugs. I will add more test cases in a separate check-in.
Some day, the code that manipulates CFG and updates dom. info could use refactoring help.
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1) have it fold "br undef", which does occur with
surprising frequency as jump threading iterates.
2) teach j-t to delete dead blocks. This removes the successor
edges, reducing the in-edges of other blocks, allowing
recursive simplification.
3) Fold things like:
br COND, BBX, BBY
BBX:
br COND, BBZ, BBW
which also happens because jump threading iterates.
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straight-forward implementation. This does not require any extra
alias analysis queries beyond what we already do for non-local loads.
Some programs really really like load PRE. For example, SPASS triggers
this ~1000 times, ~300 times in 255.vortex, and ~1500 times on 403.gcc.
The biggest limitation to the implementation is that it does not split
critical edges. This is a huge killer on many programs and should be
addressed after the initial patch is enabled by default.
The implementation of this should incidentally speed up rejection of
non-local loads because it avoids creating the repl densemap in cases
when it won't be used for fully redundant loads.
This is currently disabled by default.
Before I turn this on, I need to fix a couple of miscompilations in
the testsuite, look at compile time performance numbers, and look at
perf impact. This is pretty close to ready though.
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overflowed on negation. This commit checks to make sure that neithe C nor X
overflows. This requires that the RHS of X (a subtract instruction) be a
constant integer.
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properly updates the reverse dependency map when it installs updated
dependencies for instructions that depend on the removed instruction.
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1. Make it fold blocks separated by an unconditional branch. This enables
jump threading to see a broader scope.
2. Make jump threading able to eliminate locally redundant loads when they
feed the branch condition of a block. This frequently occurs due to
reg2mem running.
3. Make jump threading able to eliminate *partially redundant* loads when
they feed the branch condition of a block. This is common in code with
lots of loads and stores like C++ code and 255.vortex.
This implements thread-loads.ll and rdar://6402033.
Per the fixme's, several pieces of this should be moved into Transforms/Utils.
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to generate signed ICMP instructions to replace the FCMP. This would violate
the following:
define i1 @test1(i32 %val) {
%1 = uitofp i32 %val to double
%2 = fcmp ole double %1, 0.000000e+00
ret i1 %2
}
would be transformed into:
define i1 @test1(i32 %val) {
%1 = icmp slt i33 %val, 1
ret i1 %1
}
which is obviously wrong. This patch modifes InstCombiner::FoldFCmp_IntToFP_Cst
to handle when the LHS comes from UIToFP.
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This allows SCEV users to effectively calculate trip count.
LSR later on transforms back integer IVs to floating point IVs
later on to avoid int-to-float casts inside the loop.
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* merge two weak functions by making them both alias a third non-weak fn
* don't reimplement CallSite::hasArgument
* whitelist the safe linkage types
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This triggers only 60 times in llvm-test (look at .llvm.bc, not .linked.rbc)
and so it probably wont be turned on by default. Also, may of those are likely
to go away when PR2973 is fixed.
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function.
- This explicitly models the costs for functions which should
"always" or "never" be inlined. This fixes bugs where such costs
were not previously respected.
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to find opportunities for store-to-load forwarding or load CSE,
in the same way that visitStore scans back to do DSE. Also, define
a new helper function for testing whether the addresses of two
memory accesses are known to have the same value, and use it in
both visitStore and visitLoad.
These two changes allow instcombine to eliminate loads in code
produced by front-ends that frequently emit obviously redundant
addressing for memory references.
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- Renumber fcmp predicates to match their icmp counterparts.
- Try swapping operands to expose more optimization opportunities.
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This includes not marking a GEP involving a vector as unsafe, but only when it
has all zero indices. This allows scalarrepl to work in a few more cases.
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shifting and masking inside a bswap expr. This allows it to handle
the cases from PR2842, which involve the intermediate 'or'
expressions being shifted, not just the input value.
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when deciding whether to mark a function readnone/readonly.
Since the pass is currently run before SROA, this may be
quite helpful. Requested by Chris on IRC.
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I originally made this script to show that scalarrepl didn't support them, but
it turned out it does. Better to still add the testcase then.
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can get the readnone/readonly attributes, and gives them it.
The plan is to remove markmodref (which did the same thing
by querying GlobalsModRef) and delete the analogous
functionality from GlobalsModRef.
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- Recognize expressions like "x > -1 ? x : 0" as min/max and turn them
into expressions like "x < 0 ? 0 : x", which is easily recognizable
as a min/max operation.
- Refrain from folding expression like "y/2 < 1" to "y < 2" when the
comparison is being used as part of a min or max idiom, like
"y/2 < 1 ? 1 : y/2". In that case, the division has another use, so
folding doesn't eliminate it, and obfuscates the min/max, making it
harder to recognize as a min/max operation.
These benefit ScalarEvolution, CodeGen, and anything else that wants to
recognize integer min and max.
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getelementptr indices, inserting an explicit cast if necessary.
This helps expose the sign-extension operation to other optimizations.
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users, and teach it about shufflevector instructions.
Also, fix a subtle bug in SimplifyDemandedVectorElts'
insertelement code.
This is a patch that was originally written by Eli Friedman,
with some fixes and cleanup by me.
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call (thus changing the call site) it didn't
inform the callgraph about this. But the
call site does matter - as shown by the testcase,
the callgraph become invalid after the inliner
ran (with an edge between two functions simply
missing), resulting in wrong deductions by
GlobalsModRef.
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be folded. Instead, fail to fold the entire vector.
We could also return a vector with some elements folded and some not. If anyone
thinks that's a better approach, please speak up!
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can have a non-negative result; for example, -16%16 is 0. Also,
clarify the related comments. This fixes PR2670.
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track individual leaf values in such cases, so it needs to treat
struct values as normal values in this case.
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do for scalars. Patch contributed by Nicolas Capens
This also generalizes the previous xforms to work on long double, now that
isExactlyValue works for long double.
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partially unroll a loop when fully unrolling would not fit under the threshold.
Patch by Mikael Lepistö.
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that says "unconditional loads from this argument are safe", we now keep track
of the safety per set of indices from which loads happen. This prevents
ArgPromotion from promoting loads that aren't really valid. As an added effect,
this will now disregard the the type of the indices passed to a GEP, so
"load GEP %A, i32 1" and "load GEP %A, i64 1" will result in a single argument,
not two.
This fixes PR2598, for which a testcase has been added as well.
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command-line option, and disable it by default. It introduced performance
regressions because CodeGen is currently not able to remat such loads.
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case for this.
This allows instructions like loads from global variables declared to
be constant to be moved out of loops."
Patch by Stefanus Du Toit!
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Remove the GetResultInst instruction. It is still accepted in LLVM assembly
and bitcode, where it is now auto-upgraded to ExtractValueInst. Also, remove
support for return instructions with multiple values. These are auto-upgraded
to use InsertValueInst instructions.
The IRBuilder still accepts multiple-value returns, and auto-upgrades them
to InsertValueInst instructions.
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leads into a cycle involving a different PHI, LSR got stuck running
around that cycle looking for the original PHI. To avoid this, keep
track of visited PHIs and stop searching if we see one more than once.
This fixes PR2570.
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allowed to canonicalize return values).
Add a test that checks if return value and function attributes are not removed.
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return values that are still (partially) live. Instead of updating all uses of
a call instruction after removing some elements, it now just rebuilds the
original struct (With undef gaps where the unused values were) and leaves it to
instcombine to clean this up.
The added testcase still fails currently, but this is due to instcombine which
isn't good enough yet. I will fix that part next.
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was using the algorithm for folding unsigned comparisons which is
completely wrong. This has been broken since the signless types change.
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This cause a regression in InstCombine/JavaCompare, which was doing the right
thing on accident. To handle the missed case, generalize the comparisons based
on masked bits a little bit to handle comparisons against the max value. For
example, we can now xform (slt i32 (and X, 4), 4) -> (setne i32 (and X, 4), 4)
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Rewrite the DeadArgumentElimination pass, to use a more explicit tracking of
dependencies between return values and/or arguments. Also make the handling of
arguments and return values the same.
The pass now looks properly inside returned structs, but only at the first
level (ie, not inside nested structs).
This version fixed a few more bugs and was cleaned up a bit. It now passes all
of LLVM's testing, and should still pass SPEC2006. There is still a minor bug
with regard to returning nested structs. Since there is currently nothing that
emits such IR, I will fix that in a seperate commit (partly because it requires
a non-trivial fix).
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1) evaluate [v]fcmp true/false with undefs to true or false instead
of undef.
2) fix vector comparisons with undef to return a vector result instead
of i1
3) fix vector comparisons with evaluatable results to return vector
true/false instead of i1 true/false (PR2529)
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in the presence of out-of-loop users of in-loop values and the trip
count is not a known multiple of the unroll count, and to be a bit
simpler overall. This fixes PR2253.
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structures. Its default threshold is to promote things that are
smaller than 128 bytes, which is sane. However, it is not sane
to do this for things that turn into 128 *registers*. Add a cap
on the number of registers introduced, defaulting to 128/4=32.
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This is a fixed version that no longer uses multimap::equal_range, which
resulted in a pointer invalidation problem.
Also, DAE::InspectedFunctions was not really necessary, so it got removed.
Lastly, this version no longer applies the extra arg hack on functions who did
not have any arguments to start with.
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dependencies between return values and/or arguments. Also make the handling of
arguments and return values the same.
The pass now looks properly inside returned structs, but only at the first
level (ie, not inside nested structs).
Also add a testcase for testing various variations of (multiple) dead rerturn
values.
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time. Sorry for the trouble!
This time, also add a testcase, which I should have done in the first place...
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individually.
Also learn IPConstProp how returning first class aggregates work, in addition
to old style multiple return instructions.
Modify the return-constants testscase to confirm this behaviour.
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when changing the stride of a comparison so that it's slightly
more precise, by having it scan the instruction list to determine
if there is a use of the condition after the point where the
condition will be inserted.
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take into account the instrucion pointed by InsertPt. Thanks to it,
returning the new value of InsertPt to the InsertBinop() caller can be
avoided. The bug was, actually, in visitAddRecExpr() method which wasn't
correctly handling changes of InsertPt. There shouldn't be any
performance regression, as -gvn pass (run after -indvars) removes any
redundant binops.
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cases quoting of <{ didn't work out, so I changed the grep to check for }>
instead.
This fixes 7 testcases that were not properly running before.
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Also, use > %t instead of -o %t for output in one test since that also works
when %t already exists.
This fixes 6 testcases.
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work and how to replace them into individual values. Also, when trying to
replace an aggregrate that is used by load or store with a single (large)
integer, don't crash (but don't replace the aggregrate either).
Also adds a testcase for both structs and arrays.
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the conditions for performing the transform when only the
function declaration is available: no longer allow turning
i32 into i64 for example. Only allow changing between
pointer types, and between pointer types and integers of
the same size. For return values ptr -> intptr was already
allowed; I added ptr -> ptr and intptr -> ptr while there.
As shown by a recent objc testcase, changing the way
parameters/return values are passed can be fatal when calling
code written in assembler that directly manipulates call
arguments and return values unless the transform has no
impact on the way they are passed at the codegen level.
While it is possible to imagine an ABI that treats integers
of pointer size differently to pointers, I don't think LLVM
supports any so the transform should now be safe while still
being useful.
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the one case that ADCE catches that normal DCE doesn't: non-induction variable
loop computations.
This implementation handles this problem without using postdominators.
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Analysis/ConstantFolding to fold ConstantExpr's, then make instcombine use it
to try to use targetdata to fold constant expressions on void instructions.
Also extend the icmp(inttoptr, inttoptr) folding to handle the case where
int size != ptr size.
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The SimplifyCFG pass looks at basic blocks that contain only phi nodes,
followed by an unconditional branch. In a lot of cases, such a block (BB) can
be merged into their successor (Succ).
This merging is performed by TryToSimplifyUncondBranchFromEmptyBlock. It does
this by taking all phi nodes in the succesor block Succ and expanding them to
include the predecessors of BB. Furthermore, any phi nodes in BB are moved to
Succ and expanded to include the predecessors of Succ as well.
Before attempting this merge, CanPropagatePredecessorsForPHIs checks to see if
all phi nodes can be properly merged. All functional changes are made to
this function, only comments were updated in
TryToSimplifyUncondBranchFromEmptyBlock.
In the original code, CanPropagatePredecessorsForPHIs looks quite convoluted
and more like stack of checks added to handle different kinds of situations
than a comprehensive check. In particular the first check in the function did
some value checking for the case that BB and Succ have a common predecessor,
while the last check in the function simply rejected all cases where BB and
Succ have a common predecessor. The first check was still useful in the case
that BB did not contain any phi nodes at all, though, so it was not completely
useless.
Now, CanPropagatePredecessorsForPHIs is restructured to to look a lot more
similar to the code that actually performs the merge. Both functions now look
at the same phi nodes in about the same order. Any conflicts (phi nodes with
different values for the same source) that could arise from merging or moving
phi nodes are detected. If no conflicts are found, the merge can happen.
Apart from only restructuring the checks, two main changes in functionality
happened.
Firstly, the old code rejected blocks with common predecessors in most cases.
The new code performs some extra checks so common predecessors can be handled
in a lot of cases. Wherever common predecessors still pose problems, the
blocks are left untouched.
Secondly, the old code rejected the merge when values (phi nodes) from BB were
used in any other place than Succ. However, it does not seem that there is any
situation that would require this check. Even more, this can be proven.
Consider that BB is a block containing of a single phi node "%a" and a branch
to Succ. Now, since the definition of %a will dominate all of its uses, BB
will dominate all blocks that use %a. Furthermore, since the branch from BB to
Succ is unconditional, Succ will also dominate all uses of %a.
Now, assume that one predecessor of Succ is not dominated by BB (and thus not
dominated by Succ). Since at least one use of %a (but in reality all of them)
is reachable from Succ, you could end up at a use of %a without passing
through it's definition in BB (by coming from X through Succ). This is a
contradiction, meaning that our original assumption is wrong. Thus, all
predecessors of Succ must also be dominated by BB (and thus also by Succ).
This means that moving the phi node %a from BB to Succ does not pose any
problems when the two blocks are merged, and any use checks are not needed.
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and/or to handle more cases (such as this add-sitofp.ll testcase), and
port it to selectiondag's ComputeNumSignBits.
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to accurately represent the integer. This triggers 9 times in 471.omnetpp,
though 8 of those seem to be inlined from the same place.
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type and the other operand is a constant into integer comparisons.
This happens surprisingly frequently (e.g. 10 times in 471.omnetpp),
which are things like this:
%tmp8283 = sitofp i32 %tmp82 to double
%tmp1013 = fcmp ult double %tmp8283, 0.0
Clearly comparing tmp82 against i32 0 is cheaper here.
this also triggers 8 times in gobmk, including this one:
%tmp375376 = sitofp i32 %tmp375 to double
%tmp377 = fcmp ogt double %tmp375376, 8.150000e+01
which is comparing an integer against 81.5 :).
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intersecting bits. This triggers all over the place, for example in lencode,
with adds of stuff like:
%tmp580 = mul i32 %tmp579, 2
%tmp582 = and i32 %b8, 1
and
%tmp28 = shl i32 %abs.i, 1
%sign.0 = select i1 %tmp23, i32 1, i32 0
and
%tmp344 = shl i32 %tmp343, 2
%tmp346 = and i32 %tmp96, 3
etc.
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is bitcast to return a floating point value. The result of the instruction may
not be used by the program afterwards, and LLVM will happily remove all
instructions except the call. But, on some platforms, if a value is returned as
a floating point, it may need to be removed from the stack (like x87). Thus, we
can't get rid of the bitcast even if there isn't a use of the value.
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