llvm-6502/lib/Target/X86/X86SchedSandyBridge.td
Andrew Trick 0701564377 Mark the x86 machine model as incomplete. PR17367.
Ideally, the machinel model is added at the time the instructions are
defined. But many instructions in X86InstrSSE.td still need a model.

Without this workaround the scheduler asserts because x86 already has
itinerary classes for these instructions, indicating they should be
modeled by the scheduler. Since we use the new machine model for other
instructions, it expects a new machine model for these too.

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@191391 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2013-09-25 18:14:12 +00:00

132 lines
4.9 KiB
TableGen

//=- X86SchedSandyBridge.td - X86 Sandy Bridge Scheduling ----*- tablegen -*-=//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file defines the machine model for Sandy Bridge to support instruction
// scheduling and other instruction cost heuristics.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
def SandyBridgeModel : SchedMachineModel {
// All x86 instructions are modeled as a single micro-op, and SB can decode 4
// instructions per cycle.
// FIXME: Identify instructions that aren't a single fused micro-op.
let IssueWidth = 4;
let MicroOpBufferSize = 168; // Based on the reorder buffer.
let LoadLatency = 4;
let MispredictPenalty = 16;
// FIXME: SSE4 and AVX are unimplemented. This flag is set to allow
// the scheduler to assign a default model to unrecognized opcodes.
let CompleteModel = 0;
}
let SchedModel = SandyBridgeModel in {
// Sandy Bridge can issue micro-ops to 6 different ports in one cycle.
// Ports 0, 1, and 5 handle all computation.
def SBPort0 : ProcResource<1>;
def SBPort1 : ProcResource<1>;
def SBPort5 : ProcResource<1>;
// Ports 2 and 3 are identical. They handle loads and the address half of
// stores.
def SBPort23 : ProcResource<2>;
// Port 4 gets the data half of stores. Store data can be available later than
// the store address, but since we don't model the latency of stores, we can
// ignore that.
def SBPort4 : ProcResource<1>;
// Many micro-ops are capable of issuing on multiple ports.
def SBPort05 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort5]>;
def SBPort15 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
def SBPort015 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
// 54 Entry Unified Scheduler
def SBPortAny : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort23, SBPort4, SBPort5]> {
let BufferSize=54;
}
// Integer division issued on port 0.
def SBDivider : ProcResource<1>;
// Loads are 4 cycles, so ReadAfterLd registers needn't be available until 4
// cycles after the memory operand.
def : ReadAdvance<ReadAfterLd, 4>;
// Many SchedWrites are defined in pairs with and without a folded load.
// Instructions with folded loads are usually micro-fused, so they only appear
// as two micro-ops when queued in the reservation station.
// This multiclass defines the resource usage for variants with and without
// folded loads.
multiclass SBWriteResPair<X86FoldableSchedWrite SchedRW,
ProcResourceKind ExePort,
int Lat> {
// Register variant is using a single cycle on ExePort.
def : WriteRes<SchedRW, [ExePort]> { let Latency = Lat; }
// Memory variant also uses a cycle on port 2/3 and adds 4 cycles to the
// latency.
def : WriteRes<SchedRW.Folded, [SBPort23, ExePort]> {
let Latency = !add(Lat, 4);
}
}
// A folded store needs a cycle on port 4 for the store data, but it does not
// need an extra port 2/3 cycle to recompute the address.
def : WriteRes<WriteRMW, [SBPort4]>;
def : WriteRes<WriteStore, [SBPort23, SBPort4]>;
def : WriteRes<WriteLoad, [SBPort23]> { let Latency = 4; }
def : WriteRes<WriteMove, [SBPort015]>;
def : WriteRes<WriteZero, []>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteALU, SBPort015, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteIMul, SBPort1, 3>;
def : WriteRes<WriteIMulH, []> { let Latency = 3; }
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteShift, SBPort05, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteJump, SBPort5, 1>;
// This is for simple LEAs with one or two input operands.
// The complex ones can only execute on port 1, and they require two cycles on
// the port to read all inputs. We don't model that.
def : WriteRes<WriteLEA, [SBPort15]>;
// This is quite rough, latency depends on the dividend.
def : WriteRes<WriteIDiv, [SBPort0, SBDivider]> {
let Latency = 25;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 10];
}
def : WriteRes<WriteIDivLd, [SBPort23, SBPort0, SBDivider]> {
let Latency = 29;
let ResourceCycles = [1, 1, 10];
}
// Scalar and vector floating point.
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFAdd, SBPort1, 3>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFMul, SBPort0, 5>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFDiv, SBPort0, 12>; // 10-14 cycles.
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFRcp, SBPort0, 5>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteFSqrt, SBPort0, 15>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteCvtF2I, SBPort1, 3>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteCvtI2F, SBPort1, 4>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteCvtF2F, SBPort1, 3>;
// Vector integer operations.
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecShift, SBPort05, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecLogic, SBPort015, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecALU, SBPort15, 1>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteVecIMul, SBPort0, 5>;
defm : SBWriteResPair<WriteShuffle, SBPort15, 1>;
def : WriteRes<WriteSystem, [SBPort015]> { let Latency = 100; }
def : WriteRes<WriteMicrocoded, [SBPort015]> { let Latency = 100; }
} // SchedModel