llvm-6502/lib/Target/PowerPC
Lauro Ramos Venancio 1baa1971a6 "The C standards do say that "char" may either be a "signed char" or "unsigned
char" and it is up to the compilers implementation or the platform which is
followed."
http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/docs/faqs/signedchar.php


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@35382 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2007-03-27 16:33:08 +00:00
..
.cvsignore
Makefile Switch PPC return lower to use an autogenerated CC description. 2007-03-06 00:59:59 +00:00
PPC.h Moved the MachOWriter and ELFWriter out of the Target/* files. Placed the 2007-02-08 01:39:44 +00:00
PPC.td Switch PPC return lower to use an autogenerated CC description. 2007-03-06 00:59:59 +00:00
PPCAsmPrinter.cpp Putting more constants which do not contain relocations into .literal{4|8|16} 2007-03-08 08:31:54 +00:00
PPCBranchSelector.cpp Make LABEL a builtin opcode. 2007-01-26 14:34:52 +00:00
PPCCallingConv.td Switch PPC return lower to use an autogenerated CC description. 2007-03-06 00:59:59 +00:00
PPCCodeEmitter.cpp implement support for the linux/ppc function call ABI. Patch by 2007-02-25 05:34:32 +00:00
PPCFrameInfo.h implement support for the linux/ppc function call ABI. Patch by 2007-02-25 05:34:32 +00:00
PPCHazardRecognizers.cpp Fix parenthesis for BCTRL_{ELF|Macho} test. 2007-02-27 13:10:41 +00:00
PPCHazardRecognizers.h
PPCInstr64Bit.td Fix CodeGen/PowerPC/2007-03-24-cntlzd.ll 2007-03-25 04:44:03 +00:00
PPCInstrAltivec.td fix incorrect encoding of vminsw. 2007-02-16 21:20:09 +00:00
PPCInstrBuilder.h
PPCInstrFormats.td Add XLForm_1_ext template, patch by Nicolas Geoffray. 2007-02-25 05:07:49 +00:00
PPCInstrInfo.cpp
PPCInstrInfo.h Make LABEL a builtin opcode. 2007-01-26 14:34:52 +00:00
PPCInstrInfo.td Differentiate between the MachO and the ELF ABI the CALL instruction. 2007-02-27 13:01:19 +00:00
PPCISelDAGToDAG.cpp
PPCISelLowering.cpp "The C standards do say that "char" may either be a "signed char" or "unsigned 2007-03-27 16:33:08 +00:00
PPCISelLowering.h switch TargetLowering::getConstraintType to take the entire constraint, 2007-03-25 02:14:49 +00:00
PPCJITInfo.cpp Improve JIT support for linux/ppc: Patch by Nicolas Geoffray! 2007-02-25 05:04:13 +00:00
PPCJITInfo.h
PPCMachineFunctionInfo.h Duplicate use of LR, take 2. 2007-02-27 11:55:45 +00:00
PPCMachOWriterInfo.cpp More Mach-O writer improvements. 2007-02-28 07:40:50 +00:00
PPCMachOWriterInfo.h More Mach-O writer improvements. 2007-02-28 07:40:50 +00:00
PPCPerfectShuffle.h
PPCPredicates.cpp
PPCPredicates.h
PPCRegisterInfo.cpp Protect R31's frame offset from being used by callee-saved registers, when R31 2007-03-21 16:44:14 +00:00
PPCRegisterInfo.h Added MRegisterInfo hook to re-materialize an instruction. 2007-03-20 08:09:38 +00:00
PPCRegisterInfo.td We'd still like to register allocate r2 on darwin before the callee-save 2007-01-29 22:57:48 +00:00
PPCRelocations.h
PPCSchedule.td
PPCScheduleG3.td
PPCScheduleG4.td
PPCScheduleG4Plus.td
PPCScheduleG5.td
PPCSubtarget.cpp For PR1136: Rename GlobalVariable::isExternal as isDeclaration to avoid 2007-01-30 20:08:39 +00:00
PPCSubtarget.h Improve JIT support for linux/ppc: Patch by Nicolas Geoffray! 2007-02-25 05:04:13 +00:00
PPCTargetAsmInfo.cpp For Darwin, put constant data into .const, .const_data, .literal{4|8|16} 2007-03-08 01:25:25 +00:00
PPCTargetAsmInfo.h
PPCTargetMachine.cpp Improve JIT support for linux/ppc: Patch by Nicolas Geoffray! 2007-02-25 05:04:13 +00:00
PPCTargetMachine.h Moved the MachOWriter and ELFWriter out of the Target/* files. Placed the 2007-02-08 01:39:44 +00:00
README_ALTIVEC.txt
README.txt add a note 2007-03-25 05:10:46 +00:00

//===- README.txt - Notes for improving PowerPC-specific code gen ---------===//

TODO:
* gpr0 allocation
* implement do-loop -> bdnz transform
* __builtin_return_address not supported on PPC

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Support 'update' load/store instructions.  These are cracked on the G5, but are
still a codesize win.

With preinc enabled, this:

long *%test4(long *%X, long *%dest) {
        %Y = getelementptr long* %X, int 4
        %A = load long* %Y
        store long %A, long* %dest
        ret long* %Y
}

compiles to:

_test4:
        mr r2, r3
        lwzu r5, 32(r2)
        lwz r3, 36(r3)
        stw r5, 0(r4)
        stw r3, 4(r4)
        mr r3, r2
        blr 

with -sched=list-burr, I get:

_test4:
        lwz r2, 36(r3)
        lwzu r5, 32(r3)
        stw r2, 4(r4)
        stw r5, 0(r4)
        blr 

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We compile the hottest inner loop of viterbi to:

        li r6, 0
        b LBB1_84       ;bb432.i
LBB1_83:        ;bb420.i
        lbzx r8, r5, r7
        addi r6, r7, 1
        stbx r8, r4, r7
LBB1_84:        ;bb432.i
        mr r7, r6
        cmplwi cr0, r7, 143
        bne cr0, LBB1_83        ;bb420.i

The CBE manages to produce:

	li r0, 143
	mtctr r0
loop:
	lbzx r2, r2, r11
	stbx r0, r2, r9
	addi r2, r2, 1
	bdz later
	b loop

This could be much better (bdnz instead of bdz) but it still beats us.  If we
produced this with bdnz, the loop would be a single dispatch group.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Compile:

void foo(int *P) {
 if (P)  *P = 0;
}

into:

_foo:
        cmpwi cr0,r3,0
        beqlr cr0
        li r0,0
        stw r0,0(r3)
        blr

This is effectively a simple form of predication.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Lump the constant pool for each function into ONE pic object, and reference
pieces of it as offsets from the start.  For functions like this (contrived
to have lots of constants obviously):

double X(double Y) { return (Y*1.23 + 4.512)*2.34 + 14.38; }

We generate:

_X:
        lis r2, ha16(.CPI_X_0)
        lfd f0, lo16(.CPI_X_0)(r2)
        lis r2, ha16(.CPI_X_1)
        lfd f2, lo16(.CPI_X_1)(r2)
        fmadd f0, f1, f0, f2
        lis r2, ha16(.CPI_X_2)
        lfd f1, lo16(.CPI_X_2)(r2)
        lis r2, ha16(.CPI_X_3)
        lfd f2, lo16(.CPI_X_3)(r2)
        fmadd f1, f0, f1, f2
        blr

It would be better to materialize .CPI_X into a register, then use immediates
off of the register to avoid the lis's.  This is even more important in PIC 
mode.

Note that this (and the static variable version) is discussed here for GCC:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2006-02/msg00133.html

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

PIC Code Gen IPO optimization:

Squish small scalar globals together into a single global struct, allowing the 
address of the struct to be CSE'd, avoiding PIC accesses (also reduces the size
of the GOT on targets with one).

Note that this is discussed here for GCC:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2006-02/msg00133.html

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Implement Newton-Rhapson method for improving estimate instructions to the
correct accuracy, and implementing divide as multiply by reciprocal when it has
more than one use.  Itanium will want this too.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Compile this:

int %f1(int %a, int %b) {
        %tmp.1 = and int %a, 15         ; <int> [#uses=1]
        %tmp.3 = and int %b, 240                ; <int> [#uses=1]
        %tmp.4 = or int %tmp.3, %tmp.1          ; <int> [#uses=1]
        ret int %tmp.4
}

without a copy.  We make this currently:

_f1:
        rlwinm r2, r4, 0, 24, 27
        rlwimi r2, r3, 0, 28, 31
        or r3, r2, r2
        blr

The two-addr pass or RA needs to learn when it is profitable to commute an
instruction to avoid a copy AFTER the 2-addr instruction.  The 2-addr pass
currently only commutes to avoid inserting a copy BEFORE the two addr instr.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Compile offsets from allocas:

int *%test() {
        %X = alloca { int, int }
        %Y = getelementptr {int,int}* %X, int 0, uint 1
        ret int* %Y
}

into a single add, not two:

_test:
        addi r2, r1, -8
        addi r3, r2, 4
        blr

--> important for C++.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

No loads or stores of the constants should be needed:

struct foo { double X, Y; };
void xxx(struct foo F);
void bar() { struct foo R = { 1.0, 2.0 }; xxx(R); }

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Darwin Stub LICM optimization:

Loops like this:
  
  for (...)  bar();

Have to go through an indirect stub if bar is external or linkonce.  It would 
be better to compile it as:

     fp = &bar;
     for (...)  fp();

which only computes the address of bar once (instead of each time through the 
stub).  This is Darwin specific and would have to be done in the code generator.
Probably not a win on x86.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Simple IPO for argument passing, change:
  void foo(int X, double Y, int Z) -> void foo(int X, int Z, double Y)

the Darwin ABI specifies that any integer arguments in the first 32 bytes worth
of arguments get assigned to r3 through r10. That is, if you have a function
foo(int, double, int) you get r3, f1, r6, since the 64 bit double ate up the
argument bytes for r4 and r5. The trick then would be to shuffle the argument
order for functions we can internalize so that the maximum number of 
integers/pointers get passed in regs before you see any of the fp arguments.

Instead of implementing this, it would actually probably be easier to just 
implement a PPC fastcc, where we could do whatever we wanted to the CC, 
including having this work sanely.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Fix Darwin FP-In-Integer Registers ABI

Darwin passes doubles in structures in integer registers, which is very very 
bad.  Add something like a BIT_CONVERT to LLVM, then do an i-p transformation 
that percolates these things out of functions.

Check out how horrible this is:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2005-10/msg01036.html

This is an extension of "interprocedural CC unmunging" that can't be done with
just fastcc.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Compile this:

int foo(int a) {
  int b = (a < 8);
  if (b) {
    return b * 3;     // ignore the fact that this is always 3.
  } else {
    return 2;
  }
}

into something not this:

_foo:
1)      cmpwi cr7, r3, 8
        mfcr r2, 1
        rlwinm r2, r2, 29, 31, 31
1)      cmpwi cr0, r3, 7
        bgt cr0, LBB1_2 ; UnifiedReturnBlock
LBB1_1: ; then
        rlwinm r2, r2, 0, 31, 31
        mulli r3, r2, 3
        blr
LBB1_2: ; UnifiedReturnBlock
        li r3, 2
        blr

In particular, the two compares (marked 1) could be shared by reversing one.
This could be done in the dag combiner, by swapping a BR_CC when a SETCC of the
same operands (but backwards) exists.  In this case, this wouldn't save us 
anything though, because the compares still wouldn't be shared.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We should custom expand setcc instead of pretending that we have it.  That
would allow us to expose the access of the crbit after the mfcr, allowing
that access to be trivially folded into other ops.  A simple example:

int foo(int a, int b) { return (a < b) << 4; }

compiles into:

_foo:
        cmpw cr7, r3, r4
        mfcr r2, 1
        rlwinm r2, r2, 29, 31, 31
        slwi r3, r2, 4
        blr

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Fold add and sub with constant into non-extern, non-weak addresses so this:

static int a;
void bar(int b) { a = b; }
void foo(unsigned char *c) {
  *c = a;
}

So that 

_foo:
        lis r2, ha16(_a)
        la r2, lo16(_a)(r2)
        lbz r2, 3(r2)
        stb r2, 0(r3)
        blr

Becomes

_foo:
        lis r2, ha16(_a+3)
        lbz r2, lo16(_a+3)(r2)
        stb r2, 0(r3)
        blr

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We generate really bad code for this:

int f(signed char *a, _Bool b, _Bool c) {
   signed char t = 0;
  if (b)  t = *a;
  if (c)  *a = t;
}

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

This:
int test(unsigned *P) { return *P >> 24; }

Should compile to:

_test:
        lbz r3,0(r3)
        blr

not:

_test:
        lwz r2, 0(r3)
        srwi r3, r2, 24
        blr

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

On the G5, logical CR operations are more expensive in their three
address form: ops that read/write the same register are half as expensive as
those that read from two registers that are different from their destination.

We should model this with two separate instructions.  The isel should generate
the "two address" form of the instructions.  When the register allocator 
detects that it needs to insert a copy due to the two-addresness of the CR
logical op, it will invoke PPCInstrInfo::convertToThreeAddress.  At this point
we can convert to the "three address" instruction, to save code space.

This only matters when we start generating cr logical ops.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We should compile these two functions to the same thing:

#include <stdlib.h>
void f(int a, int b, int *P) {
  *P = (a-b)>=0?(a-b):(b-a);
}
void g(int a, int b, int *P) {
  *P = abs(a-b);
}

Further, they should compile to something better than:

_g:
        subf r2, r4, r3
        subfic r3, r2, 0
        cmpwi cr0, r2, -1
        bgt cr0, LBB2_2 ; entry
LBB2_1: ; entry
        mr r2, r3
LBB2_2: ; entry
        stw r2, 0(r5)
        blr

GCC produces:

_g:
        subf r4,r4,r3
        srawi r2,r4,31
        xor r0,r2,r4
        subf r0,r2,r0
        stw r0,0(r5)
        blr

... which is much nicer.

This theoretically may help improve twolf slightly (used in dimbox.c:142?).

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

int foo(int N, int ***W, int **TK, int X) {
  int t, i;
  
  for (t = 0; t < N; ++t)
    for (i = 0; i < 4; ++i)
      W[t / X][i][t % X] = TK[i][t];
      
  return 5;
}

We generate relatively atrocious code for this loop compared to gcc.

We could also strength reduce the rem and the div:
http://www.lcs.mit.edu/pubs/pdf/MIT-LCS-TM-600.pdf

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

float foo(float X) { return (int)(X); }

Currently produces:

_foo:
        fctiwz f0, f1
        stfd f0, -8(r1)
        lwz r2, -4(r1)
        extsw r2, r2
        std r2, -16(r1)
        lfd f0, -16(r1)
        fcfid f0, f0
        frsp f1, f0
        blr

We could use a target dag combine to turn the lwz/extsw into an lwa when the 
lwz has a single use.  Since LWA is cracked anyway, this would be a codesize
win only.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We generate ugly code for this:

void func(unsigned int *ret, float dx, float dy, float dz, float dw) {
  unsigned code = 0;
  if(dx < -dw) code |= 1;
  if(dx > dw)  code |= 2;
  if(dy < -dw) code |= 4;
  if(dy > dw)  code |= 8;
  if(dz < -dw) code |= 16;
  if(dz > dw)  code |= 32;
  *ret = code;
}

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Complete the signed i32 to FP conversion code using 64-bit registers
transformation, good for PI.  See PPCISelLowering.cpp, this comment:

     // FIXME: disable this lowered code.  This generates 64-bit register values,
     // and we don't model the fact that the top part is clobbered by calls.  We
     // need to flag these together so that the value isn't live across a call.
     //setOperationAction(ISD::SINT_TO_FP, MVT::i32, Custom);

Also, if the registers are spilled to the stack, we have to ensure that all
64-bits of them are save/restored, otherwise we will miscompile the code.  It
sounds like we need to get the 64-bit register classes going.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

%struct.B = type { i8, [3 x i8] }

define void @bar(%struct.B* %b) {
entry:
        %tmp = bitcast %struct.B* %b to i32*              ; <uint*> [#uses=1]
        %tmp = load i32* %tmp          ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp3 = bitcast %struct.B* %b to i32*             ; <uint*> [#uses=1]
        %tmp4 = load i32* %tmp3                ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp8 = bitcast %struct.B* %b to i32*             ; <uint*> [#uses=2]
        %tmp9 = load i32* %tmp8                ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp4.mask17 = shl i32 %tmp4, i8 1          ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp1415 = and i32 %tmp4.mask17, 2147483648            ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp.masked = and i32 %tmp, 2147483648         ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp11 = or i32 %tmp1415, %tmp.masked          ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp12 = and i32 %tmp9, 2147483647             ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        %tmp13 = or i32 %tmp12, %tmp11         ; <uint> [#uses=1]
        store i32 %tmp13, i32* %tmp8
        ret void
}

We emit:

_foo:
        lwz r2, 0(r3)
        slwi r4, r2, 1
        or r4, r4, r2
        rlwimi r2, r4, 0, 0, 0
        stw r2, 0(r3)
        blr

We could collapse a bunch of those ORs and ANDs and generate the following
equivalent code:

_foo:
        lwz r2, 0(r3)
        rlwinm r4, r2, 1, 0, 0
        or r2, r2, r4
        stw r2, 0(r3)
        blr

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We compile:

unsigned test6(unsigned x) { 
  return ((x & 0x00FF0000) >> 16) | ((x & 0x000000FF) << 16);
}

into:

_test6:
        lis r2, 255
        rlwinm r3, r3, 16, 0, 31
        ori r2, r2, 255
        and r3, r3, r2
        blr

GCC gets it down to:

_test6:
        rlwinm r0,r3,16,8,15
        rlwinm r3,r3,16,24,31
        or r3,r3,r0
        blr


===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

Consider a function like this:

float foo(float X) { return X + 1234.4123f; }

The FP constant ends up in the constant pool, so we need to get the LR register.
 This ends up producing code like this:

_foo:
.LBB_foo_0:     ; entry
        mflr r11
***     stw r11, 8(r1)
        bl "L00000$pb"
"L00000$pb":
        mflr r2
        addis r2, r2, ha16(.CPI_foo_0-"L00000$pb")
        lfs f0, lo16(.CPI_foo_0-"L00000$pb")(r2)
        fadds f1, f1, f0
***     lwz r11, 8(r1)
        mtlr r11
        blr

This is functional, but there is no reason to spill the LR register all the way
to the stack (the two marked instrs): spilling it to a GPR is quite enough.

Implementing this will require some codegen improvements.  Nate writes:

"So basically what we need to support the "no stack frame save and restore" is a
generalization of the LR optimization to "callee-save regs".

Currently, we have LR marked as a callee-save reg.  The register allocator sees
that it's callee save, and spills it directly to the stack.

Ideally, something like this would happen:

LR would be in a separate register class from the GPRs. The class of LR would be
marked "unspillable".  When the register allocator came across an unspillable
reg, it would ask "what is the best class to copy this into that I *can* spill"
If it gets a class back, which it will in this case (the gprs), it grabs a free
register of that class.  If it is then later necessary to spill that reg, so be
it.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We compile this:
int test(_Bool X) {
  return X ? 524288 : 0;
}

to: 
_test:
        cmplwi cr0, r3, 0
        lis r2, 8
        li r3, 0
        beq cr0, LBB1_2 ;entry
LBB1_1: ;entry
        mr r3, r2
LBB1_2: ;entry
        blr 

instead of:
_test:
        addic r2,r3,-1
        subfe r0,r2,r3
        slwi r3,r0,19
        blr

This sort of thing occurs a lot due to globalopt.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

We currently compile 32-bit bswap:

declare i32 @llvm.bswap.i32(i32 %A)
define i32 @test(i32 %A) {
        %B = call i32 @llvm.bswap.i32(i32 %A)
        ret i32 %B
}

to:

_test:
        rlwinm r2, r3, 24, 16, 23
        slwi r4, r3, 24
        rlwimi r2, r3, 8, 24, 31
        rlwimi r4, r3, 8, 8, 15
        rlwimi r4, r2, 0, 16, 31
        mr r3, r4
        blr 

it would be more efficient to produce:

_foo:   mr r0,r3
        rlwinm r3,r3,8,0xffffffff
        rlwimi r3,r0,24,0,7
        rlwimi r3,r0,24,16,23
        blr

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===

test/CodeGen/PowerPC/2007-03-24-cntlzd.ll compiles to:

__ZNK4llvm5APInt17countLeadingZerosEv:
        ld r2, 0(r3)
        cntlzd r2, r2
        or r2, r2, r2     <<-- silly.
        addi r3, r2, -64
        blr 

The dead or is a 'truncate' from 64- to 32-bits.

===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===