1453 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Paulo Matos
f7fc888024 [WebAssembly] Implementation of (most) table instructions
Implementation of instructions table.get, table.set, table.grow,
table.size, table.fill, table.copy.

Missing instructions are table.init and elem.drop as they deal with
element sections which are not yet implemented.

Added more tests to tables.s

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89797
2020-10-23 08:42:54 -07:00
Thomas Lively
33c86faeda [WebAssembly] Prototype i8x16.popcnt
As proposed at https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/pull/379. Use a target
builtin and intrinsic rather than normal codegen patterns to make the
instruction opt-in until it is merged to the proposal and stabilized in engines.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89446
2020-10-15 21:18:22 +00:00
Thomas Lively
438da14930 Reland "[WebAssembly] v128.load{8,16,32,64}_lane instructions"
This reverts commit 7c8385a352ba21cb388046290d93b53dc273cd9f with a typing fix
to an instruction selection pattern.
2020-10-15 19:32:34 +00:00
Thomas Lively
29bda9c7c9 Revert "[WebAssembly] v128.load{8,16,32,64}_lane instructions"
This reverts commit 7c6bfd90ab2ddaa60de62878c8512db0645e8452.
2020-10-15 15:49:36 +00:00
Thomas Lively
1dd8fe9b9b [WebAssembly] v128.load{8,16,32,64}_lane instructions
Prototype the newly proposed load_lane instructions, as specified in
https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/pull/350. Since these instructions are not
available to origin trial users on Chrome stable, make them opt-in by only
selecting them from intrinsics rather than normal ISel patterns. Since we only
need rough prototypes to measure performance right now, this commit does not
implement all the load and store patterns that would be necessary to make full
use of the offset immediate. However, the full suite of offset tests is included
to make it easy to track improvements in the future.

Since these are the first instructions to have a memarg immediate as well as an
additional immediate, the disassembler needed some additional hacks to be able
to parse them correctly. Making that code more principled is left as future
work.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89366
2020-10-15 15:33:10 +00:00
Paulo Matos
e24680c852 [WebAssembly] Added .tabletype to asm and multiple table support in obj files
Adds more testing in basic-assembly.s and a new test tables.s.
Adds support to yaml reading and writing of tables as well.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88815
2020-10-13 07:52:23 -07:00
Thomas Lively
2b696bcac5 Reland "[WebAssembly] Emulate v128.const efficiently""
This reverts commit 432e4e56d3d2, which reverted 542523a61a21. Two issues from
the original commit have been fixed. First, MSVC does not like when std::array
is initialized with only single braces, so this commit switches to using the
more portable double braces. Second, there was a subtle endianness bug that
prevented the original commit from working correctly on big-endian machines,
which has been fixed by switching to using endianness-agnostic bit twiddling
instead of type punning.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88773
2020-10-13 04:36:59 +00:00
Thomas Lively
1457667113 [WebAssembly] Prototype i16x8.q15mulr_sat_s
This saturating, rounding, Q-format multiplication instruction is proposed in
https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/pull/365.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88968
2020-10-09 21:17:53 +00:00
Mircea Trofin
074f58db6d [NFC][MC] MCRegister API typing.
Mostly LiveIntervals, with their effects (users).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89018
2020-10-08 15:08:34 -07:00
Heejin Ahn
5493d37e90 [WebAssembly] Handle indirect uses of longjmp
In LowerEmscriptenEHSjLj, `longjmp` used to be replaced with
`emscripten_longjmp_jmpbuf(jmp_buf*, i32)`, which will eventually be
lowered to `emscripten_longjmp(i32, i32)`. The reason we used two
different names was because they had different signatures in the IR
pass.

D88697 fixed this by only using `emscripten_longjmp(i32, i32)` and
adding a `ptrtoint` cast to its first argument, so
```
longjmp(buf, 0)
```
becomes
```
emscripten_longjmp((i32)buf, 0)
```

But this assumed all uses of `longjmp` was a direct call to it, which
was not the case. This patch handles indirect uses of `longjmp` by
replacing
```
longjmp
```
with
```
(i32(*)(jmp_buf*, i32))emscripten_longjmp
```

Reviewed By: tlively

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89032
2020-10-08 11:37:19 -07:00
Simon Pilgrim
048f41c5cf Fix MSVC "not all control paths return a value" warning. NFCI. 2020-10-07 19:53:39 +01:00
Heejin Ahn
0ab2923b30 [WebAssembly] Rename Emscripten EH functions
Renaming for some Emscripten EH functions has so far been done in
wasm-emscripten-finalize tool in Binaryen. But recently we decided to
make a compilation/linking path that does not rely on
wasm-emscripten-finalize for modifications, so here we move that
functionality to LLVM.

Invoke wrappers are generated in LowerEmscriptenEHSjLj pass, but final
wasm types are not available in the IR pass, we need to rename them at
the end of the pipeline.

This patch also removes uses of `emscripten_longjmp_jmpbuf` in
LowerEmscriptenEHSjLj pass, replacing that with `emscripten_longjmp`.
`emscripten_longjmp_jmpbuf` is lowered to `emscripten_longjmp`, but
previously we generated calls to `emscripten_longjmp_jmpbuf` in
LowerEmscriptenEHSjLj pass because it takes `jmp_buf*` instead of `i32`.
But we were able use `ptrtoint` to make it use `emscripten_longjmp`
directly here.

Addresses:
https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen/issues/3043
https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen/issues/3081

Companions:
https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen/pull/3191
https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/pull/12399

Reviewed By: dschuff, tlively, sbc100

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88697
2020-10-07 09:42:49 -07:00
Stella Stamenova
08f43b87cf Revert "[WebAssembly] Emulate v128.const efficiently"
This reverts commit 542523a61a21c13e7f244bcf821b0fdeb8c6bb24.
2020-10-02 09:26:21 -07:00
Thomas Lively
1ac57615ef [WebAssembly] Emulate v128.const efficiently
v128.const was recently implemented in V8, but until it rolls into Chrome
stable, we can't enable it in the WebAssembly backend without breaking origin
trial users. So far we have been lowering build_vectors that would otherwise
have been lowered to v128.const to splats followed by sequences of replace_lane
instructions to initialize each lane individually. That produces large and
inefficient code, so this patch introduces new logic to lower integer vector
constants to a single i64x2.splat where possible, with at most a single
i64x2.replace_lane following it if necessary.

Adapted from a patch authored by @omnisip.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88591
2020-10-02 00:28:06 -07:00
Thomas Lively
06c1a3680b [WebAssembly] Check features before making SjLj vars thread-local
1c5a3c4d3823 updated the variables inserted by Emscripten SjLj lowering to be
thread-local, depending on the CoalesceFeaturesAndStripAtomics pass to downgrade
them to normal globals if the target features did not support TLS. However, this
had the unintended side effect of preventing all non-TLS-supporting objects from
being linked into modules with shared memory, because stripping TLS marks an
object as thread-unsafe. This patch fixes the problem by only making the SjLj
lowering variables thread-local if the target machine supports TLS so that it
never introduces new usage of TLS that will be stripped. Since SjLj lowering
works on Modules instead of Functions, this required that the
WebAssemblyTargetMachine have its feature string updated to reflect the
coalesced features collected from all the functions so that a
WebAssemblySubtarget can be created without using any particular function.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88323
2020-09-25 11:45:16 -07:00
Thomas Lively
48b2723da4 [WebAssembly] Make SjLj lowering globals thread-local
Emscripten's longjump and exception mechanism depends on two global variables,
`__THREW__` and `__threwValue`, which are changed to be defined as thread-local
in https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/pull/12056. This patch updates
the corresponding code in the WebAssembly backend to properly declare these
globals as thread-local as well.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88262
2020-09-24 14:56:19 -07:00
Mircea Trofin
2e97c41718 [NFC][Regalloc] accessors for 'reg' and 'weight'
Also renamed the fields to follow style guidelines.

Accessors help with readability - weight mutation, in particular,
is easier to follow this way.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87725
2020-09-16 08:28:57 -07:00
Craig Topper
ad2bea0363 [SelectionDAG] Use Align/MaybeAlign in calls to getLoad/getStore/getExtLoad/getTruncStore.
The versions that take 'unsigned' will be removed in the future.

I tried to use getOriginalAlign instead of getAlign in some
places. getAlign factors in the minimum alignment implied by
the offset in the pointer info. Since we're also passing the
pointer info we can use the original alignment.

Reviewed By: arsenm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87592
2020-09-14 13:54:50 -07:00
Sam Clegg
4522227204 [WebAssembly] Add assembly syntax for mutable globals
This adds and optional ", immutable" to the end of a `.globaltype`
declaration.  I would have prefered to match the `.wat` syntax
where immutable is the default and `mut` is the signifier for
mutable globals.  Sadly changing the default would break backwards
compat with existing assembly in the wild so I think its best
to stick with this approach.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87515
2020-09-11 11:11:02 -07:00
Dominic Chen
247afd16db [WebAssembly] Set unreachable as canonical to permit disassembly
Currently, using llvm-objdump to disassemble a function containing
unreachable will trigger an assertion while decoding the opcode, since both
unreachable and debug_unreachable have the same encoding. To avoid this, set
unreachable as the canonical decoding.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87431
2020-09-10 15:04:16 -04:00
Heejin Ahn
bcac389fb2 [WebAssembly] Fix fixEndsAtEndOfFunction for try-catch
When the function return type is non-void and `end` instructions are at
the very end of a function, CFGStackify's `fixEndsAtEndOfFunction`
function fixes the corresponding block/loop/try's type to match the
function's return type. This is applied to consecutive `end` markers at
the end of a function. For example, when the function return type is
`i32`,
```
block i32    ;; return type is fixed to i32
  ...
  loop i32   ;; return type is fixed to i32
    ...
  end_loop
end_block
end_function
```

But try-catch is a little different, because it consists of two parts:
a try part and a catch part, and both parts' return type should satisfy
the function's return type. Which means,
```
try i32      ;; return type is fixed to i32
  ...
  block i32  ;; this should be changed i32 too!
    ...
  end_block
catch
  ...
end_try
end_function
```
As you can see in this example, it is not sufficient to only `end`
instructions at the end of a function; in case of `try`, we should
check instructions before `catch`es, in case their corresponding `try`'s
type has been fixed.

This changes `fixEndsAtEndOfFunction`'s algorithm to use a worklist
that contains a reverse iterator, each of which is a starting point for
a new backward `end` instruction search.

Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47413.

Reviewed By: dschuff, tlively

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87207
2020-09-08 09:27:40 -07:00
Thomas Lively
08861e0346 [WebAssembly] Fix incorrect assumption of simple value types
Fixes PR47375, in which an assertion was triggering because
WebAssemblyTargetLowering::isVectorLoadExtDesirable was improperly
assuming the use of simple value types.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87110
2020-09-06 15:42:21 -07:00
Simon Pilgrim
be8dc8c2bc WebAssemblyUtilities.h - reduce unnecessary includes to forward declarations. NFCI. 2020-09-03 17:43:35 +01:00
Craig Topper
09050e4cf7 [Attributes] Add a method to check if an Attribute has AttrKind None. Use instead of hasAttribute(Attribute::None)
There's a special case in hasAttribute for None when pImpl is null. If pImpl is not null we dispatch to pImpl->hasAttribute which will always return false for Attribute::None.

So if we just want to check for None its sufficient to just check that pImpl is null. Which can even be done inline.

This patch adds a helper for that case which I hope will speed up our getSubtargetImpl implementations.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86744
2020-08-28 13:23:45 -07:00
Craig Topper
10839866a1 [X86][MC][Target] Initial backend support a tune CPU to support -mtune
This patch implements initial backend support for a -mtune CPU controlled by a "tune-cpu" function attribute. If the attribute is not present X86 will use the resolved CPU from target-cpu attribute or command line.

This patch adds MC layer support a tune CPU. Each CPU now has two sets of features stored in their GenSubtargetInfo.inc tables . These features lists are passed separately to the Processor and ProcessorModel classes in tablegen. The tune list defaults to an empty list to avoid changes to non-X86. This annoyingly increases the size of static tables on all target as we now store 24 more bytes per CPU. I haven't quantified the overall impact, but I can if we're concerned.

One new test is added to X86 to show a few tuning features with mismatched tune-cpu and target-cpu/target-feature attributes to demonstrate independent control. Another new test is added to demonstrate that the scheduler model follows the tune CPU.

I have not added a -mtune to llc/opt or MC layer command line yet. With no attributes we'll just use the -mcpu for both. MC layer tools will always follow the normal CPU for tuning.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85165
2020-08-14 15:31:50 -07:00
Thomas Lively
12d03e3fae [WebAssembly] Allow inlining functions with different features
Allow inlining only when the Callee has a subset of the Caller's
features. In principle, we should be able to inline regardless of any
features because WebAssembly supports features at module granularity,
not function granularity, but without this restriction it would be
possible for a module to "forget" about features if all the functions
that used them were inlined.

Requested in PR46812.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85494
2020-08-13 13:57:43 -07:00
Jordan Rupprecht
7059d43168 [NFC] Inline variable only used in debug builds 2020-08-11 19:38:01 -07:00
Thomas Lively
77de82e267 [WebAssembly][AsmParser] Name missing features in error message
Rather than just saying that some feature is missing, report the exact
features to make the error message more useful and actionable.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85795
2020-08-11 17:26:14 -07:00
Thomas Lively
3f29056047 [WebAssembly][NFC] Replace WASM with standard Wasm
The officially specified abbreviation for WebAssembly is Wasm and the
spec explicitly calls out WASM as being an incorrect spelling. This
patch fixes a few comments and error messages to use the
spec-compliant abbreviation.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85764
2020-08-11 12:27:59 -07:00
Wouter van Oortmerssen
ecdeeefdee [WebAssembly] wasm64: fix memory.init operand types
I had assumed they would all become in i64, but this is not necessary as long as data segments stay 32-bit, see:
https://github.com/WebAssembly/memory64/blob/master/proposals/memory64/Overview.md

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85552
2020-08-10 10:15:20 -07:00
Thomas Lively
23fb49ac5f [WebAssembly] Fix FastISel address calculation bug
Fixes PR47040, in which an assertion was improperly triggered during
FastISel's address computation. The issue was that an `Address` set to
be relative to the FrameIndex with offset zero was incorrectly
considered to have an unset base. When the left hand side of an add
set the Address to be 0 off the FrameIndex, the right side would not
detect that the Address base had already been set and could try to set
the Address to be relative to a register instead, triggering an
assertion.

This patch fixes the issue by explicitly tracking whether an `Address`
has been set rather than interpreting an offset of zero to mean the
`Address` has not been set.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85581
2020-08-08 15:23:11 -07:00
Thomas Lively
d648be35e8 [WebAssembly] Implement prototype v128.load{32,64}_zero instructions
Specified in https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/pull/237, these
instructions load the first vector lane from memory and zero the other
lanes. Since these instructions are not officially part of the SIMD
proposal, they are only available on an opt-in basis via LLVM
intrinsics and clang builtin functions. If these instructions are
merged to the proposal, this implementation will change so that the
instructions will be generated from normal IR. At that point the
intrinsics and builtin functions would be removed.

This PR also changes the opcodes for the experimental f32x4.qfm{a,s}
instructions because their opcodes conflicted with those of the
v128.load{32,64}_zero instructions. The new opcodes were chosen to
match those used in V8.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84820
2020-08-03 13:54:00 -07:00
Fangrui Song
afa11d8b91 [MC] Default MCAsmBackend::mayNeedRelaxation() to false 2020-08-02 22:13:59 -07:00
Wouter van Oortmerssen
a492dddf2e [WebAssembly] Fixed 64-bit indices in br_table
LLVM selection dag assumes "switch" indices are pointer sized, which causes problems for our 32-bit br_table. The new function ensures 32-bit operands don't get unnecessarily extended, and 64-bit operands get truncated.

Note that the changes to the existing test test exactly that: the addition of -NEXT in 2 places ensures no extension is inserted (which the test previously ignored) and that the wrap is present (previously omitted in wasm64 mode).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84705
2020-07-30 10:52:16 -07:00
Craig Topper
a1d16be90c [WebAssembly] Fix GCC 5 build.
Hans' speculative fix in b7292f2db02d37c9291afc0613a3fbce0a4ad4e8
didn't work for me. This seems to.
2020-07-30 10:00:28 -07:00
Hans Wennborg
3fd9d6808f Speculative GCC 5 build fix
It's complaining about specializing the template in a different namespace.
2020-07-30 16:12:52 +02:00
Heejin Ahn
166ce9a607 [WebAssembly] Fix getBottom for loops
When it was first created, CFGSort only made sure BBs in each
`MachineLoop` are sorted together. After we added exception support,
CFGSort now also sorts BBs in each `WebAssemblyException`, which
represents a `catch` block, together, and
`Region` class was introduced to be a thin wrapper for both
`MachineLoop` and `WebAssemblyException`.

But how we compute those loops and exceptions is different.
`MachineLoopInfo` is constructed using the standard loop computation
algorithm in LLVM; the definition of loop is "a set of BBs that are
dominated by a loop header and have a path back to the loop header". So
even if some BBs are semantically contained by a loop in the original
program, or in other words dominated by a loop header, if they don't
have a path back to the loop header, they are not considered a part of
the loop. For example, if a BB is dominated by a loop header but
contains `call abort()` or `rethrow`, it wouldn't have a path back to
the header, so it is not included in the loop.

But `WebAssemblyException` is wasm-specific data structure, and its
algorithm is simple: a `WebAssemblyException` consists of an EH pad and
all BBs dominated by the EH pad. So this scenario is possible: (This is
also the situation in the newly added test in cfg-stackify-eh.ll)

```
Loop L: header, A, ehpad, latch
Exception E: ehpad, latch, B
```
(B contains `abort()`, so it does not have a path back to the loop
header, so it is not included in L.)

And it is sorted in this order:
```
header
A
ehpad
latch
B
```

And when CFGStackify places `end_loop` or `end_try` markers, it
previously used `WebAssembly::getBottom()`, which returns the latest BB
in the sorted order, and placed the marker there. So in this case the
marker placements will be like this:
```
loop
  header
  try
    A
  catch
    ehpad
    latch
end_loop         <-- misplaced!
    B
  end_try
```
in which nesting between the loop and the exception is not correct.
`end_loop` marker has to be placed after `B`, and also after `end_try`.

Maybe the fundamental way to solve this problem is to come up with our
own algorithm for computing loop region too, in which we include all BBs
dominated by a loop header in a loop. But this takes a lot more effort.
The only thing we need to fix is actually, `getBottom()`. If we make it
return the right BB, which means in case of a loop, the latest BB of the
loop itself and all exceptions contained in there, we are good.

This renames `Region` and `RegionInfo` to `SortRegion` and
`SortRegionInfo` and extracts them into their own file. And add
`getBottom` to `SortRegionInfo` class, from which it can access
`WebAssemblyExceptionInfo`, so that it can compute a correct bottom
block for loops.

Reviewed By: dschuff

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84724
2020-07-29 10:36:32 -07:00
Thomas Lively
e2b0ae5192 [WebAssembly] Remove intrinsics for SIMD widening ops
Instead, pattern match extends of extract_subvectors to generate
widening operations. Since extract_subvector is not a legal node, this
is implemented via a custom combine that recognizes extract_subvector
nodes before they are legalized. The combine produces custom ISD nodes
that are later pattern matched directly, just like the intrinsic was.

Also removes the clang builtins for these operations since the
instructions can now be generated from portable code sequences.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84556
2020-07-28 18:25:55 -07:00
Thomas Lively
adbadea361 [WebAssembly] Implement truncating vector stores
Rather than expanding truncating stores so that vectors are stored one
lane at a time, lower them to a sequence of instructions using
narrowing operations instead, when possible. Since the narrowing
operations have saturating semantics, but truncating stores require
truncation, mask the stored value to manually truncate it before
narrowing. Also, since narrowing is a binary operation, pass in the
original vector as the unused second argument.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84377
2020-07-28 17:46:45 -07:00
Wouter van Oortmerssen
dbcc53b15e [WebAssembly] 64-bit (function) pointer fixes.
Accounting for the fact that Wasm function indices are 32-bit, but in wasm64 we want uniform 64-bit pointers.
Includes reloc types for 64-bit table indices.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83729
2020-07-16 14:10:22 -07:00
Thomas Lively
9ac94b78c6 [WebAssembly] Implement v128.select
Although the SIMD spec proposal does not specifically include a
select instruction, the select instruction in MVP WebAssembly is
polymorphic over the selected types, so it is able to work on v128
values when they are enabled. This patch introduces a new variant of
the select instruction for each legal vector type. Additional ISel
patterns are adapted from the SELECT_I32 and SELECT_I64 patterns.

Depends on D83736.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83737
2020-07-16 11:37:25 -07:00
Thomas Lively
1cc997c0a7 [WebAssembly] Lower vselect to v128.bitselect
We were previously expanding vselect and matching on the expansion to
generate bitselects, but in some cases the expansion would be further
combined and a bitselect would not get generated. This patch improves
codegen in those cases by legalizing vselect and lowering it to
v128.bitselect. The old pattern that matches the expansion is still
useful for lowering IR that already uses the expansion rather than a
select operation.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83734
2020-07-16 11:11:19 -07:00
Thomas Lively
de452e6c93 [WebAssembly] Prefer v128.const for constant splats
In BUILD_VECTOR lowering, we used to generally prefer using splats
over v128.const instructions because v128.const has a very large
encoding. However, in d5b7a4e2e8 we switched to preferring consts
because they are expected to be more efficient in engines. This patch
updates the ISel patterns to match this current preference.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83581
2020-07-10 18:27:52 -07:00
Thomas Lively
12061b6bf1 [WebAssembly][NFC] Simplify vector shift lowering and add tests
This patch builds on 0d7286a652 by simplifying the code for detecting
splat values and adding new tests demonstrating the lowering of
splatted absolute value shift amounts, which are common in code
generated by Halide. The lowering is very bad right now, but
subsequent patches will improve it considerably. The tests will be
useful for evaluating the improvements in those patches.

Reviewed By: aheejin

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83493
2020-07-10 00:18:59 -07:00
Thomas Lively
748afaf37d [WebAssembly] Avoid scalarizing vector shifts in more cases
Since WebAssembly's vector shift instructions take a scalar shift
amount rather than a vector shift amount, we have to check in ISel
that the vector shift amount is a splat. Previously, we were checking
explicitly for splat BUILD_VECTOR nodes, but this change uses the
standard utilities for detecting splat values that can handle more
complex splat patterns. Since the C++ ISel lowering is now more
general than the ISel patterns, this change also simplifies shift
lowering by using the C++ lowering for all SIMD shifts rather than
mixing C++ and normal pattern-based lowering.

This change improves ISel for shifts to the point that the
simd-shift-unroll.ll regression test no longer tests the code path it
was originally meant to test. The bug corresponding to that regression
test is no longer reproducible with its original reported reproducer,
so rather than try to fix the regression test, this change just
removes it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83278
2020-07-07 10:45:26 -07:00
Wouter van Oortmerssen
850662dafb [WebAssembly] Added 64-bit memory.grow/size/copy/fill
This covers both the existing memory functions as well as the new bulk memory proposal.
Added new test files since changes where also required in the inputs.

Also removes unused init/drop intrinsics rather than trying to make them work for 64-bit.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82821
2020-07-06 12:49:50 -07:00
Alexander Belyaev
ea3fabb802 [llvm] Cast to (void) the unused variable. 2020-07-05 12:33:58 +02:00
Thomas Lively
1c8a1d0f1c [WebAssembly] Do not assume br_table range checks will be gt_u
OSS-Fuzz and the Emscripten test suite uncovered some edge cases in
which the range check instruction seemed to be an (i32.const 0) or
other unexpected instruction, triggering an assertion. Unfortunately
the reproducers are rather complicated, so they don't make good unit
tests. This commit removes the bad assertion and conservatively
optimizes range checks only when the range check instruction is
i32.gt_u.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83169
2020-07-04 18:11:24 -07:00
Thomas Lively
bb0c10ffc6 [WebAssembly] Do not omit range checks for i64 switches
Summary:
Since the br_table instruction takes an i32, switches over i64s (and
larger integers) must use the i32.wrap_i64 instruction to truncate the
table index. This truncation makes numbers just over 2^32
indistinguishable from small numbers, so it was a miscompilation to
omit the range check preceding these br_tables. This change fixes the
problem by skipping the "fixing" of the br_table when the range check
is an i64 instruction.

Fixes PR46447.

Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff, kripken

Reviewed By: kripken

Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83017
2020-07-03 17:15:39 -07:00
Guillaume Chatelet
ced6ab5db1 [Alignment][NFC] Migrate SelectionDAGTargetInfo::EmitTargetCodeForMemcpy to Align
This patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82849
2020-06-30 13:12:31 +00:00