71 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ahmed Bougacha
f40aa3d262 [X86] Look for scalar through one bitcast when lowering to VBROADCAST.
Fixes PR23464: one way to use the broadcast intrinsics is:

  _mm256_broadcastw_epi16(_mm_cvtsi32_si128(*(int*)src));

We don't currently fold this, but now that we use native IR for
the intrinsics (r245605), we can look through one bitcast to find
the broadcast scalar.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10557

llvm-svn: 245613
2015-08-20 21:02:39 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha
6a04431cfd [X86] Add some broadcast-from-memory tests.
llvm-svn: 245612
2015-08-20 20:59:41 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
8ef138051c [X86][SSE] Use bitmasks instead of shuffles where possible.
VPAND is a lot faster than VPSHUFB and VPBLENDVB - this patch ensures we attempt to lower to a basic bitmask before lowering to the slower byte shuffle/blend instructions.

Split off from D11518.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11541

llvm-svn: 243395
2015-07-28 08:54:41 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
925a261d63 [X86][SSE] Added shuffle tests to demonstrate missed bitmask.
llvm-svn: 243324
2015-07-27 20:41:57 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha
96f42ed646 [X86] update_llc_test_checks vector-shuffle-*. NFC.
Some of them had gone stale.

llvm-svn: 240485
2015-06-24 00:03:48 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
a5a17c0b23 [X86][SSE] Use (V)PINSRB for direct byte insertion in 16i8 buildvector on SSE4.1 targets
This patch allows SSE4.1 targets to use (V)PINSRB to create 16i8 vectors by inserting i8 scalars directly into a XMM register instead of merging pairs of i8 scalars into a i16 and using the SSE2 PINSRW instruction.

This allows folding of byte loads and reduces scalar register usage as well.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8839

llvm-svn: 234193
2015-04-06 18:39:00 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
335a565d46 [DAGCombiner] Combine shuffles of BUILD_VECTOR and SCALAR_TO_VECTOR
This patch attempts to fold the shuffling of 'scalar source' inputs - BUILD_VECTOR and SCALAR_TO_VECTOR nodes - if the shuffle node is the only user. This folds away a lot of unnecessary shuffle nodes, and allows quite a bit of constant folding that was being missed.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8516

llvm-svn: 234004
2015-04-03 10:02:21 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
2d456bc887 [DagCombiner] Allow shuffles to merge through bitcasts
Currently shuffles may only be combined if they are of the same type, despite the fact that bitcasts are often introduced in between shuffle nodes (e.g. x86 shuffle type widening).

This patch allows a single input shuffle to peek through bitcasts and if the input is another shuffle will merge them, shuffling using the smallest sized type, and re-applying the bitcasts at the inputs and output instead.

Dropped old ShuffleToZext test - this patch removes the use of the zext and vector-zext.ll covers these anyhow.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7939

llvm-svn: 231380
2015-03-05 17:14:04 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
55eca885d4 [x86] Now that the new vector shuffle legality is enabled and everything
is going well, remove the flag and the code for the old legality tests.

This is the first step toward removing the entire old vector shuffle
lowering. *Much* more code to delete coming up next.

llvm-svn: 229963
2015-02-20 03:59:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
6d618f4a18 [x86] Delete still more piles of complex code now that we have a good
systematic lowering of v8i16.

This required a slight strategy shift to prefer unpack lowerings in more
places. While this isn't a cut-and-dry win in every case, it is in the
overwhelming majority. There are only a few places where the old
lowering would probably be a touch faster, and then only by a small
margin.

In some cases, this is yet another significant improvement.

llvm-svn: 229859
2015-02-19 15:21:57 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
fad94c932a [x86] Teach the unpack lowering how to lower with an initial unpack in
addition to lowering to trees rooted in an unpack.

This saves shuffles and or registers in many various ways, lets us
handle another class of v4i32 shuffles pre SSE4.1 without domain
crosses, etc.

llvm-svn: 229856
2015-02-19 15:06:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
6f2050671d [x86] Dramatically improve v8i16 shuffle lowering by not using its
terribly complex partial blend logic.

This code path was one of the more complex and bug prone when it first
went in and it hasn't faired much better. Ultimately, with the simpler
basis for unpack lowering and support bit-math blending, this is
completely obsolete. In the worst case without this we generate
different but equivalent instructions. However, in many cases we
generate much better code. This is especially true when blends or pshufb
is available.

This does expose one (minor) weakness of the unpack lowering that I'll
try to address.

In case you were wondering, this is actually a big part of what I've
been trying to pull off in the recent string of commits.

llvm-svn: 229853
2015-02-19 14:08:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
73087f5ce9 [x86] Remove the final fallback in the v8i16 lowering that isn't really
needed, and significantly improve the SSSE3 path.

This makes the new strategy much more clear. If we can blend, we just go
with that. If we can't blend, we try to permute into an unpack so
that we handle cases where the unpack doing the blend also simplifies
the shuffle. If that fails and we've got SSSE3, we now call into
factored-out pshufb lowering code so that we leverage the fact that
pshufb can set up a blend for us while shuffling. This generates great
code, especially because we *know* we don't have a fast blend at this
point. Finally, we fall back on decomposing into permutes and blends
because we do at least have a bit-math-based blend if we need to use
that.

This pretty significantly improves some of the v8i16 code paths. We
never need to form pshufb for the single-input shuffles because we have
effective target-specific combines to form it there, but we were missing
its effectiveness in the blends.

llvm-svn: 229851
2015-02-19 13:56:49 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
ba91b52308 [x86] Simplify the pre-SSSE3 v16i8 lowering significantly by decomposing
them into permutes and a blend with the generic decomposition logic.

This works really well in almost every case and lets the code only
manage the expansion of a single input into two v8i16 vectors to perform
the actual shuffle. The blend-based merging is often much nicer than the
pack based merging that this replaces. The only place where it isn't we
end up blending between two packs when we could do a single pack. To
handle that case, just teach the v2i64 lowering to handle these blends
by digging out the operands.

With this we're down to only really random permutations that cause an
explosion of instructions.

llvm-svn: 229849
2015-02-19 13:15:12 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
b0373058d2 [x86] Remove the insanely over-aggressive unpack lowering strategy for
v16i8 shuffles, and replace it with new facilities.

This uses precise patterns to match exact unpacks, and the new
generalized unpack lowering only when we detect a case where we will
have to shuffle both inputs anyways and they terminate in exactly
a blend.

This fixes all of the blend horrors that I uncovered by always lowering
blends through the vector shuffle lowering. It also removes *sooooo*
much of the crazy instruction sequences required for v16i8 lowering
previously. Much cleaner now.

The only "meh" aspect is that we sometimes use pshufb+pshufb+unpck when
it would be marginally nicer to use pshufb+pshufb+por. However, the
difference there is *tiny*. In many cases its a win because we re-use
the pshufb mask. In others, we get to avoid the pshufb entirely. I've
left a FIXME, but I'm dubious we can really do better than this. I'm
actually pretty happy with this lowering now.

For SSE2 this exposes some horrors that were really already there. Those
will have to fixed by changing a different path through the v16i8
lowering.

llvm-svn: 229846
2015-02-19 12:10:37 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
72b437995e [x86] Add support for bit-wise blending and use it in the v8 and v16
lowering paths. I'm going to be leveraging this to simplify a lot of the
overly complex lowering of v8 and v16 shuffles in pre-SSSE3 modes.

Sadly, this isn't profitable on v4i32 and v2i64. There, the float and
double blending instructions for pre-SSE4.1 are actually pretty good,
and we can't beat them with bit math. And once SSE4.1 comes around we
have direct blending support and this ceases to be relevant.

Also, some of the test cases look odd because the domain fixer
canonicalizes these to floating point domain. That's OK, it'll use the
integer domain when it matters and some day I may be able to update
enough of LLVM to canonicalize the other way.

This restores almost all of the regressions from teaching x86's vselect
lowering to always use vector shuffle lowering for blends. The remaining
problems are because the v16 lowering path is still doing crazy things.
I'll be re-arranging that strategy in more detail in subsequent commits
to finish recovering the performance here.

llvm-svn: 229836
2015-02-19 10:46:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
fbca0e7b75 [x86] Refactor the bit shift code the same as I just did the byte shift
code.

While this didn't have the miscompile (it used MatchLeft consistently)
it missed some cases where it could use right shifts. I've added a test
case Craig Topper came up with to exercise the right shift matching.

This code is really identical between the two. I'm going to merge them
next so that we don't keep two copies of all of this logic.

llvm-svn: 229655
2015-02-18 09:19:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
d44ede78e3 [x86] Add a generic unpack-targeted lowering technique. This can be used
to generically lower blends and is particularly nice because it is
available frome SSE2 onward. This removes a lot of the remaining domain
crossing blends in SSE2 code.

I'm hoping to replace some of the "interleaved" lowering hacks with
something closer to this which should be more principled. First, this
needs to learn how to detect and use other interleavings besides that of
the natural type provided. That will be a follow-up patch though.

llvm-svn: 229378
2015-02-16 12:28:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
358c1db65e [x86] Add initial basic support for forming blends of v16i8 vectors.
This blend instruction is ... really lame. The register usage is insane.
As a consequence this is probably only *barely* better than 2 pshufbs
followed by a por, and that mostly because it only has to read from
a single memory location.

However, this doesn't fix as much as I kind of expected, so more to go.
Pretty sure that the ordering and delegation of v16i8 is just really,
really bad.

llvm-svn: 229373
2015-02-16 10:58:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
db7a8ca276 [x86] Add some more test cases for i8 vector blends.
llvm-svn: 229372
2015-02-16 10:51:49 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
635ad2f50d [x86] Switch a collection of tests explicitly to the new vector shuffle
legality test (essentially, everything is legal).

I'm planning to make this the default shortly, but I'd like to fix
a collection of the bugs it exposes first, and this will let me easily
test them. It also showcases both the improvements and a few of the
regressions triggered by the change. The biggest improvements by far are
the significantly reduced shuffling and domain crossing in the combining
test case. The biggest regressions are missing some clever blending
patterns.

llvm-svn: 229284
2015-02-15 06:37:21 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
83f63dfef3 [x86] Remove the now-default-on flag for the new vector shuffle lowering
strategy from a bunch of tests.

llvm-svn: 229283
2015-02-15 06:20:51 +00:00
Craig Topper
fd328d454f Fix probable typo in test.
llvm-svn: 229070
2015-02-13 06:07:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
d418a34d82 [x86] Mechanically update a bunch of tests' check lines using the latest
version of the script.

Changes include:
- Using the VEX prefix
- Skipping more detail when we have useful shuffle comments to match
- Matching more shuffle comments that have been added to the printer
  (yay!)
- Matching the destination registers of some AVX instructions
- Stripping trailing whitespace that crept in
- Fixing indentation issues

Nothing interesting going on here. I'm just trying really hard to ensure
these changes don't show up in the diffs with actual changes to the
backend.

llvm-svn: 228132
2015-02-04 10:46:53 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
eee3b225d9 [X86][SSE] psrl(w/d/q) and psll(w/d/q) bit shifts for SSE2
Patch to match cases where shuffle masks can be reduced to bit shifts. Similar to byte shift shuffle matching from D5699.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6649

llvm-svn: 228047
2015-02-03 21:58:29 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
e4646d63a8 [x86] Add two truly horrific test cases for the new vector shuffle
lowering. I'm prepping patches to improve these, and this will let the
delta of those patches show the improvement. =]

llvm-svn: 228044
2015-02-03 21:56:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
7c1eb70e22 [x86] Update the indent and layout of some tests in this file. NFC
This is just to remove voise from using the update_llc_test_checks
script.

llvm-svn: 228043
2015-02-03 21:56:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0a9c0a2838 [x86] Tweak my update script to use test case function names starting
with 'stress' to indicate that the specific output isn't interesting and
relax them to only check the last instruction (a ret).

I've updated the one test case that really uses this to name the one
'stress_test' which was actually producing output we can directly check.
With this, the script doesn't introduce noise when run over the v16 test
file.

llvm-svn: 228033
2015-02-03 21:26:45 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
6b1cbac334 [X86][SSE] Added general integer shuffle matching for MOVQ instruction
This patch adds general shuffle pattern matching for the MOVQ zero-extend instruction (copy lower 64bits, zero upper) for all 128-bit integer vectors, it is added as a fallback test in lowerVectorShuffleAsZeroOrAnyExtend.

llvm-svn: 228022
2015-02-03 20:09:18 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
45b04beea7 [X86][SSE] Shuffle mask decode support for zero extend, scalar float/double moves and integer load instructions
This patch adds shuffle mask decodes for integer zero extends (pmovzx** and movq xmm,xmm) and scalar float/double loads/moves (movss/movsd).

Also adds shuffle mask decodes for integer loads (movd/movq).

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7228

llvm-svn: 227688
2015-01-31 14:09:36 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2da477ebfb [x86] Remove some windows line endings that snuck into the tests here.
Folks on Windows, remember to set up your subversion to strip these when
submitting...

llvm-svn: 225593
2015-01-11 01:36:20 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
02b7bb4769 [X86][SSE] Avoid vector byte shuffles with zero by using pshufb to create zeros
pshufb can shuffle in zero bytes as well as bytes from a source vector - we can use this to avoid having to shuffle 2 vectors and ORing the result when the used inputs from a vector are all zeroable.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6878

llvm-svn: 225551
2015-01-09 22:03:19 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
449336c7d0 [X86][SSE] Added vector packing test for pr12412
llvm-svn: 225138
2015-01-04 19:08:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
701b41a316 [x86] Switch a constant selection test to use positive assertions and to
store to real pointers so that its clear that the right code is in fact
being generated.

llvm-svn: 223612
2014-12-07 17:15:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
1b3d3441e0 [x86] Clean up the shift lowering vector shuffle tests a bit using my
script. Notably this folds all the SSE cases together into a single
FileCheck block. It also adds a vex prefix.

llvm-svn: 223610
2014-12-07 17:15:53 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
e5f972f1c1 [X86][SSE] pslldq/psrldq byte shifts/rotation for SSE2
This patch builds on http://reviews.llvm.org/D5598 to perform byte rotation shuffles (lowerVectorShuffleAsByteRotate) on pre-SSSE3 (palignr) targets - pre-SSSE3 is only enabled on i8 and i16 vector targets where it is a more definite performance gain.

I've also added a separate byte shift shuffle (lowerVectorShuffleAsByteShift) that makes use of the ability of the SLLDQ/SRLDQ instructions to implicitly shift in zero bytes to avoid the need to create a zero register if we had used palignr.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5699

llvm-svn: 222340
2014-11-19 10:06:49 +00:00
Tim Northover
3a30fb90f5 X86: use getConstant rather than getTargetConstant behind BUILD_VECTOR.
getTargetConstant should only be used when you can guarantee the instruction
selected will be able to cope with the raw value. BUILD_VECTOR is rather too
generic for this so we should use getConstant instead. In that case, an
instruction can still consume the constant, but if it doesn't it'll be
materialised through its own round of ISel.

Should fix PR21352.

llvm-svn: 221961
2014-11-14 01:30:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
30d928c2f6 [x86] Clean up a bunch of vector shuffle tests with my script. Notably,
removes windows line endings and other noise. This is in prelude to
making substantive changes to these tests.

llvm-svn: 221776
2014-11-12 09:17:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
aa7f8c811b [x86] Fix PR21139, one of the last remaining regressions found in the
new vector shuffle lowering.

This is loosely based on a patch by Marius Wachtler to the PR (thanks!).
I refactored it a bi to use std::count_if and a mutable array ref but
the core idea was exactly right. I also added some direct testing of
this case.

I believe PR21137 is now the only remaining regression.

llvm-svn: 219081
2014-10-05 12:07:34 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
72b6e493f2 [x86] Teach the new vector shuffle lowering to aggressively form MOVSS
and MOVSD nodes for single element vector inserts.

This is particularly important because a number of patterns in the
backend detect these patterns and leverage them to simplify things. It
also fixes quite a few of the insertion bad code examples. However, it
regresses a specific area: when available, blendps and blendpd are
*dramatically* faster than movss and movsd respectively. But it doesn't
really work to form the blend logic first because the blends *aren't* as
crazy efficient when the data is coming from memory anyways, and thus
will have a movss or movsd regardless. Also, doing that would block
a bunch of the patterns that this is designed to hit.

So my plan is to go into the patterns for lowering MOVSS and MOVSD and
lower them via blends when available. However that's a pretty invasive
restructuring so it will need to be a follow-up patch.

I have already gone into the patterns to lower MOVSS and MOVSD from
memory using MOVLPD, etc. Without that, several of the test cases
I already have regress.

llvm-svn: 218985
2014-10-03 13:11:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
ed2c9efc13 [x86] Teach the new vector shuffle lowering about VBROADCAST and
VPBROADCAST.

This has the somewhat expected pervasive impact. I don't know why
I forgot about this. Everything seems good with lots of significant
improvements in the tests.

llvm-svn: 218724
2014-10-01 00:41:21 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
5a27308c76 [x86] Add AVX1 and AVX2 testing to all of the 128-bit shuffle test
cases.

While clearly we don't need the AVX vector width, these ISA extensions
often cause us to select different instructions and we should cover them
even with the narrow vector width.

Also, while here, nuke the stress_test2 contents. There is no reason to
try to FileCheck this entire body when it is mostly a test for
successfully surviving the code generator.

llvm-svn: 218710
2014-09-30 22:16:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
4f910094ef [x86] Rework all of the 128-bit vector shuffle tests with my handy test
updating script so that they are more thorough and consistent.

Specific fixes here include:
- Actually test VEX-encoded AVX mnemonics.
- Actually use an SSE 4.1 run to test SSE 4.1 features!
- Correctly check instructions sequences from the start of the function.
- Elide the shuffle operands and comment designator in a consistent way.
- Test all of the architectures instead of just the ones I was motivated
  to manually author.

I've gone back through and fixed up any egregious issues I spotted. Let
me know if I missed something you really dislike.

One downside to this is that we're now not as diligently using FileCheck
variables for registers. I would be much more concerned with this if we
had larger register usage, but there just aren't that interesting of
register choices here and most of the registers are constrained by the
ABI. Ultimately, I don't think this is likely to be the maintenance
burden for these tests and updating them again should be staright
forward.

llvm-svn: 218707
2014-09-30 21:44:34 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
773e8426f8 [x86] Fix yet another bug in the new vector shuffle lowering's handling
of widening masks.

We can't widen a zeroing mask unless both elements that would be merged
are either zeroed or undef. This is the only way to widen a mask if it
has a zeroed element.

Also clean up the code here by ordering the checks in a more logical way
and by using the symoblic values for undef and zero. I'm actually torn
on using the symbolic values because the existing code is littered with
the assumption that -1 is undef, and moreover that entries '< 0' are the
special entries. While that works with the values given to these
constants, using the symbolic constants actually makes it a bit more
opaque why this is the case.

llvm-svn: 218575
2014-09-28 03:30:25 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0f4ad15770 [x86] Fix a moderately terrifying bug in the new 128-bit shuffle logic
that managed to elude all of my fuzz testing historically. =/

Something changed to allow this code path to actually be exercised and
it was doing bad things. It is especially heavily exercised by the
patterns that emerge when doing AVX shuffles that end up lowered through
the 128-bit code path.

llvm-svn: 218540
2014-09-26 20:41:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
d2677fff24 [x86] Teach the vector comment parsing and printing to correctly handle
undef in the shuffle mask. This shows up when we're printing comments
during lowering and we still have an IR-level constant hanging around
that models undef.

A nice consequence of this is *much* prettier test cases where the undef
lanes actually show up as undef rather than as a particular set of
values. This also allows us to print shuffle comments in cases that use
undef such as the recently added variable VPERMILPS lowering. Now those
test cases have nice shuffle comments attached with their details.

The shuffle lowering for PSHUFB has been augmented to use undef, and the
shuffle combining has been augmented to comprehend it.

llvm-svn: 218301
2014-09-23 11:15:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
32aacd5feb [x86] Fully generalize the zext lowering in the new vector shuffle
lowering to support both anyext and zext and to custom lower for many
different microarchitectures.

Using this allows us to get *exactly* the right code for zext and anyext
shuffles in all the vector sizes. For v16i8, the improvement is *huge*.
The new SSE2 test case added I refused to add before this because it was
sooooo muny instructions.

llvm-svn: 218143
2014-09-19 20:00:32 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
8a927d739f [x86] Recognize that we can use duplication to widen v16i8 shuffles due
to undef lanes as well as defined widenable lanes. This dramatically
improves the lowering we use for undef-shuffles in a zext-ish pattern
for SSE2.

llvm-svn: 218115
2014-09-19 09:45:21 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
b59ec295e0 [x86] Actually test the SSE2 lowering for most of the zext-ish shuffles.
Not sure why I only did SSSE3 here. Also, I've left out some of the SSE2
ones because the shuffles are so absurd it's not worth transcribing
them. Will try to fix them to be sane and then check them.

llvm-svn: 218114
2014-09-19 08:51:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2c46914a5d [x86] Add a dedicated lowering path for zext-compatible vector shuffles
to the new vector shuffle lowering code.

This allows us to emit PMOVZX variants consistently for patterns where
it is a viable lowering. This instruction is both fast and allows us to
fold loads into it. This only hooks the new lowering up for i16 and i8
element widths, mostly so I could manage the change to the tests. I'll
add the i32 one next, although it is significantly less interesting.

One thing to note is that we already had some tests for these patterns
but those tests had far less horrible instructions. The problem is that
those tests weren't checking the strict start and end of the instruction
sequence. =[ As a consequence something changed in the lowering making
us generate *TERRIBLE* code for these patterns in SSE2 through SSSE3.
I've consolidated all of the tests and spelled out the madness that we
currently emit for these shuffles. I'm going to try to figure out what
has gone wrong here.

llvm-svn: 218102
2014-09-19 06:07:49 +00:00