If we have a mask, and a value x, where (x & mask) == x, we can drop the AND
and just use x.
This is about a 0.4% geomean code size improvement on CTMark at -O3 for AArch64.
In AArch64, this is most useful post-legalization. Patterns like this often
show up when legalizing s1s, which must be extended to larger types.
e.g.
```
%cmp:_(s32) = G_ICMP ...
%and:_(s32) = G_AND %cmp, 1
```
Since G_ICMP only produces a single bit, there's no reason to mask it with the
G_AND.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85463
Intrinsic properties can now be set to default and applied to all
intrinsics. If the attributes are not needed, the user can opt-out by
setting the DisableDefaultAttributes flag to true.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70365
In DAGTypeLegalizer::GenWidenVectorLoads the algorithm assumes it only
ever deals with fixed width types, hence the offsets for each individual
store never take 'vscale' into account. I've changed the code in that
function to use TypeSize instead of unsigned for tracking the remaining
load amount. In addition, I've changed the load loop to use the new
IncrementPointer helper function for updating the addresses in each
iteration, since this handles scalable vector types.
Also, I've added report_fatal_errors in GenWidenVectorExtLoads,
TargetLowering::scalarizeVectorLoad and TargetLowering::scalarizeVectorStores,
since these functions currently use a sequence of element-by-element
scalar loads/stores. In a similar vein, I've also added a fatal error
report in FindMemType for the case when we decide to return the element
type for a scalable vector type.
I've added new tests in
CodeGen/AArch64/sve-split-load.ll
CodeGen/AArch64/sve-ld-addressing-mode-reg-imm.ll
for the changes in GenWidenVectorLoads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85909
Summary:
Caught by HWASAN on arm64 Android (which uses ld128 for long double). This
was running the existing fuzzer.
The specific minimized fuzz input to reproduce this is:
__cxa_demangle("1\006ILeeeEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE", 0, 0, 0);
Reviewers: eugenis, srhines, #libc_abi!
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, danielkiss, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77924
It's annoying to have to maintain multiple, nearly identical chains of if
statements which all set the same attributes.
Add a helper function, `addFlagsUsingAttrFn` which performs the attribute
setting.
Then, use wrappers for that function in `lowerCall` and `setArgFlags`.
(Note that the flag-setting code in `setArgFlags` was missing the returned
attribute. There's no selection for this yet, so no test. It's an example of
the kind of thing this lets us avoid, though.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86159
Parsing DWARFv5 debug_loclist offsets when a CU is parsed is weighing
down memory usage of symbolizers that don't need to parse this data at
all. There's not much benefit to caching these anyway - since they are
O(1) lookup and reading once you know where the offset list starts (and
can do bounds checking with the offset list size too).
In general, I think it might be time to start paying down some of the
technical debt of loc/loclist/range/rnglist parsing to try to unify it a
bit more.
eg:
* Currently DWARFUnit has: RangeSection, RangeSectionBase, LocSection,
LocSectionBase, LocTable, RngListTable, LoclistTableHeader (be nice if
these were all wrapped up in two variables - one for loclists, one for
rnglists)
* rnglists and loclists are handled differently (see:
LoclistTableHeader, but no RnglistTableHeader)
* maybe all these types could be less stateful - lazily parse what they
need to, even reparsing rather than caching because it doesn't seem
too expensive, for instance. (though admittedly so long as it's
constantcost/overead per compilatiton that's probably adequate)
* Maybe implementing and using a DWARFDataExtractor that can be
sub-ranged (so we could slice it up to just the single contribution) -
though maybe that's not so useful because loc/ranges need to refer to
it by absolute, not contribution-relative mechanisms
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86110
This is restricted to single use loads, which if we fold to sextloads we can
find more optimal addressing modes on AArch64.
This also fixes an overload the MachineFunction::getMachineMemOperand() method
which was incorrectly using the MF alignment instead of the MMO alignment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85966
By detecting this sign extend pattern early, we can uncover opportunities for
more optimizations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85965
We weren't looking through the parameters on calls at all.
E.g., say you had
```
declare i32 @zext(i32 zeroext %x)
...
%y = call i32 @zext(i32 %something)
...
```
At the point of the call, we wouldn't know that the %something should have the
zeroext attribute.
This sets flags in about the same way as
TargetLoweringBase::ArgListEntry::setAttributes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86125
AMDGPU ISA isn't backwards compatible and hence -mcpu must always be specified during disassembly.
However, the AMDGPU target CPU is stored in e_flags in the ELF object.
This patch allows targets to implement CPU string detection, and also implements it for AMDGPU by looking at e_flags.
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84519
This patch introduces a new abstract attribute `AANoUndef` which corresponds to `noundef` IR attribute and deduce them.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85184
Currently it is hard to avoid having LLVM link to the system install of
ncurses, since it uses check_library_exists to find e.g. libtinfo and
not find_library or find_package.
With this change the ncurses lib is found with find_library, which also
considers CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH. This solves an issue for the spack package
manager, where we want to use the zlib installed by spack, and spack
provides the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH for it.
This is a similar change as https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219, which just
landed in master.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85820
This patch implements the vec_extractm function prototypes in altivec.h in
order to utilize the vector extract with mask instructions introduced in Power10.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82675
WIP that tries to hide the latency of runtime calls that involve host to
device memory transfers by splitting them into their "issue" and "wait"
versions. The "issue" is moved upwards as much as possible. The "wait" is
moved downards as much as possible. The "issue" issues the memory transfer
asynchronously, returning a handle. The "wait" waits in the returned
handle for the memory transfer to finish. We still lack of the movement.
When diffing disassembly dump of two binaries, I see lots of noises from mismatched jump target addresses and global data references, which unnecessarily causes diffs on every function, making it impractical. I'm trying to symbolize the raw binary addresses to minimize the diff noise.
In this change, a local branch target is modeled as a label and the branch target operand will simply be printed as a label. Local labels are collected by a separate pre-decoding pass beforehand. A global data memory operand will be printed as a global symbol instead of the raw data address. Unfortunately, due to the way the disassembler is set up and to be less intrusive, a global symbol is always printed as the last operand of a memory access instruction. This is less than ideal but is probably acceptable from checking code quality point of view since on most targets an instruction can have at most one memory operand.
So far only the X86 disassemblers are supported.
Test Plan:
llvm-objdump -d --x86-asm-syntax=intel --no-show-raw-insn --no-leading-addr :
```
Disassembly of section .text:
<_start>:
push rax
mov dword ptr [rsp + 4], 0
mov dword ptr [rsp], 0
mov eax, dword ptr [rsp]
cmp eax, dword ptr [rip + 4112] # 202182 <g>
jge 0x20117e <_start+0x25>
call 0x201158 <foo>
inc dword ptr [rsp]
jmp 0x201169 <_start+0x10>
xor eax, eax
pop rcx
ret
```
llvm-objdump -d **--symbolize-operands** --x86-asm-syntax=intel --no-show-raw-insn --no-leading-addr :
```
Disassembly of section .text:
<_start>:
push rax
mov dword ptr [rsp + 4], 0
mov dword ptr [rsp], 0
<L1>:
mov eax, dword ptr [rsp]
cmp eax, dword ptr <g>
jge <L0>
call <foo>
inc dword ptr [rsp]
jmp <L1>
<L0>:
xor eax, eax
pop rcx
ret
```
Note that the jump instructions like `jge 0x20117e <_start+0x25>` without this work is printed as a real target address and an offset from the leading symbol. With a change in the optimizer that adds/deletes an instruction, the address and offset may shift for targets placed after the instruction. This will be a problem when diffing the disassembly from two optimizers where there are unnecessary false positives due to such branch target address changes. With `--symbolize-operand`, a label is printed for a branch target instead to reduce the false positives. Similarly, the disassemble of PC-relative global variable references is also prone to instruction insertion/deletion.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84191
Some of the lower implementations were relying on this, however the
type was not set depending on which form .lower* helper form you were
using. For instance, if you used an unconditonal lower(), the type was
never set. Most of the lower actions do not benefit from a type
parameter, and just expand in terms of the original operation's types.
However, some lowerings could benefit from an additional type hint to
combine a promotion and an expansion. An example of this is for
add/sub sat. The DAG integer legalization tries to use smarter
expansions directly when promoting the integer type, and doesn't
always produce the same instruction with a wider type.
Treat this as an optional hint argument, that only means something for
specific lower actions. It may be useful to generalize this mechanism
to pass a full list of type indexes and desired types, but I haven't
run into a case like that yet.
SUMMARY:
1. This patch provided API for decoding the traceback table info and unit test for the these API.
2. Another patchs will do the following things:
2.1 added a new option --traceback-table to decode the trace back table information for xcoff object file when
using llvm-objdump to disassemble the xcoff objfile.
2.2 print out the traceback table information for llvm-objdump.
Reviewers: Jason liu, Hubert Tong, James Henderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81585
Use the TableGen directive back-end to generate code for the clauses unparsing.
Reviewed By: sscalpone, kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85851
The artifact combiner searches for the uses of G_MERGE_VALUES for
unmerge/trunc that need further combining. This also needs to handle
the vector merge opcodes the same way. This fixes leaving behind some
pairs I expected to be removed, that were if the legalizer is run a
second time.
Existing implementation always aborts on syntax errors in a DataLayout
description. While this is meaningful for consuming textual IR modules, it is
inconvenient for users that may need fine-grained control over the layout from,
e.g., command-line options. Propagate errors through the parsing functions and
only abort in the top-level parsing function instead.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85650
The current demand propagator for addition will mark all input bits at and right of the alive output bit as alive. But carry won't propagate beyond a bit for which both operands are zero (or one/zero in the case of subtraction) so a more accurate answer is possible given known bits.
I derived a propagator by working through truth tables and using a bit-reversed addition to make demand ripple to the right, but I'm not sure how to make a convincing argument for its correctness in the comments yet. Nevertheless, here's a minimal implementation and test to get feedback.
This would help in a situation where, for example, four bytes (<128) packed into an int are added with four others SIMD-style but only one of the four results is actually read.
Known A: 0_______0_______0_______0_______
Known B: 0_______0_______0_______0_______
AOut: 00000000001000000000000000000000
AB, current: 00000000001111111111111111111111
AB, patch: 00000000001111111000000000000000
Committed on behalf of: @rrika (Erika)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72423
If we can't identify alloca used in lifetime marker we
need to assume to worst case scenario.
Reviewed By: eugenis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84630
This change added a new inline advisor that takes optimization remarks from previous inlining as input, and provides the decision as advice so current inlining can replay inline decisions of a different compilation. Dwarf inline stack with line and discriminator is used as anchor for call sites including call context. The change can be useful for Inliner tuning as it provides a channel to allow external input for tweaking inline decisions. Existing alternatives like alwaysinline attribute is per-function, not per-callsite. Per-callsite inline intrinsic can be another solution (not yet existing), but it's intrusive to implement and also does not differentiate call context.
A switch -sample-profile-inline-replay=<inline_remarks_file> is added to hook up the new inline advisor with SampleProfileLoader's inline decision for replay. Since SampleProfileLoader does top-down inlining, inline decision can be specialized for each call context, hence we should be able to replay inlining accurately. However with a bottom-up inliner like CGSCC inlining, the replay can be limited due to lack of specialization for different call context. Apart from that limitation, the new inline advisor can still be used by regular CGSCC inliner later if needed for tuning purpose.
This is a resubmit of https://reviews.llvm.org/D83743
This code becomes dead for valid IR after 48f4312 and a96fc46. The reason for the test change is that the verifier reports the first verification error encountered, in some non-specified visit order. By removing the verification code in gc.relocates for a statepoint with inline gc operands, I change the error the verifier reports. And in one case, the checked for error is no longer possible with the bundle representation, so I simply delete the file.
This was done by turning on -enable-npm-optnone and fixing failures.
That will be enabled in a follow-up change for ease of reverting.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85457
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
This avoid GUID lookup in Index.findSummaryInModule.
Follow up for D81242.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85269
Define the platform ID = 10, and simple mappings between platform ID & name.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, cishida
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85594
These should really match either G_BUILD_VECTOR or
G_BUILD_VECTOR_TRUNC, but there doesn't seem to be an existing
mechanism for matching alternative opcodes. There is GIM_SwitchOpcode,
but it seems to assume it's oly only used for matcher optimization.
I could also omit any opcode check and rely on the matcher directly
checking the opcode, but the table optimizer currently assumes there
has to be an opcode check.
Also doesn't try to handle undef elements like the DAG version.
This adds RemoteJITLinkMemoryManager is a new subclass of OrcRemoteTargetClient. It implements jitlink::JITLinkMemoryManager and targets the OrcRemoteTargetRPCAPI.
Behavior should be very similar to RemoteRTDyldMemoryManager. The essential differnce with JITLink is that allocations work in isolation from its memory manager. Thus, the RemoteJITLinkMemoryManager might be seen as "JITLink allocation factory".
RPCMMAlloc is another subclass of OrcRemoteTargetClient and implements the actual functionality. It allocates working memory on the host and target memory on the remote target. Upon finalization working memory is copied over to the tagrte address space. Finalization can be asynchronous for JITLink allocations, but I don't see that it makes a difference here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85919