Fix the shift amount when unrolling a vector shift into scalar shifts.
Fix problem in getShuffleScalarElt where it assumes that the input of
a bit convert must be a vector.
llvm-svn: 60740
- Change default scheduling preference to list-burr, which produces somewhat
better code than the default. Could also use list-tdrr, but need to ask
dev list about the appropriate handy mnemonic before commiting.
llvm-svn: 60738
complete. For instance, it lowers the common case into this less-than-optimal
code:
addl %ecx, %eax
seto %cl
testb %cl, %cl
jne LBB1_2 ## overflow
instead of:
addl %ecx, %eax
jo LBB1_2 ## overflow
That will come in a future commit.
llvm-svn: 60737
and use it in x86 address mode folding. Also, make
getRegForValue return 0 for illegal types even if it has a
ValueMap for them, because Argument values are put in the
ValueMap. This fixes PR3181.
llvm-svn: 60696
track of whether the CachedNonLocalPointerInfo for a block is specific
to a block. If so, just return it without any pred scanning. This is
good for a 6% speedup on GVN (when it uses this lookup method, which
it doesn't right now).
llvm-svn: 60695
method. This will eventually take over load/store dep
queries from getNonLocalDependency. For now it works
fine, but is incredibly slow because it does no caching.
Lets not switch GVN to use it until that is fixed :)
llvm-svn: 60649
clobber with the current implementation. Instead of returning
a "precise clobber" just return a fuzzy one. This doesn't
matter to any clients anyway and should speed up analysis time
very very slightly.
llvm-svn: 60641
doesn't do its own local caching, and is slightly more aggressive about
free/store dse (see testcase). This eliminates the last external client
of MemDep::getDependenceFrom().
llvm-svn: 60619
since %p isn't formatted consistently, but obviously plain %x is wrong.
PRIxPTR with a cast to uintptr_t would work here, but that requires
inconvenient build-system changes. %lu works on all current and
foreseable future hosts.
llvm-svn: 60616
loops when they can be subsumed into addressing modes.
Change X86 addressing mode check to realize that
some PIC references need an extra register.
(I believe this is correct for Linux, if not, I'm sure
someone will tell me.)
llvm-svn: 60608
1. Merge the 'None' result into 'Normal', making loads
and stores return their dependencies on allocations as Normal.
2. Split the 'Normal' result into 'Clobber' and 'Def' to
distinguish between the cases when memdep knows the value is
produced from when we just know if may be changed.
3. Move some of the logic for determining whether readonly calls
are CSEs into memdep instead of it being in GVN. This still
leaves verification that the arguments are hte same to GVN to
let it know about value equivalences in different contexts.
4. Change memdep's call/call dependency analysis to use
getModRefInfo(CallSite,CallSite) instead of doing something
very weak. This only really matters for things like DSA, but
someday maybe we'll have some other decent context sensitive
analyses :)
5. This reimplements the guts of memdep to handle the new results.
6. This simplifies GVN significantly:
a) readonly call CSE is slightly simpler
b) I eliminated the "getDependencyFrom" chaining for load
elimination and load CSE doesn't have to worry about
volatile (they are always clobbers) anymore.
c) GVN no longer does any 'lastLoad' caching, leaving it to
memdep.
7. The logic in DSE is simplified a bit and sped up. A potentially
unsafe case was eliminated.
llvm-svn: 60607
1. GlobalBaseReg may have been spilled.
2. It may not be live at the use.
3. Spiller doesn't know this is happening so it won't prevent GlobalBaseReg from being spilled later (That by itself is a nasty hack. It's needed because we don't insert the reload until later).
llvm-svn: 60595
While they appear to provide a normal clobbering def, they don't
in the case of the awkward IMPLICIT_DEF+INSERT_SUBREG idiom. It
would be good to change INSERT_SUBREG; until then, this change
allows post-regalloc scheduling to cope in a mildly conservative
way.
llvm-svn: 60583
This fixes many bugs. I will add more test cases in a separate check-in.
Some day, the code that manipulates CFG and updates dom. info could use refactoring help.
llvm-svn: 60554
- Add v4f32, v2f64 to LowerVECTOR_SHUFFLE
- Look for vector rotate in shuffle elements, generate a vector rotate
instead of a full-blown shuffle when opportunity presents itself.
- Generate larger test harness and fix a few interesting but obscure bugs.
llvm-svn: 60552
- First patch from Nehal Desai, a new contributor at Aerospace. Nehal's patch
fixes sign/zero/any-extending loads for integers and floating point. Example
code, compiled w/o debugging or optimization where he first noticed the bug:
int main(void) {
float a = 99.0;
printf("%d\n", a);
return 0;
}
Verified that this code actually works on a Cell SPU.
Changes by Scott Michel:
- Fix bug in the value type list constructed by SPUISD::LDRESULT to include
both the load result's result and chain, not just the chain alone.
- Simplify LowerLOAD and remove extraneous and unnecessary chains.
- Remove unused SPUISD pseudo instructions.
llvm-svn: 60526
1) have it fold "br undef", which does occur with
surprising frequency as jump threading iterates.
2) teach j-t to delete dead blocks. This removes the successor
edges, reducing the in-edges of other blocks, allowing
recursive simplification.
3) Fold things like:
br COND, BBX, BBY
BBX:
br COND, BBZ, BBW
which also happens because jump threading iterates.
llvm-svn: 60470
foldMemoryOperand how to "fold" them, by converting them into constant-pool
loads. When they aren't folded, they use xorps/cmpeqd, but for example when
register pressure is high, they may now be folded as memory operands, which
reduces register pressure.
Also, mark V_SET0 isAsCheapAsAMove so that two-address-elimination will
remat it instead of copying zeros around (V_SETALLONES was already marked).
llvm-svn: 60461
is set but mayLoad is not set. Fix all the problems this turned up.
Change code to not use isSimpleLoad instead of mayLoad unless it
really wants isSimpleLoad.
llvm-svn: 60459
delegates to the regular x86-32 convention which handles byval, but only
after it handles a few cases, and it's necessary to handle byval before
handling those cases. This fixes PR3122 (and rdar://6400815), llvm-gcc
miscompiling LLVM.
llvm-svn: 60453
1. ppcf128 select is expanded to f64 select's.
2. f64 select operand 0 is an i1 truncate, it's promoted to i32 zero_extend.
3. f64 select is updated. It's changed back to a "NewNode" and being re-analyzed.
4. f64 select operands are being processed. Operand 0 is a "NewNode". It's being expunged out of ReplacedValues map.
5. ExpungeNode tries to remap f64 select and notice it's a "NewNode" and assert.
Duncan, please take a look. Thanks.
llvm-svn: 60443
- Incorporate Tilmann Scheller's ISD::TRUNCATE custom lowering patch
- Update SPU calling convention info, even if it's not used yet (but can be
at some point or another)
- Ensure that any-extended f32 loads are custom lowered, especially when
they're promoted for use in printf.
llvm-svn: 60438
straight-forward implementation. This does not require any extra
alias analysis queries beyond what we already do for non-local loads.
Some programs really really like load PRE. For example, SPASS triggers
this ~1000 times, ~300 times in 255.vortex, and ~1500 times on 403.gcc.
The biggest limitation to the implementation is that it does not split
critical edges. This is a huge killer on many programs and should be
addressed after the initial patch is enabled by default.
The implementation of this should incidentally speed up rejection of
non-local loads because it avoids creating the repl densemap in cases
when it won't be used for fully redundant loads.
This is currently disabled by default.
Before I turn this on, I need to fix a couple of miscompilations in
the testsuite, look at compile time performance numbers, and look at
perf impact. This is pretty close to ready though.
llvm-svn: 60408
constant. If X is a constant, then this is folded elsewhere.
- Added a note to Target/README.txt to indicate that we'd like to implement
this when we're able.
llvm-svn: 60399
- LowerXADDO lowers [SU]ADDO into an ADD with an implicit EFLAGS define. The
EFLAGS are fed into a SETCC node which has the conditional COND_O or COND_C,
depending on the type of ADDO requested.
- LowerBRCOND now recognizes if it's coming from a SETCC node with COND_O or
COND_C set.
llvm-svn: 60388
figuring out the base of the IV. This produces better
code in the example. (Addresses use (IV) instead of
(BASE,IV) - a significant improvement on low-register
machines like x86).
llvm-svn: 60374
- Fix v2[if]64 vector insertion code before IBM files a bug report.
- Ensure that zero (0) offsets relative to $sp don't trip an assert
(add $sp, 0 gets legalized to $sp alone, tripping an assert)
- Shuffle masks passed to SPUISD::SHUFB are now v16i8 or v4i32
llvm-svn: 60358
ReplaceNodeResults: rather than returning a node which
must have the same number of results as the original
node (which means mucking around with MERGE_VALUES,
and which is also easy to get wrong since SelectionDAG
folding may mean you don't get the node you expect),
return the results in a vector.
llvm-svn: 60348
instead of std::sort. This shrinks the release-asserts LSR.o file
by 1100 bytes of code on my system.
We should start using array_pod_sort where possible.
llvm-svn: 60335
buggy rewrite, this notifies ScalarEvolution of a pending instruction
about to be removed and then erases it, instead of erasing it then
notifying.
llvm-svn: 60329
new instructions it simplifies. Because we're threading jumps on edges
with constants coming in from PHI's, we inherently are exposing a lot more
constants to the new block. Folding them and deleting dead conditions
allows the cost model in jump threading to be more accurate as it iterates.
llvm-svn: 60327
elimination: when finding dependent load/stores, realize that
they are the same if aliasing claims must alias instead of relying
on the pointers to be exactly equal. This makes load elimination
more aggressive. For example, on 403.gcc, we had:
< 68 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
< 152718 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
< 49699 gvn - Number of loads deleted
< 6153 memdep - Number of dirty cached non-local responses
< 169336 memdep - Number of fully cached non-local responses
< 162428 memdep - Number of uncached non-local responses
now we have:
> 64 gvn - Number of instructions PRE'd
> 153623 gvn - Number of instructions deleted
> 49856 gvn - Number of loads deleted
> 5022 memdep - Number of dirty cached non-local responses
> 159030 memdep - Number of fully cached non-local responses
> 162443 memdep - Number of uncached non-local responses
That's an extra 157 loads deleted and extra 905 other instructions nuked.
This slows down GVN very slightly, from 3.91 to 3.96s.
llvm-svn: 60314
vector instead of a densemap. This shrinks the memory usage of this thing
substantially (the high water mark) as well as making operations like
scanning it faster. This speeds up memdep slightly, gvn goes from
3.9376 to 3.9118s on 403.gcc
This also splits out the statistics for the cached non-local case to
differentiate between the dirty and clean cached case. Here's the stats
for 403.gcc:
6153 memdep - Number of dirty cached non-local responses
169336 memdep - Number of fully cached non-local responses
162428 memdep - Number of uncached non-local responses
yay for caching :)
llvm-svn: 60313
Note that the FoldOpIntoPhi call is dead because it's impossible for the
first operand of a subtraction to be both a ConstantInt and a PHINode.
llvm-svn: 60306
multiplies.
Some more cleverness would be nice, though. It would be nice if we
could do this transformation on illegal types. Also, we would
prefer a narrower constant when possible so that we can use a narrower
multiply, which can be cheaper.
llvm-svn: 60283
"For signed integers, the determination of overflow of x*y is not so simple. If
x and y have the same sign, then overflow occurs iff xy > 2**31 - 1. If they
have opposite signs, then overflow occurs iff xy < -2**31."
In this case, x == -1.
llvm-svn: 60278
overflowed on negation. This commit checks to make sure that neithe C nor X
overflows. This requires that the RHS of X (a subtract instruction) be a
constant integer.
llvm-svn: 60275
ReverseLocalDeps when we update it. This fixes a regression test
failure from my last commit.
Second, for each non-local cached information structure, keep a bit that
indicates whether it is dirty or not. This saves us a scan over the whole
thing in the common case when it isn't dirty.
llvm-svn: 60274
instead of containing them by value. This increases the density
(!) of NonLocalDeps as well as making the reallocation case
faster. This speeds up gvn on 403.gcc by 2% and makes room for
future improvements.
I'm not super thrilled with having to explicitly manage the new/delete
of the map, but it is necesary for the next change.
llvm-svn: 60271
If we see that a load depends on the allocation of its memory with no
intervening stores, we now return a 'None' depedency instead of "Normal".
This tweaks GVN to do its optimization with the new result.
llvm-svn: 60267
dependencies. The basic situation was this: consider if we had:
store1
...
store2
...
store3
Where memdep thinks that store3 depends on store2 and store2 depends
on store1. The problem happens when we delete store2: The code in
question was updating dep info for store3 to be store1. This is a
spiffy optimization, but is not safe at all, because aliasing isn't
transitive. This bug isn't exposed today with DSE because DSE will only
zap store2 if it is identifical to store 3, and in this case, it is
safe to update it to depend on store1. However, memcpyopt is not so
fortunate, which is presumably why the "dropInstruction" code used to
exist.
Since this doesn't actually provide a speedup in practice, just rip the
code out.
llvm-svn: 60263
an entry in the nonlocal deps map, don't reset entries
referencing that instruction to [dirty, null], instead, set
them to [dirty,next] where next is the instruction after the
deleted one. Use this information in the non-local deps
code to avoid rescanning entire blocks.
This speeds up GVN slightly by avoiding pointless work. On
403.gcc this makes GVN 1.5% faster.
llvm-svn: 60256
Put a some code back to handle buggy behavior that GVN expects: it wants
loads to depend on each other, and accesses to depend on their allocations.
llvm-svn: 60240
Document the Dirty value more precisely, use it for the uninitialized
DepResultTy value. Change reverse mappings to be from an instruction*
instead of DepResultTy, and stop tracking other forms. This makes it more
clear that we only care about the instruction cases.
Eliminate a DepResultTy,bool pair by using Dirty in the local case as well,
shrinking the map and simplifying the code.
This speeds up GVN by ~3% on 403.gcc.
llvm-svn: 60232
query. This makes it crystal clear what cases can escape from MemDep that
the clients have to handle. This also gives the clients a nice simplified
interface to it that is easy to poke at.
This patch also makes DepResultTy and MemoryDependenceAnalysis::DepType
private, yay.
llvm-svn: 60231
of a pointer/int pair instead of a manually bitmangled pointer.
This forces clients to think a little more about checking the
appropriate pieces and will be useful for internal
implementation improvements later.
I'm not particularly happy with this. After going through this
I don't think that the clients of memdep should be exposed to
the internal type at all. I'll fix this in a subsequent commit.
This has no functionality change.
llvm-svn: 60230
properly updates the reverse dependency map when it installs updated
dependencies for instructions that depend on the removed instruction.
llvm-svn: 60222
wrappers around the interesting code and use an obscure iterator
abstraction that dates back many many years.
Move EraseDeadInstructions to Transforms/Utils and name it
RecursivelyDeleteTriviallyDeadInstructions.
llvm-svn: 60191