and the spill is its kill. However, if the local allocator has determined the
register has not been modified (possible when its value was reloaded), it would
not issue a restore. In that case, mark the last use of the virtual register as
kill.
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promoted functions. This is important for varargs calls in
particular. Thanks to duncan for providing a great testcase.
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It's not safe to use the two value CombineTo variant to combine away a dead load.
e.g.
v1, chain2 = load chain1, loc
v2, chain3 = load chain2, loc
v3 = add v2, c
Now we replace use of v1 with undef, use of chain2 with chain1.
ReplaceAllUsesWith() will iterate through uses of the first load and update operands:
v1, chain2 = load chain1, loc
v2, chain3 = load chain1, loc
v3 = add v2, c
Now the second load is the same as the first load, SelectionDAG cse will ensure
the use of second load is replaced with the first load.
v1, chain2 = load chain1, loc
v3 = add v1, c
Then v1 is replaced with undef and bad things happen.
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it should work, but I have no machine to test
it on. Committed because it will at least
cause no harm, and maybe someone can test it
for me!
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make the 'fp return in ST(0)' optimization smart enough to
look through token factor nodes. THis allows us to compile
testcases like CodeGen/X86/fp-stack-retcopy.ll into:
_carg:
subl $12, %esp
call L_foo$stub
fstpl (%esp)
fldl (%esp)
addl $12, %esp
ret
instead of:
_carg:
subl $28, %esp
call L_foo$stub
fstpl 16(%esp)
movsd 16(%esp), %xmm0
movsd %xmm0, 8(%esp)
fldl 8(%esp)
addl $28, %esp
ret
Still not optimal, but much better and this is a trivial patch. Fixing
the rest requires invasive surgery that is is not llvm 2.2 material.
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drop attributes on varargs call arguments. Also, it could generate
invalid IR if the transformed call already had the 'nest' attribute
somewhere (this can never happen for code coming from llvm-gcc,
but it's a theoretical possibility). Fix both problems.
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byval work. This miscompilation is due to the program indexing an array out
of range and us doing a transformation that broke this.
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a load/store of i64. The later prevents promotion/scalarrepl of the
source and dest in many cases.
This fixes the 300% performance regression of the byval stuff on
stepanov_v1p2.
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realize that ne & sgt was a signed comparison (it was only
looking at whether the left compare was signed).
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if this becomes a varargs call then deal correctly with any
parameter attributes on the newly vararg call arguments.
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inlining a function if we know that the function does not write
to *any* memory. This implements test/Transforms/Inline/byval2.ll
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parameter, even if it is a varargs function. Do
allow attributes on the varargs part of a call,
but not beyond the last argument. Only allow
selected attributes to be on the varargs part of
a call (currently only 'byval' is allowed). The
reasoning here is that most attributes, eg inreg,
simply make no sense here.
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get away with it, which exposes opportunities to eliminate the memory
objects entirely. For example, we now compile byval.ll to:
define internal void @f1(i32 %b.0, i64 %b.1) {
entry:
%tmp2 = add i32 %b.0, 1 ; <i32> [#uses=0]
ret void
}
define i32 @main() nounwind {
entry:
call void @f1( i32 1, i64 2 )
ret i32 0
}
This seems like it would trigger a lot for code that passes around small
structs (e.g. SDOperand's or _Complex)...
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- struct_2.ll: Completely unaligned load/store testing
- call_indirect.ll, struct_1.ll: Add test lines to exercise
X-form [$reg($reg)] addressing
At this point, loads and stores should be under control (he says
in an optimistic tone of voice.)
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- Cleaned up custom load/store logic, common code is now shared [see note
below], cleaned up address modes
- More test cases: various intrinsics, structure element access (load/store
test), updated target data strings, indirect function calls.
Note: This patch contains a refactoring of the LoadSDNode and StoreSDNode
structures: they now share a common base class, LSBaseSDNode, that
provides an interface to their common functionality. There is some hackery
to access the proper operand depending on the derived class; otherwise,
to do a proper job would require finding and rearranging the SDOperands
sent to StoreSDNode's constructor. The current refactor errs on the
side of being conservatively and backwardly compatible while providing
functionality that reduces redundant code for targets where loads and
stores are custom-lowered.
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Likewise fix up a bunch of other libcalls. While
there I remove NEG_F32 and NEG_F64 since they are
not used anywhere. This fixes 9 Ada ACATS failures.
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the code generated is not wonderful. This turns a miscompilation into
a code quality bug (noted in the ppc readme). This fixes PR642, which
is over 2 years old (!). Nate, please review this.
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providing a misleading facility. It's used once in the MIPS backend
and hardcoded as "\t.globl\t" everywhere else.
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direct calls bails out unless caller and callee have essentially
equivalent parameter attributes. This is illogical - the callee's
attributes should be of no relevance here. Rework the logic, which
incidentally fixes a crash when removed arguments have attributes.
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a direct call with cast parameters and cast return
value (if any), instcombine was prepared to cast any
non-void return value into any other, whether castable
or not. Add a new predicate for testing whether casting
is valid, and check it both for the return value and
(as a cleanup) for the parameters.
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could theoretically introduce a trap, but is also a performance issue.
This speeds up ptrdist/ks by 8%.
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the initial value, while the type fields were not (this
is a qualified union type, so not all fields are always
present). This resulted in the size of the corresponding
LLVM type being larger than the gcc TYPE_SIZE.
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values, which means doing extra legalization work.
It would be easier to get this kind of thing right if
there was some documentation...
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eliminating the llvm.x86.sse2.loadl.pd intrinsic?), one shuffle optzn
may be done (if shufps is better than pinsw, Evan, please review), and
we already know about LICM of simple instructions.
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if we are just going to store it back anyway. This improves things
like:
double foo();
void bar(double *P) { *P = foo(); }
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define void @f() {
...
call i32 @g()
...
}
define void @g() {
...
}
The hazards are:
- @f and @g have GC, but they differ GC. Inlining is invalid. This
may never occur.
- @f has no GC, but @g does. g's GC must be propagated to @f.
The other scenarios are safe:
- @f and @g have the same GC.
- @f and @g have no GC.
- @g has no GC.
This patch adds inliner checks for the former two scenarios.
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function with GC.
This will catch the error when the inliner inlines a function with
GC into a caller with no GC.
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as on functions. Make it verify invokes and not just
ordinary calls. As a (desired) side-effect, it is no
longer legal to have call attributes on arguments that
are being passed to the varargs part of a varargs
function (llvm-as drops them on the floor anyway).
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return attributes on the floor. In the case of a call
to a varargs function where the varargs arguments are
being removed, any call attributes on those arguments
need to be dropped. I didn't do this because I plan to
make it illegal to have such attributes (see next patch).
With this change, compiling the gcc filter2 eh test at -O0
and then running opt -std-compile-opts on it results in
a correctly working program (compiling at -O1 or higher
results in the test failing due to a problem with how we
output eh info into the IR).
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calls 'nounwind'. It is important for correct C++
exception handling that nounwind markings do not get
lost, so this transformation is actually needed for
correctness.
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how to lower them (with no attempt made to be
efficient, since they should only occur for
unoptimized code).
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calls. Remove special casing of inline asm from the
inliner. There is a potential problem: the verifier
rejects invokes of inline asm (not sure why). If an
asm call is not marked "nounwind" in some .ll, and
instcombine is not run, but the inliner is run, then
an illegal module will be created. This is bad but
I'm not sure what the best approach is. I'm tempted
to remove the check in the verifier...
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endianness of the target not of the host. Done by the
simple expedient of reversing bytes for primitive types
if the host and target endianness don't match. This is
correct for integer and pointer types. I don't know if
it is correct for floating point types.
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SelectionDAG::getConstant, in the same way as vector floating-point
constants. This allows the legalize expansion code for @llvm.ctpop and
friends to be usable with vector types.
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2. Using zero-extended value of Scale and unsigned division is safe provided
that Scale doesn't have the sign bit set.
Previously these 2 instructions:
%p = bitcast [100 x {i8,i8,i8}]* %x to i8*
%q = getelementptr i8* %p, i32 -4
were combined into:
%q = getelementptr [100 x { i8, i8, i8 }]* %x, i32 0,
i32 1431655764, i32 0
what was incorrect.
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regions of memory that have a target specific relationship, as described in the
Embedded C Technical Report.
This also implements the 2007-12-11-AddressSpaces test,
which demonstrates how address space attributes can be used in LLVM IR.
In addition, this patch changes the bitcode signature for stores (in a backwards
compatible manner), such that the pointer type, rather than the pointee type, is
encoded. This permits type information in the pointer (e.g. address space) to be
preserved for stores.
LangRef updates are forthcoming.
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possible before resorting to pextrw and pinsrw.
- Better codegen for v4i32 shuffles masquerading as v8i16 or v16i8 shuffles.
- Improves (i16 extract_vector_element 0) codegen by recognizing
(i32 extract_vector_element 0) does not require a pextrw.
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Thompson. Usage should be something like this:
open Llvm
open Llvm_bitreader
match read_bitcode_file fn with
| Bitreader_failure msg ->
prerr_endline msg
| Bitreader_success m ->
...;
dispose_module m
Compile with: ocamlc llvm.cma llvm_bitreader.cma
ocamlopt llvm.cmxa llvm_bitreader.cmxa
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Reimplement the xform in Analysis/ConstantFolding.cpp where we can use
targetdata to validate that it is safe. While I'm in there, fix some const
correctness issues and generalize the interface to the "operand folder".
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using the minimum possible number of bytes. For little
endian targets run on little endian machines, apints are
stored in memory from LSB to MSB as before. For big endian
targets on big endian machines they are stored from MSB to
LSB which wasn't always the case before (if the target and
host endianness doesn't match values are stored according
to the host's endianness). Doing this requires knowing the
endianness of the host, which is determined when configuring -
thanks go to Anton for this. Only having access to little
endian machines I was unable to properly test the big endian
part, which is also the most complicated...
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methods are new to Function:
bool hasCollector() const;
const std::string &getCollector() const;
void setCollector(const std::string &);
void clearCollector();
The assembly representation is as such:
define void @f() gc "shadow-stack" { ...
The implementation uses an on-the-side table to map Functions to
collector names, such that there is no overhead. A StringPool is
further used to unique collector names, which are extremely
likely to be unique per process.
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