perform initialization without static constructors AND without explicit initialization
by the client. For the moment, passes are required to initialize both their
(potential) dependencies and any passes they preserve. I hope to be able to relax
the latter requirement in the future.
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formulae which become illegal as a result of the offset updating don't
escape.
This is for rdar://8529692. No testcase yet, because the given cases
hit use-list ordering differences.
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This doesn't usually matter, because the other heuristics usually
succeed regardless, but it's good to keep the register use
bookkeeping consistent.
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initialization functions that initialize the set of passes implemented in
that library. Add C bindings for these functions as well.
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a header declaring them all. This is also where we will declare per-library pass-set
initializer functions down the road.
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Anyone interested in more general PRE would be better served by implementing it separately, to get real
anticipation calculation, etc.
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The x86_mmx type is used for MMX intrinsics, parameters and
return values where these use MMX registers, and is also
supported in load, store, and bitcast.
Only the above operations generate MMX instructions, and optimizations
do not operate on or produce MMX intrinsics.
MMX-sized vectors <2 x i32> etc. are lowered to XMM or split into
smaller pieces. Optimizations may occur on these forms and the
result casted back to x86_mmx, provided the result feeds into a
previous existing x86_mmx operation.
The point of all this is prevent optimizations from introducing
MMX operations, which is unsafe due to the EMMS problem.
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code size (making this transform code size neutral), and it allows us to hoist values out of loops, which is always
a good thing.
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Because of this, we cannot use the Simplify* APIs, as they can assert-fail on unreachable code. Since it's not easy to determine
if a given threading will cause a block to become unreachable, simply defer simplifying simplification to later InstCombine and/or
DCE passes.
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register pressure and thus excess spills, which we don't currently recover from well. This should
be re-evaluated in the future if our ability to generate good spills/splits improves.
Partial fix for <rdar://problem/7635585>.
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This reverts revision 114633. It was breaking llvm-gcc-i386-linux-selfhost.
It seems there is a downstream bug that is exposed by
-cgp-critical-edge-splitting=0. When that bug is fixed, this patch can go back
in.
Note that the changes to tailcallfp2.ll are not reverted. They were good are
required.
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Splitting critical edges at the merge point only addressed part of the issue; it is also possible for non-post-domination
to occur when the path from the load to the merge has branches in it. Unfortunately, full anticipation analysis is
time-consuming, so for now approximate it. This is strictly more conservative than real anticipation, so we will miss
some cases that real PRE would allow, but we also no longer insert loads into paths where they didn't exist before. :-)
This is a very slight net positive on SPEC for me (0.5% on average). Most of the benchmarks are largely unaffected, but
when it pays off it pays off decently: 181.mcf improves by 4.5% on my machine.
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"external" even when doing lazy bitcode loading. This was broken because
a function that is not materialized fails the !isDeclaration() test.
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truncates are free only in the case where the extended type is legal but the
load type is not. If both types are illegal, such as when they are too big,
the load may not be legalized into an extended load.
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load when the type of the load is not legal, even if truncates are not free.
The load is going to be legalized to an extending load anyway.
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