llvm/lib/Target/ARM
Bruno Cardoso Lopes 895c1e2dee Fix ssat and ssat16 encodings for ARM and Thumb. The bit position value
must be encoded decremented by one. Only add encoding tests for ssat16
because ssat can't be parsed yet.

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@132324 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2011-05-31 03:33:27 +00:00
..
AsmParser ARM asm parser wasn't able to parse a "mov" instruction while in Thumb 2011-05-27 23:46:09 +00:00
Disassembler Restore an accidentally removed comment. 2011-05-25 04:48:17 +00:00
InstPrinter Constants with multiple encodings (ARM): 2011-04-05 18:02:46 +00:00
TargetInfo
ARM.h Making use of VFP / NEON floating point multiply-accumulate / subtraction is 2010-12-05 22:04:16 +00:00
ARM.td This patch combines several changes from Evan Cheng for rdar://8659675. 2011-04-19 18:11:57 +00:00
ARMAddressingModes.h - Implement asm parsing support for LDRSBT, LDRHT, LDRSHT and STRHT 2011-04-04 17:18:19 +00:00
ARMAsmBackend.cpp This actually starts at offset 0, not 1. 2011-05-28 03:16:22 +00:00
ARMAsmPrinter.cpp Implement the 'M' output modifier for arm inline asm. This is fairly 2011-05-28 01:40:44 +00:00
ARMAsmPrinter.h Make size computation less brittle. 2011-05-27 22:05:41 +00:00
ARMBaseInfo.h Apply again changes to support ARM memory asm parsing. I removed 2011-03-31 23:26:08 +00:00
ARMBaseInstrInfo.cpp use the MachineInstrBuilder operator-> to simplify some code. 2011-04-29 05:24:29 +00:00
ARMBaseInstrInfo.h Fix a ton of comment typos found by codespell. Patch by 2011-04-15 05:18:47 +00:00
ARMBaseRegisterInfo.cpp Use the dwarf->llvm mapping to print register names in the cfi 2011-05-30 20:20:15 +00:00
ARMBaseRegisterInfo.h Use the dwarf->llvm mapping to print register names in the cfi 2011-05-30 20:20:15 +00:00
ARMBuildAttrs.h Rework some .ARM.attribute work for improved gcc compatibility. 2011-02-07 00:49:53 +00:00
ARMCallingConv.h In the calling convention logic, ValVT is always a legal type, 2010-11-04 10:49:57 +00:00
ARMCallingConv.td ARM byval support. Will be enabled by another patch to the FE. <rdar://problem/7662569> 2011-04-20 16:47:52 +00:00
ARMCodeEmitter.cpp Fix ssat and ssat16 encodings for ARM and Thumb. The bit position value 2011-05-31 03:33:27 +00:00
ARMConstantIslandPass.cpp Avoid de-referencing pass beginning of a basic block. No small test case possible. rdar://9216009 2011-04-01 22:09:28 +00:00
ARMConstantPoolValue.cpp Initialize an ARMConstantPoolValue field. 2010-12-01 01:38:58 +00:00
ARMConstantPoolValue.h Nuke a FIXME. No need to be fancier here, as ARM handles constant pools 2010-11-29 23:09:20 +00:00
ARMELFWriterInfo.cpp Move the ARM reloc constants to Support/ELF.h 2010-11-23 19:40:36 +00:00
ARMELFWriterInfo.h Move the ARM reloc constants to Support/ELF.h 2010-11-23 19:40:36 +00:00
ARMExpandPseudoInsts.cpp use the MachineInstrBuilder operator-> to simplify some code. 2011-04-29 05:24:29 +00:00
ARMFastISel.cpp Fix ARM fast isel to correctly flag memory operands to stores. This fixes 2011-05-28 20:34:49 +00:00
ARMFixupKinds.h Fix comment. 2011-05-27 03:46:51 +00:00
ARMFrameLowering.cpp In Thumb2 mode, lower frame indix references to: 2011-04-22 01:42:52 +00:00
ARMFrameLowering.h In Thumb2 mode, lower frame indix references to: 2011-04-22 01:42:52 +00:00
ARMGlobalMerge.cpp Enable GlobalMerge on darwin. 2011-03-23 23:34:19 +00:00
ARMHazardRecognizer.cpp This patch combines several changes from Evan Cheng for rdar://8659675. 2011-04-19 18:11:57 +00:00
ARMHazardRecognizer.h Various bits of framework needed for precise machine-level selection 2010-12-24 05:03:26 +00:00
ARMInstrFormats.td Make the branch encoding for tBcc more obvious that it's a 4-byte opcode 2011-05-27 03:50:53 +00:00
ARMInstrInfo.cpp Eliminate ARM::MOVi2pieces. Just use MOVi32imm and expand it to either movi+orr or movw+movt depending on the subtarget. 2010-11-12 23:03:38 +00:00
ARMInstrInfo.h Eliminate ARM::MOVi2pieces. Just use MOVi32imm and expand it to either movi+orr or movw+movt depending on the subtarget. 2010-11-12 23:03:38 +00:00
ARMInstrInfo.td Fix ssat and ssat16 encodings for ARM and Thumb. The bit position value 2011-05-31 03:33:27 +00:00
ARMInstrNEON.td Fixed MC encoding for index_align for VLD1/VST1 (single element from one lane) for size 32 2011-05-09 17:47:27 +00:00
ARMInstrThumb2.td Fix ssat and ssat16 encodings for ARM and Thumb. The bit position value 2011-05-31 03:33:27 +00:00
ARMInstrThumb.td Make the branch encoding for tBcc more obvious that it's a 4-byte opcode 2011-05-27 03:50:53 +00:00
ARMInstrVFP.td Some single-precision VFP instructions can execute in either the VPF or Neon 2011-04-19 18:11:38 +00:00
ARMISelDAGToDAG.cpp Add support for ARM ldrexd/strexd intrinsics. They both use i32 register pairs 2011-05-28 04:07:29 +00:00
ARMISelLowering.cpp On Darwin ARM, set the UNWIND_RESUME libcall to _Unwind_SjLj_Resume. 2011-05-29 19:50:32 +00:00
ARMISelLowering.h Make the logic for determining function alignment more explicit. No functionality change. 2011-05-06 20:34:06 +00:00
ARMJITInfo.cpp Update comment to match my recent change. 2011-02-02 17:29:40 +00:00
ARMJITInfo.h Materialize GA addresses with movw + movt pairs for Darwin in PIC mode. e.g. 2011-01-17 08:03:18 +00:00
ARMLoadStoreOptimizer.cpp Clean up comment a bit. 2011-05-25 21:19:19 +00:00
ARMMachineFunctionInfo.h Remove unused bitvectors that record ARM callee-saved registers. 2011-02-14 23:40:38 +00:00
ARMMCAsmInfo.cpp Dead code elimination. 2011-05-06 14:56:22 +00:00
ARMMCAsmInfo.h
ARMMCCodeEmitter.cpp Fix ssat and ssat16 encodings for ARM and Thumb. The bit position value 2011-05-31 03:33:27 +00:00
ARMMCExpr.cpp Model :upper16: and :lower16: as ARM specific MCTargetExpr. This is a step 2011-01-13 07:58:56 +00:00
ARMMCExpr.h MCExpr: Add FindAssociatedSection, which attempts to mirror the 'as' semantics 2011-04-29 18:00:03 +00:00
ARMMCInstLower.cpp Add needed braces. 2011-01-26 02:06:22 +00:00
ARMPerfectShuffle.h In r131488 I misunderstood how VREV works. It splits the vector in half and splits each half. Therefore, the real problem was that we were using a VREV64 for a 4xi16, when we should have been using a VREV32. 2011-05-18 06:42:21 +00:00
ARMRegisterInfo.cpp Trim a few unneeded includes. 2011-04-18 21:35:54 +00:00
ARMRegisterInfo.h
ARMRegisterInfo.td Eliminate the ARM sub-register indexes that are not needed by the sources. 2011-05-07 21:22:42 +00:00
ARMRelocations.h
ARMSchedule.td Sorry, several patches in one. 2011-01-20 08:34:58 +00:00
ARMScheduleA8.td Sorry, several patches in one. 2011-01-20 08:34:58 +00:00
ARMScheduleA9.td Improvements for the Cortex-A9 scheduling itineraries. 2011-04-19 18:11:36 +00:00
ARMScheduleV6.td Sorry, several patches in one. 2011-01-20 08:34:58 +00:00
ARMSelectionDAGInfo.cpp RTABI chapter 4.3.4 specifies __eabi_mem* calls. Specifically, __eabi_memset accepts parameters (ptr, size, value) in a different order than GNU's memset (ptr, value, size), therefore the special lowering in AAPCS mode. Implementation by Evzen Muller. 2011-05-22 21:41:23 +00:00
ARMSelectionDAGInfo.h RTABI chapter 4.3.4 specifies __eabi_mem* calls. Specifically, __eabi_memset accepts parameters (ptr, size, value) in a different order than GNU's memset (ptr, value, size), therefore the special lowering in AAPCS mode. Implementation by Evzen Muller. 2011-05-22 21:41:23 +00:00
ARMSubtarget.cpp Revert accidental commit. 2011-05-20 17:38:48 +00:00
ARMSubtarget.h Revert accidental commit. 2011-05-20 17:38:48 +00:00
ARMTargetMachine.cpp ADT/Triple: Move a variety of clients to using isOSDarwin() and isOSWindows() 2011-04-19 21:14:45 +00:00
ARMTargetMachine.h Rename TargetFrameInfo into TargetFrameLowering. Also, put couple of FIXMEs and fixes here and there. 2011-01-10 12:39:04 +00:00
ARMTargetObjectFile.cpp Some first rudimentary support for ARM EHABI: print exception table in "text mode". 2011-03-05 18:43:15 +00:00
ARMTargetObjectFile.h Second set of ARM/MC/ELF changes. 2010-10-11 23:01:44 +00:00
CMakeLists.txt Use explicit add_subdirectory's for LLVM target sublibraries instead 2011-02-20 02:55:27 +00:00
Makefile Teach ARM Target to use the tblgen support for generating an MC'ized 2010-11-03 23:52:49 +00:00
MLxExpansionPass.cpp This patch combines several changes from Evan Cheng for rdar://8659675. 2011-04-19 18:11:57 +00:00
NEONMoveFix.cpp Change VFPNeonA8 definition to make the code easier to read. 2011-02-23 02:35:33 +00:00
README-Thumb2.txt
README-Thumb.txt Add another note taken from the gcc bugzilla. 2011-01-12 09:06:19 +00:00
README.txt Add a readme entry for the redundant movw issue for pr9370. 2011-03-03 06:39:09 +00:00
Thumb1FrameLowering.cpp Implement frame unwinding information emission for Thumb1. Not finished yet because there is no way given the constpool index to examine the actual entry: the reason is clones inserted by constant island pass, which are not tracked at all! The only connection is done during asmprinting time via magic label names which is really gross and needs to be eventually fixed. 2011-03-05 18:43:50 +00:00
Thumb1FrameLowering.h Fix Target/ARM/Thumb1FrameLowering.h header guard. 2011-04-24 15:47:01 +00:00
Thumb1InstrInfo.cpp Move callee-saved regs spills / reloads to TFI 2010-11-27 23:05:03 +00:00
Thumb1InstrInfo.h Move callee-saved regs spills / reloads to TFI 2010-11-27 23:05:03 +00:00
Thumb1RegisterInfo.cpp Add a TRI::getLargestLegalSuperClass hook to provide an upper limit on register class inflation. 2011-04-26 18:52:33 +00:00
Thumb1RegisterInfo.h Add a TRI::getLargestLegalSuperClass hook to provide an upper limit on register class inflation. 2011-04-26 18:52:33 +00:00
Thumb2InstrInfo.cpp Preliminary support for ARM frame save directives emission via MI flags. 2011-03-05 18:43:32 +00:00
Thumb2InstrInfo.h Making use of VFP / NEON floating point multiply-accumulate / subtraction is 2010-12-05 22:04:16 +00:00
Thumb2ITBlockPass.cpp Reapply r110396, with fixes to appease the Linux buildbot gods. 2010-08-06 18:33:48 +00:00
Thumb2RegisterInfo.cpp Trim a few unneeded includes. 2011-04-18 21:35:54 +00:00
Thumb2RegisterInfo.h Implement frame unwinding information emission for Thumb1. Not finished yet because there is no way given the constpool index to examine the actual entry: the reason is clones inserted by constant island pass, which are not tracked at all! The only connection is done during asmprinting time via magic label names which is really gross and needs to be eventually fixed. 2011-03-05 18:43:50 +00:00
Thumb2SizeReduction.cpp use the MachineInstrBuilder operator-> to simplify some code. 2011-04-29 05:24:29 +00:00

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Random ideas for the ARM backend.
//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Reimplement 'select' in terms of 'SEL'.

* We would really like to support UXTAB16, but we need to prove that the
  add doesn't need to overflow between the two 16-bit chunks.

* Implement pre/post increment support.  (e.g. PR935)
* Implement smarter constant generation for binops with large immediates.

A few ARMv6T2 ops should be pattern matched: BFI, SBFX, and UBFX

Interesting optimization for PIC codegen on arm-linux:
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=43129

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Crazy idea:  Consider code that uses lots of 8-bit or 16-bit values.  By the
time regalloc happens, these values are now in a 32-bit register, usually with
the top-bits known to be sign or zero extended.  If spilled, we should be able
to spill these to a 8-bit or 16-bit stack slot, zero or sign extending as part
of the reload.

Doing this reduces the size of the stack frame (important for thumb etc), and
also increases the likelihood that we will be able to reload multiple values
from the stack with a single load.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

The constant island pass is in good shape.  Some cleanups might be desirable,
but there is unlikely to be much improvement in the generated code.

1.  There may be some advantage to trying to be smarter about the initial
placement, rather than putting everything at the end.

2.  There might be some compile-time efficiency to be had by representing
consecutive islands as a single block rather than multiple blocks.

3.  Use a priority queue to sort constant pool users in inverse order of
    position so we always process the one closed to the end of functions
    first. This may simply CreateNewWater.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Eliminate copysign custom expansion. We are still generating crappy code with
default expansion + if-conversion.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Eliminate one instruction from:

define i32 @_Z6slow4bii(i32 %x, i32 %y) {
        %tmp = icmp sgt i32 %x, %y
        %retval = select i1 %tmp, i32 %x, i32 %y
        ret i32 %retval
}

__Z6slow4bii:
        cmp r0, r1
        movgt r1, r0
        mov r0, r1
        bx lr
=>

__Z6slow4bii:
        cmp r0, r1
        movle r0, r1
        bx lr

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Implement long long "X-3" with instructions that fold the immediate in.  These
were disabled due to badness with the ARM carry flag on subtracts.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

More load / store optimizations:
1) Better representation for block transfer? This is from Olden/power:

	fldd d0, [r4]
	fstd d0, [r4, #+32]
	fldd d0, [r4, #+8]
	fstd d0, [r4, #+40]
	fldd d0, [r4, #+16]
	fstd d0, [r4, #+48]
	fldd d0, [r4, #+24]
	fstd d0, [r4, #+56]

If we can spare the registers, it would be better to use fldm and fstm here.
Need major register allocator enhancement though.

2) Can we recognize the relative position of constantpool entries? i.e. Treat

	ldr r0, LCPI17_3
	ldr r1, LCPI17_4
	ldr r2, LCPI17_5

   as
	ldr r0, LCPI17
	ldr r1, LCPI17+4
	ldr r2, LCPI17+8

   Then the ldr's can be combined into a single ldm. See Olden/power.

Note for ARM v4 gcc uses ldmia to load a pair of 32-bit values to represent a
double 64-bit FP constant:

	adr	r0, L6
	ldmia	r0, {r0-r1}

	.align 2
L6:
	.long	-858993459
	.long	1074318540

3) struct copies appear to be done field by field 
instead of by words, at least sometimes:

struct foo { int x; short s; char c1; char c2; };
void cpy(struct foo*a, struct foo*b) { *a = *b; }

llvm code (-O2)
        ldrb r3, [r1, #+6]
        ldr r2, [r1]
        ldrb r12, [r1, #+7]
        ldrh r1, [r1, #+4]
        str r2, [r0]
        strh r1, [r0, #+4]
        strb r3, [r0, #+6]
        strb r12, [r0, #+7]
gcc code (-O2)
        ldmia   r1, {r1-r2}
        stmia   r0, {r1-r2}

In this benchmark poor handling of aggregate copies has shown up as
having a large effect on size, and possibly speed as well (we don't have
a good way to measure on ARM).

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

* Consider this silly example:

double bar(double x) {  
  double r = foo(3.1);
  return x+r;
}

_bar:
        stmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r7, lr}
        add r7, sp, #8
        mov r4, r0
        mov r5, r1
        fldd d0, LCPI1_0
        fmrrd r0, r1, d0
        bl _foo
        fmdrr d0, r4, r5
        fmsr s2, r0
        fsitod d1, s2
        faddd d0, d1, d0
        fmrrd r0, r1, d0
        ldmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r7, pc}

Ignore the prologue and epilogue stuff for a second. Note 
	mov r4, r0
	mov r5, r1
the copys to callee-save registers and the fact they are only being used by the
fmdrr instruction. It would have been better had the fmdrr been scheduled
before the call and place the result in a callee-save DPR register. The two
mov ops would not have been necessary.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Calling convention related stuff:

* gcc's parameter passing implementation is terrible and we suffer as a result:

e.g.
struct s {
  double d1;
  int s1;
};

void foo(struct s S) {
  printf("%g, %d\n", S.d1, S.s1);
}

'S' is passed via registers r0, r1, r2. But gcc stores them to the stack, and
then reload them to r1, r2, and r3 before issuing the call (r0 contains the
address of the format string):

	stmfd	sp!, {r7, lr}
	add	r7, sp, #0
	sub	sp, sp, #12
	stmia	sp, {r0, r1, r2}
	ldmia	sp, {r1-r2}
	ldr	r0, L5
	ldr	r3, [sp, #8]
L2:
	add	r0, pc, r0
	bl	L_printf$stub

Instead of a stmia, ldmia, and a ldr, wouldn't it be better to do three moves?

* Return an aggregate type is even worse:

e.g.
struct s foo(void) {
  struct s S = {1.1, 2};
  return S;
}

	mov	ip, r0
	ldr	r0, L5
	sub	sp, sp, #12
L2:
	add	r0, pc, r0
	@ lr needed for prologue
	ldmia	r0, {r0, r1, r2}
	stmia	sp, {r0, r1, r2}
	stmia	ip, {r0, r1, r2}
	mov	r0, ip
	add	sp, sp, #12
	bx	lr

r0 (and later ip) is the hidden parameter from caller to store the value in. The
first ldmia loads the constants into r0, r1, r2. The last stmia stores r0, r1,
r2 into the address passed in. However, there is one additional stmia that
stores r0, r1, and r2 to some stack location. The store is dead.

The llvm-gcc generated code looks like this:

csretcc void %foo(%struct.s* %agg.result) {
entry:
	%S = alloca %struct.s, align 4		; <%struct.s*> [#uses=1]
	%memtmp = alloca %struct.s		; <%struct.s*> [#uses=1]
	cast %struct.s* %S to sbyte*		; <sbyte*>:0 [#uses=2]
	call void %llvm.memcpy.i32( sbyte* %0, sbyte* cast ({ double, int }* %C.0.904 to sbyte*), uint 12, uint 4 )
	cast %struct.s* %agg.result to sbyte*		; <sbyte*>:1 [#uses=2]
	call void %llvm.memcpy.i32( sbyte* %1, sbyte* %0, uint 12, uint 0 )
	cast %struct.s* %memtmp to sbyte*		; <sbyte*>:2 [#uses=1]
	call void %llvm.memcpy.i32( sbyte* %2, sbyte* %1, uint 12, uint 0 )
	ret void
}

llc ends up issuing two memcpy's (the first memcpy becomes 3 loads from
constantpool). Perhaps we should 1) fix llvm-gcc so the memcpy is translated
into a number of load and stores, or 2) custom lower memcpy (of small size) to
be ldmia / stmia. I think option 2 is better but the current register
allocator cannot allocate a chunk of registers at a time.

A feasible temporary solution is to use specific physical registers at the
lowering time for small (<= 4 words?) transfer size.

* ARM CSRet calling convention requires the hidden argument to be returned by
the callee.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

We can definitely do a better job on BB placements to eliminate some branches.
It's very common to see llvm generated assembly code that looks like this:

LBB3:
 ...
LBB4:
...
  beq LBB3
  b LBB2

If BB4 is the only predecessor of BB3, then we can emit BB3 after BB4. We can
then eliminate beq and and turn the unconditional branch to LBB2 to a bne.

See McCat/18-imp/ComputeBoundingBoxes for an example.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Pre-/post- indexed load / stores:

1) We should not make the pre/post- indexed load/store transform if the base ptr
is guaranteed to be live beyond the load/store. This can happen if the base
ptr is live out of the block we are performing the optimization. e.g.

mov r1, r2
ldr r3, [r1], #4
...

vs.

ldr r3, [r2]
add r1, r2, #4
...

In most cases, this is just a wasted optimization. However, sometimes it can
negatively impact the performance because two-address code is more restrictive
when it comes to scheduling.

Unfortunately, liveout information is currently unavailable during DAG combine
time.

2) Consider spliting a indexed load / store into a pair of add/sub + load/store
   to solve #1 (in TwoAddressInstructionPass.cpp).

3) Enhance LSR to generate more opportunities for indexed ops.

4) Once we added support for multiple result patterns, write indexed loads
   patterns instead of C++ instruction selection code.

5) Use VLDM / VSTM to emulate indexed FP load / store.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Implement support for some more tricky ways to materialize immediates.  For
example, to get 0xffff8000, we can use:

mov r9, #&3f8000
sub r9, r9, #&400000

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

We sometimes generate multiple add / sub instructions to update sp in prologue
and epilogue if the inc / dec value is too large to fit in a single immediate
operand. In some cases, perhaps it might be better to load the value from a
constantpool instead.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

GCC generates significantly better code for this function.

int foo(int StackPtr, unsigned char *Line, unsigned char *Stack, int LineLen) {
    int i = 0;

    if (StackPtr != 0) {
       while (StackPtr != 0 && i < (((LineLen) < (32768))? (LineLen) : (32768)))
          Line[i++] = Stack[--StackPtr];
        if (LineLen > 32768)
        {
            while (StackPtr != 0 && i < LineLen)
            {
                i++;
                --StackPtr;
            }
        }
    }
    return StackPtr;
}

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

This should compile to the mlas instruction:
int mlas(int x, int y, int z) { return ((x * y + z) < 0) ? 7 : 13; }

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

At some point, we should triage these to see if they still apply to us:

http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19598
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18560
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27016

http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11831
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11826
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11825
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11824
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11823
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11820
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10982

http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10242
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9831
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9760
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9759
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9703
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9702
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9663

http://www.inf.u-szeged.hu/gcc-arm/
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/debus04linktime.html

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

gcc generates smaller code for this function at -O2 or -Os:

void foo(signed char* p) {
  if (*p == 3)
     bar();
   else if (*p == 4)
    baz();
  else if (*p == 5)
    quux();
}

llvm decides it's a good idea to turn the repeated if...else into a
binary tree, as if it were a switch; the resulting code requires -1 
compare-and-branches when *p<=2 or *p==5, the same number if *p==4
or *p>6, and +1 if *p==3.  So it should be a speed win
(on balance).  However, the revised code is larger, with 4 conditional 
branches instead of 3.

More seriously, there is a byte->word extend before
each comparison, where there should be only one, and the condition codes
are not remembered when the same two values are compared twice.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

More LSR enhancements possible:

1. Teach LSR about pre- and post- indexed ops to allow iv increment be merged
   in a load / store.
2. Allow iv reuse even when a type conversion is required. For example, i8
   and i32 load / store addressing modes are identical.


//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

This:

int foo(int a, int b, int c, int d) {
  long long acc = (long long)a * (long long)b;
  acc += (long long)c * (long long)d;
  return (int)(acc >> 32);
}

Should compile to use SMLAL (Signed Multiply Accumulate Long) which multiplies 
two signed 32-bit values to produce a 64-bit value, and accumulates this with 
a 64-bit value.

We currently get this with both v4 and v6:

_foo:
        smull r1, r0, r1, r0
        smull r3, r2, r3, r2
        adds r3, r3, r1
        adc r0, r2, r0
        bx lr

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

This:
        #include <algorithm>
        std::pair<unsigned, bool> full_add(unsigned a, unsigned b)
        { return std::make_pair(a + b, a + b < a); }
        bool no_overflow(unsigned a, unsigned b)
        { return !full_add(a, b).second; }

Should compile to:

_Z8full_addjj:
	adds	r2, r1, r2
	movcc	r1, #0
	movcs	r1, #1
	str	r2, [r0, #0]
	strb	r1, [r0, #4]
	mov	pc, lr

_Z11no_overflowjj:
	cmn	r0, r1
	movcs	r0, #0
	movcc	r0, #1
	mov	pc, lr

not:

__Z8full_addjj:
        add r3, r2, r1
        str r3, [r0]
        mov r2, #1
        mov r12, #0
        cmp r3, r1
        movlo r12, r2
        str r12, [r0, #+4]
        bx lr
__Z11no_overflowjj:
        add r3, r1, r0
        mov r2, #1
        mov r1, #0
        cmp r3, r0
        movhs r1, r2
        mov r0, r1
        bx lr

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Some of the NEON intrinsics may be appropriate for more general use, either
as target-independent intrinsics or perhaps elsewhere in the ARM backend.
Some of them may also be lowered to target-independent SDNodes, and perhaps
some new SDNodes could be added.

For example, maximum, minimum, and absolute value operations are well-defined
and standard operations, both for vector and scalar types.

The current NEON-specific intrinsics for count leading zeros and count one
bits could perhaps be replaced by the target-independent ctlz and ctpop
intrinsics.  It may also make sense to add a target-independent "ctls"
intrinsic for "count leading sign bits".  Likewise, the backend could use
the target-independent SDNodes for these operations.

ARMv6 has scalar saturating and halving adds and subtracts.  The same
intrinsics could possibly be used for both NEON's vector implementations of
those operations and the ARMv6 scalar versions.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

ARM::MOVCCr is commutable (by flipping the condition). But we need to implement
ARMInstrInfo::commuteInstruction() to support it.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Split out LDR (literal) from normal ARM LDR instruction. Also consider spliting
LDR into imm12 and so_reg forms. This allows us to clean up some code. e.g.
ARMLoadStoreOptimizer does not need to look at LDR (literal) and LDR (so_reg)
while ARMConstantIslandPass only need to worry about LDR (literal).

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Constant island pass should make use of full range SoImm values for LEApcrel.
Be careful though as the last attempt caused infinite looping on lencod.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Predication issue. This function:   

extern unsigned array[ 128 ];
int     foo( int x ) {
  int     y;
  y = array[ x & 127 ];
  if ( x & 128 )
     y = 123456789 & ( y >> 2 );
  else
     y = 123456789 & y;
  return y;
}

compiles to:

_foo:
	and r1, r0, #127
	ldr r2, LCPI1_0
	ldr r2, [r2]
	ldr r1, [r2, +r1, lsl #2]
	mov r2, r1, lsr #2
	tst r0, #128
	moveq r2, r1
	ldr r0, LCPI1_1
	and r0, r2, r0
	bx lr

It would be better to do something like this, to fold the shift into the
conditional move:

	and r1, r0, #127
	ldr r2, LCPI1_0
	ldr r2, [r2]
	ldr r1, [r2, +r1, lsl #2]
	tst r0, #128
	movne r1, r1, lsr #2
	ldr r0, LCPI1_1
	and r0, r1, r0
	bx lr

it saves an instruction and a register.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

It might be profitable to cse MOVi16 if there are lots of 32-bit immediates
with the same bottom half.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Robert Muth started working on an alternate jump table implementation that
does not put the tables in-line in the text.  This is more like the llvm
default jump table implementation.  This might be useful sometime.  Several
revisions of patches are on the mailing list, beginning at:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2009-June/022763.html

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Make use of the "rbit" instruction.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Take a look at test/CodeGen/Thumb2/machine-licm.ll. ARM should be taught how
to licm and cse the unnecessary load from cp#1.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

The CMN instruction sets the flags like an ADD instruction, while CMP sets
them like a subtract. Therefore to be able to use CMN for comparisons other
than the Z bit, we'll need additional logic to reverse the conditionals
associated with the comparison. Perhaps a pseudo-instruction for the comparison,
with a post-codegen pass to clean up and handle the condition codes?
See PR5694 for testcase.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Given the following on armv5:
int test1(int A, int B) {
  return (A&-8388481)|(B&8388480);
}

We currently generate:
	ldr	r2, .LCPI0_0
	and	r0, r0, r2
	ldr	r2, .LCPI0_1
	and	r1, r1, r2
	orr	r0, r1, r0
	bx	lr

We should be able to replace the second ldr+and with a bic (i.e. reuse the
constant which was already loaded).  Not sure what's necessary to do that.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

The code generated for bswap on armv4/5 (CPUs without rev) is less than ideal:

int a(int x) { return __builtin_bswap32(x); }

a:
	mov	r1, #255, 24
	mov	r2, #255, 16
	and	r1, r1, r0, lsr #8
	and	r2, r2, r0, lsl #8
	orr	r1, r1, r0, lsr #24
	orr	r0, r2, r0, lsl #24
	orr	r0, r0, r1
	bx	lr

Something like the following would be better (fewer instructions/registers):
	eor     r1, r0, r0, ror #16
	bic     r1, r1, #0xff0000
	mov     r1, r1, lsr #8
	eor     r0, r1, r0, ror #8
	bx	lr

A custom Thumb version would also be a slight improvement over the generic
version.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

Consider the following simple C code:

void foo(unsigned char *a, unsigned char *b, int *c) {
 if ((*a | *b) == 0) *c = 0;
}

currently llvm-gcc generates something like this (nice branchless code I'd say):

       ldrb    r0, [r0]
       ldrb    r1, [r1]
       orr     r0, r1, r0
       tst     r0, #255
       moveq   r0, #0
       streq   r0, [r2]
       bx      lr

Note that both "tst" and "moveq" are redundant.

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//

When loading immediate constants with movt/movw, if there are multiple
constants needed with the same low 16 bits, and those values are not live at
the same time, it would be possible to use a single movw instruction, followed
by multiple movt instructions to rewrite the high bits to different values.
For example:

  volatile store i32 -1, i32* inttoptr (i32 1342210076 to i32*), align 4,
  !tbaa
!0
  volatile store i32 -1, i32* inttoptr (i32 1342341148 to i32*), align 4,
  !tbaa
!0

is compiled and optimized to:

    movw    r0, #32796
    mov.w    r1, #-1
    movt    r0, #20480
    str    r1, [r0]
    movw    r0, #32796    @ <= this MOVW is not needed, value is there already
    movt    r0, #20482
    str    r1, [r0]

//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//