The original design of custom operands support assumed that most GPUs
have the same or very similar operand names end encodings. This is
no longer the case. As a result the support code becomes over-complicated
and difficult to maintain.
This change implements a different design with the following benefits:
- support of aliases;
- support of operands with overlapped encodings;
- identification of defined but unsupported operands.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121696
The namespaces of HWREGs is now overlapping with gfx10. Thus the
patch is longer than necessary to just support new names. It also
need to handle proper error messages, i.e. to issue a "specified
hardware register is not supported on this GPU" message.
This may need a major refactoring in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121418
Summary:
In general, we need queue_ptr for aperture bases and trap handling,
and user SGPRs have to be set up to hold queue_ptr. In current implementation,
user SGPRs are set up unnecessarily for some cases. If the target has aperture
registers, queue_ptr is not needed to reference aperture bases. For trap
handling, if target suppots getDoorbellID, queue_ptr is also not necessary.
Futher, code object version 5 introduces new kernel ABI which passes queue_ptr
as an implicit kernel argument, so user SGPRs are no longer necessary for
queue_ptr. Based on the trap handling document:
https://llvm.org/docs/AMDGPUUsage.html#amdgpu-trap-handler-for-amdhsa-os-v4-onwards-table,
llvm.debugtrap does not need queue_ptr, we remove queue_ptr suport for llvm.debugtrap
in the backend.
Reviewers: sameerds, arsenm
Fixes: SWDEV-307189
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119762
gfx90a allows the number of ACC registers (AGPRs) to be set
independently to the VGPR registers. For both HSA and PAL metadata, we
now include an "agpr_count" key to report the number of AGPRs set for
supported devices (gfx90a, gfx908, as determined by hasMAIInsts()).
This is collected from SIProgramInfo.NumAccVGPR for both HSA and PAL.
The AsmParser also now recognizes ".kernel.agpr_count" for supported
devices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116140
Enabled HW_REG_HW_ID as an alias for HW_REG_HW_ID1. This is required for compatibility with existing code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119939
Separate MCRegisterInfo::regsOverlap out from
TargetRegisterInfo::regsOverlap. This is useful in the AMDGPU AsmParser
where we only have access to MCRegisterInfo.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119533
The module flag to indicate use of hostcall is insufficient to catch
all cases where hostcall might be in use by a kernel. This is now
replaced by a function attribute that gets propagated to top-level
kernel functions via their respective call-graph.
If the attribute "amdgpu-no-hostcall-ptr" is absent on a kernel, the
default behaviour is to emit kernel metadata indicating that the
kernel uses the hostcall buffer pointer passed as an implicit
argument.
The attribute may be placed explicitly by the user, or inferred by the
AMDGPU attributor by examining the call-graph. The attribute is
inferred only if the function is not being sanitized, and the
implictarg_ptr does not result in a load of any byte in the hostcall
pointer argument.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, arsenm, kpyzhov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119216
Use same MSSA clobbering checks as in the AMDGPUAnnotateUniformValues.
Kernel argument promotion needs exactly the same information so factor
out utility function isClobberedInFunction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119480
Summary:
Add code object v5 support (deafult is still v4)
Generate metadata for implicit kernel args for the new ABI
Set the metadata version to be 1.2
Reviewers:
t-tye, b-sumner, arsenm, and bcahoon
Fixes:
SWDEV-307188, SWDEV-307189
Differential Revision:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D118272
If the bias is zero, we can remove it from the image instruction.
Also copy other image optimizations (l->lz, mip->nomip) to IR combines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116042
Approximately revert D103431.
LDS variables are allocated at kernel launch and deallocated at kernel exit.
The address is therefore kernel execution dependent. Global variables are
initialized by values written to .data, which can't be done for a LDS variable
as there is no kernel running, or by a global constructor. Initializing the
global to the address of some LDS allocated by a global constructor is possible
but indistinguishable from undef.
Assigning the address of a LDS variable to a global should be a sema error. It
isn't for openmp, haven't checked other languages. Failing that it could be set
to undef, perhaps in this pass.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115413
The combined vector register classes with both
VGPRs and AGPRs are currently unallocatable.
This patch turns them into allocatable as a
prerequisite to enable copy between VGPR and
AGPR registers during regalloc.
Also, added the missing AV register classes from
192b to 1024b.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109300
These instructions should allow src0 to be a literal with the same
value as the mandatory other literal. Enable it by introducing an
operand that defers adding its value to the MI when decoding till
the mandatory literal is parsed.
Reviewed By: dp, foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111067
Change-Id: I22b0ae0d35bad17b6f976808e48bffe9a6af70b7
As described on D111049, we're trying to remove the <string> dependency from error handling and replace uses of report_fatal_error(const std::string&) with the Twine() variant which can be forward declared.
1. Splitted out some parts of R600 target to separate modules/headers.
2. Reduced some include lists in headers.
3. Minor forward declarations, redundant includes and flags in GCNSubtarget
cleanup.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109351
With architected flat scratch it becomes readonly. We must always
reserve SGPR pair for it even if we do not use scratch at all since
an attempt to write to SGPRs mapped to FLAT_SCRATCH results in
memory violation.
This is not needed since GFX10 with architected flat scratch though
since special SGPRs are not carving space from normal SGPRs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110376
Suffix opcodes with _gfx10.
Remove direct references to architecture specific opcodes.
Add a BVH flag and apply this to diassembly.
Fix a number of disassembly errors on gfx90a target caused by
previous incorrect BVH detection code.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108117
While collecting reachable callees (from kernels), ignore call graph node which
does not have associated function or associated function is not a definition.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107329
Disable null export (for kills) when a frontend defines a pixel
shader as not exporting using amdgpu-color-export and
amdgpu-depth-export function attrbutes.
This allows the generation of export free pixel shaders.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105683
Set informational fields in the .shader_functions table.
Also correct the documentation, .scratch_memory_size and .lds_size are
integers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105116
Add SReg_224, VReg_224, AReg_224, etc.
Link 224-bit types with v7i32/v7f32.
Link existing 192-bit types to newly added v3i64/v3f64/v6i32/v6f32.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104622
Don't use SCC iterators when we're only interested in reachability.
Use df_begin/df_end inline to find reachable nodes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104704
The main motivation behind pointer replacement of LDS use within non-kernel
functions is - to *avoid* subsequent LDS lowering pass from directly packing
LDS (assume large LDS) into a struct type which would otherwise cause allocating
huge memory for struct instance within every kernel.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103225
This allows to lower an LDS variable into a kernel structure
even if there is a constant expression used from different
kernels.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103655
There is a trivial but severe bug in the recent code collecting
LDS globals used by kernel. It aborts scan on the first constant
without scanning further uses. That leads to LDS overallocation
with multiple kernels in certain cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103190
A16 support for image instructions assembly/disassembly (gfx10) was missing
Also refactor MIMG op addr size calcs to common function
We'd got 3 places where the same operation was being done.
One test is now marked XFAIL until a related codegen patch is in place
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102231
Change-Id: I7e86e730ef8c71901457855cba570581f4f576bb
The waitcnt pass would increment the number of vmem events for some buffer
invalidates that were not handled by the pass.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102252
Preexisting waitcnt may not update the scoreboard if the instruction
being examined needed to wait on fewer counters than what was encoded in
the old waitcnt instruction. Fixing this results in the elimination of
some redudnat waitcnt.
These changes also enable combining consecutive waitcnt into a single
S_WAITCNT or S_WAITCNT_VSCNT instruction.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100281
Move some utility functions which are used within LDS lowering pass to a separate utils
file so that other LDS related passes can make use of them when required.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100526
By convention, VOP1/2/C instructions which can be promoted to VOP3 have _e32 suffix while promoted instructions have _e64 suffix. Instructions which have a single variant should have no _e32/_e64 suffix. Unfortunately there was no simple way to identify single variant instructions - it was implemented by a hack. See bug https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39086.
This fix simplifies handling of single VOP instructions by adding a dedicated flag.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99408
This instruction is only valid on 2D MSAA and 2D MSAA Array
surfaces. Remove intrinsic support for other dimension types,
and block assembly for unsupported dimensions.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98397
gfx90a operations require even aligned registers, but this was
previously achieved by reserving registers inside the full class.
Ideally this would be captured in the static instruction definitions
for the operands, and we would have different instructions per
subtarget. The hackiest part of this is we need to manually reassign
AGPR register classes after instruction selection (we get away without
this for VGPRs since those types are actually registered for legal
types).
Update the list of s_sendmsg messages known to the assembler and
disassembler and validate the ones that were added or removed in gfx9
and gfx10.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97295
Support for XNACK and SRAMECC is not static on some GPUs. We must be able
to differentiate between different scenarios for these dynamic subtarget
features.
The possible settings are:
- Unsupported: The GPU has no support for XNACK/SRAMECC.
- Any: Preference is unspecified. Use conservative settings that can run anywhere.
- Off: Request support for XNACK/SRAMECC Off
- On: Request support for XNACK/SRAMECC On
GCNSubtarget will track the four options based on the following criteria. If
the subtarget does not support XNACK/SRAMECC we say the setting is
"Unsupported". If no subtarget features for XNACK/SRAMECC are requested we
must support "Any" mode. If the subtarget features XNACK/SRAMECC exist in the
feature string when initializing the subtarget, the settings are "On/Off".
The defaults are updated to be conservatively correct, meaning if no setting
for XNACK or SRAMECC is explicitly requested, defaults will be used which
generate code that can be run anywhere. This corresponds to the "Any" setting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85882
Rename the *_gfx9_gfx10 ttmp registers to *_gfx9plus for simplicity,
and use the corresponding isGFX9Plus predicate to decide when to use
them instead of the old *_vi versions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94975
It's more future-proof to use isGFX10Plus from the start, on the
assumption that future architectures will be based on current
architectures.
Also make use of the existing isGFX9Plus in a few places.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92092
Add .shader_functions to pal metadata, which contains the stack frame
size for all non-entry-point functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90036
No longer rely on an external tool to build the llvm component layout.
Instead, leverage the existing `add_llvm_componentlibrary` cmake function and
introduce `add_llvm_component_group` to accurately describe component behavior.
These function store extra properties in the created targets. These properties
are processed once all components are defined to resolve library dependencies
and produce the header expected by llvm-config.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90848
Add a calling convention called amdgpu_gfx for real function calls
within graphics shaders. For the moment, this uses the same calling
convention as other calls in amdgpu, with registers excluded for return
address, stack pointer and stack buffer descriptor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88540
Previously, the default value for ieee mode was
- on for compute kernels and compute shaders,
- off for all shaders except compute shaders.
This commit changes the default to be
- on for compute kernels,
- off for shaders.
This aligns the default value with the settings that are actually in
use. To my knowledge, all users of shader calling conventions (mesa and
llpc) disable the ieee mode by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89388
If no pal metadata is given, default to the msgpack format instead of
the legacy metadata. This makes tests better readable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90035
Introduce a utility function to make it more
convenient to write code that is the same on
the GFX9 and GFX10 subtargets.
Use isGFX9Plus in the AsmParser for AMDGPU.
Authored By: Joe_Nash
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88908
It was found some packed immediate operands (e.g. `<half 1.0, half 2.0>`) are
incorrectly processed so one of two packed values were lost.
Introduced new function to check immediate 32-bit operand can be folded.
Converted condition about current op_sel flags value to fall-through.
Fixes: SWDEV-247595
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87158
If the same stream object is used for multiple compiles, the PAL metadata from eariler compilations will leak into later one. See https://github.com/GPUOpen-Drivers/llpc/issues/882 for how this is happening in LLPC.
No tests were added because multiple compiles will have to happen using the same pass manager, and I do not see a setup for that on the LLVM side. Let me know if there is a good way to test this.
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85667
PAL recently got support for multiple ELF sections and relocations,
therefore we can now use .rodata sections instead of forcing constants
into .text.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85895
Currently supported LLVM MTBUF syntax is shown below. It is not compatible with SP3.
op dst, addr, rsrc, FORMAT, soffset
This change adds support for SP3 syntax:
op dst, addr, rsrc, soffset SP3FORMAT
In addition to being compatible with SP3, this syntax allows using symbolic names for data, numeric and unified formats. Below is a list of added syntax variants.
format:<expression>
format:[<numeric-format-name>,<data-format-name>]
format:[<data-format-name>,<numeric-format-name>]
format:[<data-format-name>]
format:[<numeric-format-name>]
format:[<unified-format-name>]
The last syntax variant is supported for GFX10 only.
See llvm bug 37738
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec, vpykhtin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84026
MTBUF implementation has many issues and this change addresses most of these:
- refactored duplicated code;
- hardcoded constants moved out of high-level code;
- fixed a decoding error when nfmt or dfmt are zero (bug 36932);
- corrected parsing of operand separators (bug 46403);
- corrected handling of missing operands (bug 46404);
- corrected handling of out-of-range modifiers (bug 46421);
- corrected default value (bug 46467).
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec, vpykhtin, artem.tamazov, kzhuravl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83760
It seems to be a hardware defect that the half inline constants do not
work as expected for the 16-bit integer operations (the inverse does
work correctly). Experimentation seems to show these are really
reading the 32-bit inline constants, which can be observed by writing
inline asm using op_sel to see what's in the high half of the
constant. Theoretically we could fold the high halves of the 32-bit
constants using op_sel.
The *_asm_all.s MC tests are broken, and I don't know where the script
to autogenerate these are. I started manually fixing it, but there's
just too many cases to fix. This also does break the
assembler/disassembler support for these values, and I'm not sure what
to do about it. These are still valid encodings, so it seems like you
should be able to use them in some way. If you wrote assembly using
them, you could have really meant it (perhaps to read the high bits
with op_sel?). The disassembler will print the invalid literal
constant which will fail to re-assemble. The behavior is also
different depending on the use context. Consider this example, which
was previously accepted and encoded using the inline constant:
v_mad_i16 v5, v1, -4.0, v3
; encoding: [0x05,0x00,0xec,0xd1,0x01,0xef,0x0d,0x04]
In contexts where an inline immediate is required (such as on gfx8/9),
this will now be rejected. For gfx10, this will produce the literal
encoding and change the printed format:
v_mad_i16 v5, v1, 0xc400, v3
; encoding: [0x05,0x00,0x5e,0xd7,0x01,0xff,0x0d,0x04,0x00,0xc4,0x00,0x00]
This is just another variation of the issue that we don't perfectly
handle round trip assembly/disassembly due to not tracking how
immediates were encoded. This doesn't matter much in practice, since
compilers don't emit the suboptimal encoding. I doubt any users are
relying on this behavior (although I did make use of the old behavior
to figure out what was wrong).
Fixes bug 46302.
Summary: 'A' constraint requires an immediate int or fp constant that can be inlined in an instruction encoding.
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78494
This only affects assembly and -filetype=asm codegen of PAL metadata.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78860
Change-Id: I7b822e1917bf7b403486820d31afc483be207652
This was backwards from intended and missing a test. We perhaps should
just ignored the FP mode here, since it shouldn't be legal to mix code
with different default modes in the absence of strictfp.
12994a70cf did this for 128-bit classes:
SGPR_128 only includes the real allocatable SGPRs, and SReg_128 adds
the additional non-allocatable TTMP registers. There's no point in
allocating SReg_128 vregs. This shrinks the size of the classes
regalloc needs to consider, which is usually good.
This patch extends it to all classes > 64 bits, for consistency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78622
Add 96-bit, 160-bit and 256-bit AReg classes to match VReg and SReg.
NFC as far as I know, but it may avoid weird legalization problems.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78348
Summary:
This fixes a few issues related to SMRD offsets. On gfx9 and gfx10 we have a
signed byte offset immediate, however we can overflow into a negative since we
treat it as unsigned.
Also, the SMRD SOFFSET sgpr is an unsigned offset on all subtargets. We
sometimes tried to use negative values here.
Third, S_BUFFER instructions should never use a signed offset immediate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77082
This will likely introduce catastrophic performance regressions on
older subtargets, but should be correct. A follow up change will
remove the old fp32-denormals subtarget features, and switch to using
the new denormal-fp-math/denormal-fp-math-f32 attributes. Frontends
should be making sure to add the denormal-fp-math-f32 attribute when
appropriate to avoid performance regressions.
Summary:
"Per CU" is a bit simplistic for gfx10, but I couldn't think of a better
name.
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec, nhaehnle, dstuttard, tpr
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, t-tye, hiraditya, kerbowa, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76861
Summary: I think Max in the name was misleading. NFC.
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, hiraditya, kerbowa, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76860
Summary:
These methods were identical. I chose to remove getMaxWavesPerCU because
I think Max in the name was misleading. NFC.
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, hiraditya, kerbowa, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76859
Based on D72931
This adds a new feature called A16 which is enabled for gfx10.
gfx9 keeps the R128A16 feature so it can share all the instruction encodings
with gfx7/8.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73956