As stated in
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-llc-add-expandlargeintfpconvert-pass-for-fp-int-conversion-of-large-bitint/65528,
this implementation is very similar to ExpandLargeDivRem, which expands
‘fptoui .. to’, ‘fptosi .. to’, ‘uitofp .. to’, ‘sitofp .. to’ instructions
with a bitwidth above a threshold into auto-generated functions. This is
useful for targets like x86_64 that cannot lower fp convertions with more
than 128 bits. The expanded nodes are referring from the IR generated by
`compiler-rt/lib/builtins/floattidf.c`, `compiler-rt/lib/builtins/fixdfti.c`,
and etc.
Corner cases:
1. For fp16: as there is no related builtins added in compliler-rt. So I
mainly utilized the fp32 <-> fp16 lib calls to implement.
2. For fp80: as this pass is soft fp emulation and no fp80 instructions can
help in this problem. I recommend users to deprecate this usage. For now, the
implementation uses fp128 as the temporary conversion type and inserts
fptrunc/ext at top/end of the function.
3. For bf16: as clang FE currently doesn't support bf16 algorithm operations
(convert to int, float, +, -, *, ...), this patch doesn't consider bf16 for
now.
4. For unsigned FPToI: since both default hardware behaviors and libgcc are
ignoring "returns 0 for negative input" spec. This pass follows this old way
to ignore unsigned FPToI. See this example:
https://gcc.godbolt.org/z/bnv3jqW1M
The end-to-end tests are uploaded at https://reviews.llvm.org/D138261
Reviewed By: LuoYuanke, mgehre-amd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137241
Currently per-function metadata consists of:
(start-pc, size, features)
This adds a new UAR feature and if it's set an additional element:
(start-pc, size, features, stack-args-size)
Reviewed By: melver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136078
Currently per-function metadata consists of:
(start-pc, size, features)
This adds a new UAR feature and if it's set an additional element:
(start-pc, size, features, stack-args-size)
Reviewed By: melver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136078
This reverts commit a1255dc467.
This patch results in:
llvm/lib/CodeGen/SanitizerBinaryMetadata.cpp:57:17: error: no member
named 'size' in 'llvm::MDTuple'
Currently per-function metadata consists of:
(start-pc, size, features)
This adds a new UAR feature and if it's set an additional element:
(start-pc, size, features, stack-args-size)
Reviewed By: melver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136078
This adds the ExpandLargeDivRem to the default pass pipeline.
The limit at which it expands div/rem instructions is configured
via a new TargetTransformInfo hook (default: no expansion)
X86, Arm and AArch64 backends implement this hook to expand div/rem
instructions with more than 128 bits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130076
When we fill the shape to tile configure memory, the shape is gotten
from AMX pseudo instruction. However the register for the shape may be
split or spilled by greedy RA. That cause we fill the shape to config
memory after ldtilecfg is executed, so that the shape configuration
would be wrong.
This patch is to split the tile register allocation from greedy register
allocation, so that after tile registers are allocated the shape
registers are still virtual register. The shape register only may be
redefined or multi-defined by phi elimination pass, two address pass.
That doesn't affect tile register configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128584
This relands commit 4d8d2580c5.
The major change here is using 'addUsedIfAvailable<BasicBlockSectionsProfileReader>()` to make sure we don't change the pipeline tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126518
Today, text section prefixes (none, .unlikely, .hot, and .unkown) are determined based on PGO profile. However, Propeller may deem a function hot when PGO doesn't. Besides, when `-Wl,-keep-text-section-prefix=true` Propeller cannot enforce a global section ordering as the linker can only reorder sections within each output section (.text, .text.hot, .text.unlikely).
This patch promotes all functions with Propeller profiles (functions listed in the basic-block-sections profile) to .text.hot. The feature is hidden behind the flag `--bbsections-guided-section-prefix` which defaults to `true`.
The new implementation refactors the parsing of basic block sections profile into a new `BasicBlockSectionsProfileReader` analysis pass. This allows us to use the information earlier in `CodeGenPrepare` in order to set the functions text prefix. `BasicBlockSectionsProfileReader` will be used both by `BasicBlockSections` pass and `CodeGenPrepare`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122930
This is the first commit for the cmov-vs-branch optimization pass.
The goal is to develop a new profile-guided and target-independent cost/benefit analysis
for selecting conditional moves over branches when optimizing for performance.
Initially, this new pass is expected to be enabled only for instrumentation-based PGO.
RFC: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-cmov-vs-branch-optimization/6040
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120230
This pass inserts the necessary CFI instructions to compensate for the
inconsistency of the call-frame information caused by linear (non-CGA
aware) nature of the unwind tables.
Unlike the `CFIInstrInserer` pass, this one almost always emits only
`.cfi_remember_state`/`.cfi_restore_state`, which results in smaller
unwind tables and also transparently handles custom unwind info
extensions like CFA offset adjustement and save locations of SVE
registers.
This pass takes advantage of the constraints taht LLVM imposes on the
placement of save/restore points (cf. `ShrinkWrap.cpp`):
* there is a single basic block, containing the function prologue
* possibly multiple epilogue blocks, where each epilogue block is
complete and self-contained, i.e. CSR restore instructions (and the
corresponding CFI instructions are not split across two or more
blocks.
* prologue and epilogue blocks are outside of any loops
Thus, during execution, at the beginning and at the end of each basic
block the function can be in one of two states:
- "has a call frame", if the function has executed the prologue, or
has not executed any epilogue
- "does not have a call frame", if the function has not executed the
prologue, or has executed an epilogue
These properties can be computed for each basic block by a single RPO
traversal.
From the point of view of the unwind tables, the "has/does not have
call frame" state at beginning of each block is determined by the
state at the end of the previous block, in layout order.
Where these states differ, we insert compensating CFI instructions,
which come in two flavours:
- CFI instructions, which reset the unwind table state to the
initial one. This is done by a target specific hook and is
expected to be trivial to implement, for example it could be:
```
.cfi_def_cfa <sp>, 0
.cfi_same_value <rN>
.cfi_same_value <rN-1>
...
```
where `<rN>` are the callee-saved registers.
- CFI instructions, which reset the unwind table state to the one
created by the function prologue. These are the sequence:
```
.cfi_restore_state
.cfi_remember_state
```
In this case we also insert a `.cfi_remember_state` after the
last CFI instruction in the function prologue.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, danielkiss, chill
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114545
This pass inserts the necessary CFI instructions to compensate for the
inconsistency of the call-frame information caused by linear (non-CFG
aware) nature of the unwind tables.
Unlike the `CFIInstrInserer` pass, this one almost always emits only
`.cfi_remember_state`/`.cfi_restore_state`, which results in smaller
unwind tables and also transparently handles custom unwind info
extensions like CFA offset adjustement and save locations of SVE
registers.
This pass takes advantage of the constraints that LLVM imposes on the
placement of save/restore points (cf. `ShrinkWrap.cpp`):
* there is a single basic block, containing the function prologue
* possibly multiple epilogue blocks, where each epilogue block is
complete and self-contained, i.e. CSR restore instructions (and the
corresponding CFI instructions are not split across two or more
blocks.
* prologue and epilogue blocks are outside of any loops
Thus, during execution, at the beginning and at the end of each basic
block the function can be in one of two states:
- "has a call frame", if the function has executed the prologue, or
has not executed any epilogue
- "does not have a call frame", if the function has not executed the
prologue, or has executed an epilogue
These properties can be computed for each basic block by a single RPO
traversal.
In order to accommodate backends which do not generate unwind info in
epilogues we compute an additional property "strong no call frame on
entry" which is set for the entry point of the function and for every
block reachable from the entry along a path that does not execute the
prologue. If this property holds, it takes precedence over the "has a
call frame" property.
From the point of view of the unwind tables, the "has/does not have
call frame" state at beginning of each block is determined by the
state at the end of the previous block, in layout order.
Where these states differ, we insert compensating CFI instructions,
which come in two flavours:
- CFI instructions, which reset the unwind table state to the
initial one. This is done by a target specific hook and is
expected to be trivial to implement, for example it could be:
```
.cfi_def_cfa <sp>, 0
.cfi_same_value <rN>
.cfi_same_value <rN-1>
...
```
where `<rN>` are the callee-saved registers.
- CFI instructions, which reset the unwind table state to the one
created by the function prologue. These are the sequence:
```
.cfi_restore_state
.cfi_remember_state
```
In this case we also insert a `.cfi_remember_state` after the
last CFI instruction in the function prologue.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, danielkiss, chill
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114545
For MachO, lower `@llvm.global_dtors` into `@llvm_global_ctors` with
`__cxa_atexit` calls to avoid emitting the deprecated `__mod_term_func`.
Reuse the existing `WebAssemblyLowerGlobalDtors.cpp` to accomplish this.
Enable fallback to the old behavior via Clang driver flag
(`-fregister-global-dtors-with-atexit`) or llc / code generation flag
(`-lower-global-dtors-via-cxa-atexit`). This escape hatch will be
removed in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121736
For MachO, lower `@llvm.global_dtors` into `@llvm_global_ctors` with
`__cxa_atexit` calls to avoid emitting the deprecated `__mod_term_func`.
Reuse the existing `WebAssemblyLowerGlobalDtors.cpp` to accomplish this.
Enable fallback to the old behavior via Clang driver flag
(`-fregister-global-dtors-with-atexit`) or llc / code generation flag
(`-lower-global-dtors-via-cxa-atexit`). This escape hatch will be
removed in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121736
For MachO, lower `@llvm.global_dtors` into `@llvm_global_ctors` with
`__cxa_atexit` calls to avoid emitting the deprecated `__mod_term_func`.
Reuse the existing `WebAssemblyLowerGlobalDtors.cpp` to accomplish this.
Enable fallback to the old behavior via Clang driver flag
(`-fregister-global-dtors-with-atexit`) or llc / code generation flag
(`-lower-global-dtors-via-cxa-atexit`). This escape hatch will be
removed in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121327
FSAFDO profile loader is currently disabled even --enable-fs-discriminator is enabled.
They need to be turned on by options which makes it cumbersome for experiments.
This patch changes the FSAFDO profile loader enabled by default. Since they are
guarded by EnableFSDiscriminator, they will only be turned on if
--enable-fs-discriminator is enabled. Note that --enable-fs-discriminator is
still disabled by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119033
The bulk of the implementation is common between 'release' mode (==AOT-ed
model) and 'development' mode (for training), the main difference is
that in development mode, we may also log features (for training logs),
inject scoring information (currently after the Virtual Register
Rewriter) and then produce the log file.
This patch also introduces the score injection pass, 'Register
Allocation Pass Scoring', which is trivially just logging the score in
development mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117147
In a couple of places machine verification was disabled for no apparent
reason, probably just because an "addPass(..., false)" line was cut and
pasted from elsewhere.
After this patch the only remaining place where machine verification is
disabled in the generic TargetPassConfig code, is after addPreEmitPass.
Enable verification of live intervals immediately after computing them
(when -early-live-intervals is used) and fix a problem that that
provokes: currently the verifier insists that a segment that ends at an
early-clobber slot must be followed by another segment starting at the
same slot. But before TwoAddressInstruction runs, the equivalent
condition is: a segment that ends at an early-clobber slot must have its
last use tied to an early-clobber def. That condition is harder to check
here, so for now just disable this check until tied operands have been
rewritten.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111065
Enabling this does not show any problems in check-llvm in an
LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110703
LiveVariables does not examine the contents of bundles, so
MachineVerifier should not expect it to know about kill flags on
operands of instructions inside a bundle.
With this fix we can enable machine verification after running the
LiveVariables analysis. Doing this does not show any problems in
check-llvm in an LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110700
Enabling this does not show any problems in check-llvm in an
LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110697
Enabling this does not show any problems in check-llvm in an
LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110695
Machine verification after DetectDeadLanes has been disabled since the
pass was first added in D18427, but I guess this was just due to copy-
and-paste. Enabling it does not show any problems in check-llvm in an
LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110689
Machine verification after RemoveRedundantDebugValues has been disabled
since the pass was first added in D105279, but I guess this was just due
to copy-and-paste. Enabling it does not show any problems in check-llvm
in an LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110688
Currenlty PseudoProbeInserter is a pass conditioned on a target switch. It works well with a single clang invocation. It doesn't work so well when the backend is called separately (i.e, through the linker or llc), where user has always to pass -pseudo-probe-for-profiling explictly. I'm making the pass a default pass that requires no command line arg to trigger, but will be actually run depending on whether the CU comes with `llvm.pseudo_probe_desc` metadata.
Reviewed By: wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110209
This patch implements Flow Sensitive Sample FDO (FSAFDO) profile
loader. We have two profile loaders for FS profile,
one before RegAlloc and one before BlockPlacement.
To enable it, when -fprofile-sample-use=<profile> is specified,
add "-enable-fs-discriminator=true \
-disable-ra-fsprofile-loader=false \
-disable-layout-fsprofile-loader=false"
to turn on the FS profile loaders.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107878
This patch adds Pass1 of MIRADDFSDiscriminatorsPass before register
allocation, and Pass2 of MIRAddFSDiscriminatorsPass before
Block-Placement. This is still under --enable-fs-discrmininator
option (default false).
This would reduce the turn-around time for FSAFDO transition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104579
This new MIR pass removes redundant DBG_VALUEs.
After the register allocator is done, more precisely, after
the Virtual Register Rewriter, we end up having duplicated
DBG_VALUEs, since some virtual registers are being rewritten
into the same physical register as some of existing DBG_VALUEs.
Each DBG_VALUE should indicate (at least before the LiveDebugValues)
variables assignment, but it is being clobbered for function
parameters during the SelectionDAG since it generates new DBG_VALUEs
after COPY instructions, even though the parameter has no assignment.
For example, if we had a DBG_VALUE $regX as an entry debug value
representing the parameter, and a COPY and after the COPY,
DBG_VALUE $virt_reg, and after the virtregrewrite the $virt_reg gets
rewritten into $regX, we'd end up having redundant DBG_VALUE.
This breaks the definition of the DBG_VALUE since some analysis passes
might be built on top of that premise..., and this patch tries to fix
the MIR with the respect to that.
This first patch performs bacward scan, by trying to detect a sequence of
consecutive DBG_VALUEs, and to remove all DBG_VALUEs describing one
variable but the last one:
For example:
(1) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
(2) DBG_VALUE $esi, !"var2", ...
(3) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
...
in this case, we can remove (1).
By combining the forward scan that will be introduced in the next patch
(from this stack), by inspecting the statistics, the RemoveRedundantDebugValues
removes 15032 instructions by using gdb-7.11 as a testbed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105279