Rui Ueyama [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 21:49:56 +0000 (21:49 +0000)]
FileOutputBuffer: handle mmap(2) failure
If the underlying filesystem does not support mmap system call,
FileOutputBuffer may fail when it attempts to mmap an output temporary
file. This patch handles such situation.
Unfortunately, it looks like it is very hard to test this functionality
without a filesystem that doesn't support mmap using llvm-lit. I tested
this locally by passing an invalid parameter to mmap so that it fails and
falls back to the in-memory buffer. Maybe that's all what we can do.
I believe it is reasonable to submit this without a test.
Joel E. Denny [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 21:41:42 +0000 (21:41 +0000)]
[FileCheck] Suppress old -v/-vv diags if dumping input
The old diagnostic form of the trace produced by -v and -vv looks
like:
```
check1:1:8: remark: CHECK: expected string found in input
CHECK: abc
^
<stdin>:1:3: note: found here
; abc def
^~~
```
When dumping annotated input is requested (via -dump-input), I find
that this old trace is not useful and is sometimes harmful:
1. The old trace is mostly redundant because the same basic
information also appears in the input dump's annotations.
2. The old trace buries any error diagnostic between it and the input
dump, but I find it useful to see any error diagnostic up front.
3. FILECHECK_OPTS=-dump-input=fail requests annotated input dumps only
for failed FileCheck calls. However, I have to also add -v or -vv
to get a full set of annotations, and that can produce massive
output from all FileCheck calls in all tests. That's a real
problem when I run this in the IDE I use, which grinds to a halt as
it tries to capture all that output.
When -dump-input=fail|always, this patch suppresses the old trace from
-v or -vv. Error diagnostics still print as usual. If you want the
old trace, perhaps to see variable expansions, you can set
-dump-input=none (the default).
Craig Topper [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 20:48:24 +0000 (20:48 +0000)]
[X86][AVX512F_SCALAR]: Adding full coverage of MC encoding for the AVX512F_SCALAR isa sets. NFC
Adding MC regressions tests to cover the AVX512F_SCALAR isa sets.
This patch is part of a larger task to cover MC encoding of all X86 isa sets started in revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39952
Rui Ueyama [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 18:44:04 +0000 (18:44 +0000)]
FileOutputBuffer: Handle "-" as stdout.
I was honestly a bit surprised that we didn't do this before. This
patch is to handle "-" as the stdout so that if you pass `-o -` to
lld, for example, it writes an output to stdout instead of file `-`.
I thought that we might want to handle this at a higher level than
FileOutputBuffer, because if we land this patch, we can no longer
create a file whose name is `-` (there's a workaround though; you can
pass `./-` instead of `-`). However, because raw_fd_ostream already
handles `-` as a special file name, I think it's okay and actually
consistent to handle `-` as a special name in FileOutputBuffer.
Simon Pilgrim [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 17:52:15 +0000 (17:52 +0000)]
[llvm-mca][X86] Tidyup avx512 placeholder tests
Ensure we keep avx512f/bw/dq + vl versions separate, add example broadcast tests - this should allow us to better the test coverage of test\CodeGen\X86\avx512-schedule.ll
[docs] Scudo: document error messages & their potential cause
Summary:
A couple of changes in the Scudo documentation:
- tag the shell code blocks as `console`;
- document error messages that are displayed in some termination conditions,
the reason they triggered, and potential causes.
We're getting pretty close to matching/exceeding test coverage of the test\CodeGen\X86\*-schedule.ll files, which should allow us to get rid of -print-schedule and fix PR37160
Sanjay Patel [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 16:26:09 +0000 (16:26 +0000)]
[x86] add another partial undef vector binop test; NFC
The existing test unintentionally shows that we have prematurely
optimized the shuffle into a vector concat and lost the undef info,
so it is not affected by a basic improvement to
SimplifyDemandedVectorElts.
Serge Guelton [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 16:25:17 +0000 (16:25 +0000)]
Use response file when generating LLVM-C.dll
As discovered in D56774 the command line gets to long, so use a response file to give the script the libs. This change has been tested and is confirmed working for me.
Sanjay Patel [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:24:13 +0000 (14:24 +0000)]
[DAGCombiner] narrow vector binop with 2 insert subvector operands
vecbo (insertsubv undef, X, Z), (insertsubv undef, Y, Z) --> insertsubv VecC, (vecbo X, Y), Z
This is another step in generic vector narrowing. It's also a step towards more horizontal op
formation specifically for x86 (although we still failed to match those in the affected tests).
The scalarization cases are also not optimal (we should be scalarizing those), but it's still
an improvement to use a narrower vector op when we know part of the result must be constant
because both inputs are undef in some vector lanes.
I think a similar match but checking for a constant operand might help some of the cases in
D51553.
Currently disassembleObject() is a ~550 lines length function.
This patch extracts the code that creates a section->their relocation
mapping into a new helper function to simplify/reduce it a bit.
Alex Bradbury [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:05:11 +0000 (14:05 +0000)]
[RISCV][NFC] Change naming scheme for RISC-V specific DAG nodes
Previously we had names like 'Call' or 'Tail'. This potentially clashes with
the naming scheme used elsewhere in RISCVInstrInfo.td. Many other backends
would use names like AArch64call or PPCtail. I prefer the SystemZ approach,
which uses prefixed all-lowercase names. This matches the naming scheme used
for target-independent SelectionDAG nodes.
llvm::is_trivially_copyable portability is verified at compile time using
std::is_trivially_copyable as the reference implementation.
Unfortunately, the latter is not available on all platforms, so introduce
a proper configure check to detect if it is available on the target platform.
In a similar manner, std::is_copy_assignable is not fully supported for gcc4.9.
Provide a portable (?) implementation instead.
For constant bit select patterns, replace one AND with a ANDNP, allowing us to reuse the constant mask. Only do this if the mask has multiple uses (to avoid losing load folding) or if we have XOP as its VPCMOV can handle most folding commutations.
This also requires computeKnownBitsForTargetNode support for X86ISD::ANDNP and X86ISD::FOR to prevent regressions in fabs/fcopysign patterns.
Simon Pilgrim [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:27:18 +0000 (13:27 +0000)]
[X86][BtVer2] SSE2 vector shifts has local forwarding disabled
Similar to horizontal ops on D56777, the sse2 (but not mmx) bit shift ops has local forwarding disabled, adding +1cy to the use latency for the result.
Simon Pilgrim [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:13:57 +0000 (13:13 +0000)]
[X86][BtVer2] X86ISD::VPERMILPV has local forwarding disabled
Similar to horizontal ops on D56777, the vpermilpd/vpermilps variable mask ops has local forwarding disabled, adding +1cy to the use latency for the result.
Simon Pilgrim [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 12:29:38 +0000 (12:29 +0000)]
[CostModel][X86] Add ICMP Predicate specific costs
First step towards PR40376, this patch adds support for getCmpSelInstrCost to use the (optional) Instruction CmpInst predicate to indicate the type of integer comparison we're performing and alter the costs accordingly.
Simon Pilgrim [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 12:17:48 +0000 (12:17 +0000)]
[X86][SSE] Add selective commutation support for insertps (PR40340)
When we are inserting 1 "inline" element, and zeroing 2 of the other elements then we can safely commute the insertps source inputs to improve memory folding.
Alex Bradbury [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 12:11:53 +0000 (12:11 +0000)]
[RISCV] Quick fix for PR40333
Avoid the infinite loop caused by the target DAG combine converting ANYEXT to
SIGNEXT and the target-independent DAG combine logic converting back to
ANYEXT. Do this by not adding the new node to the worklist.
Committing directly as this definitely doesn't make the problem any worse, and
I intend to follow-up with a patch that avoids this custom combiner logic
altogether and just lowers the i32 operations to a target-specific
SelectionDAG node. This should be easier to reason about and improve codegen
quality in some cases (though may miss out on some later DAG combines).
Chandler Carruth [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 10:29:58 +0000 (10:29 +0000)]
Revert r351778: IR: Add fp operations to atomicrmw
This broke the RISCV build, and even with that fixed, one of the RISCV
tests behaves surprisingly differently with asserts than without,
leaving there no clear test pattern to use. Generally it seems bad for
hte IR to differ substantially due to asserts (as in, an alloca is used
with asserts that isn't needed without!) and nothing I did simply would
fix it so I'm reverting back to green.
This also required reverting the RISCV build fix in r351782.
James Henderson [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 09:35:35 +0000 (09:35 +0000)]
[llvm-readelf]Revert --dyn-symbols behaviour to make it GNU compatible, and add new --hash-symbols switch for old behaviour
In r287786, the behaviour of --dyn-symbols in llvm-readelf (but not
llvm-readobj) was changed to print the dynamic symbols as derived from
the hash table, rather than to print the dynamic symbol table contents
directly. The original change was initially submitted without review,
and some comments were made on the commit mailing list implying that the
new behavious is GNU compatible. I argue that it is not:
1) It does not include a null symbol.
2) It prints the symbols based on an order derived from the hash
table.
3) It prints an extra column indicating which bucket it came from.
This could break parsers that expect a fixed number of columns,
with the first column being the symbol index.
4) If the input happens to have both .hash and .gnu.hash section, it
prints interpretations of them both, resulting in most symbols
being printed twice.
5) There is no way of just printing the raw dynamic symbol table,
because --symbols also prints the static symbol table.
This patch reverts the --dyn-symbols behaviour back to its old behaviour
of just printing the contents of the dynamic symbol table, similar to
what is printed by --symbols. As the hashed interpretation is still
desirable to validate the hash table, it puts it under a new switch
"--hash-symbols". This is a no-op on all output forms except for GNU
output style for ELF. If there is no hash table, it does nothing,
unlike the previous behaviour which printed the raw dynamic symbol
table, since the raw dynsym is available under --dyn-symbols.
The yaml input for the test is based on that in
test/tools/llvm-readobj/demangle.test, but stripped down to the bare
minimum to provide a valid dynamic symbol.
Note: some LLD tests needed updating. I will commit a separate patch for
those.
Eli Friedman [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 01:51:37 +0000 (01:51 +0000)]
[ARM] Combine ands+lsls to lsls+lsrs for Thumb1.
This patch may seem familiar... but my previous patch handled the
equivalent lsls+and, not this case. Usually instcombine puts the
"and" after the shift, so this case doesn't come up. However, if the
shift comes out of a GEP, it won't get canonicalized by instcombine,
and DAGCombine doesn't have an equivalent transform.
This also modifies isDesirableToCommuteWithShift to suppress DAGCombine
transforms which would make the overall code worse.
I'm not really happy adding a bunch of code to handle this, but it would
probably be tricky to substantially improve the behavior of DAGCombine
here.
Philip Reames [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 01:34:33 +0000 (01:34 +0000)]
[CVP] Use LVI to constant fold deopt operands
Deopt operands are generally intended to record information about a site in code with minimal perturbation of the surrounding code. Idiomatically, they also tend to appear down rare paths. Putting these together, we have an obvious case for extending CVP w/deopt operand constant folding. Arguably, we should be doing this for all operands on all instructions, but that's definitely a much larger and risky change.
Eli Friedman [Tue, 22 Jan 2019 00:42:20 +0000 (00:42 +0000)]
[LangRef] Clarify semantics of volatile operations.
Specifically, clarify the following:
1. Volatile load and store may access addresses that are not memory.
2. Volatile load and store do not modify arbitrary memory.
3. Volatile load and store do not trap.
Prompted by recent volatile discussion on llvmdev.
Currently, there's sort of a split in the source code about whether
volatile operations are allowed to trap; this resolves that dispute in
favor of not allowing them to trap.
JF Bastien [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 23:53:52 +0000 (23:53 +0000)]
Document toolchain update policy
Summary:
Capture the current agreed-upon toolchain update policy based on the following
discussions:
- LLVM dev meeting 2018 BoF "Migrating to C++14, and beyond!"
llvm.org/devmtg/2018-10/talk-abstracts.html#bof3
- A Short Policy Proposal Regarding Host Compilers
lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-May/123238.html
- Using C++14 code in LLVM (2018)
lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-May/123182.html
- Using C++14 code in LLVM (2017)
lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-October/118673.html
- Using C++14 code in LLVM (2016)
lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/105483.html
- Document and Enforce new Host Compiler Policy
llvm.org/D47073
- Require GCC 5.1 and LLVM 3.5 at a minimum
llvm.org/D46723
Craig Topper [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 20:02:28 +0000 (20:02 +0000)]
[X86] Change avx512 COMPRESS and EXPAND lowering to use a single masked node instead of expand/compress+select.
Summary:
For compress, a select node doesn't semantically reflect the behavior of the instruction. The mask would have holes in it, but the resulting write is to contiguous elements at the bottom of the vector.
Furthermore, as far as the compressing and expanding is concerned the behavior is depended on the mask. You can't just have an expand/compress node that only reads the input vector. That node would have no meaning by itself.
This all only works because we pattern match the compress/expand+select back to the instruction. But conceivably an optimization of the select could break the pattern and leave something meaningless.
This patch modifies the expand and compress node to take the mask and passthru as additional inputs and gets rid of the select all together.
[AMDGPU] Fixed hazard recognizer to walk predecessors
Fixes two problems with GCNHazardRecognizer:
1. It only scans up to 5 instructions emitted earlier.
2. It does not take control flow into account. An earlier instruction
from the previous basic block is not necessarily a predecessor.
At the same time a real predecessor block is not scanned.
The patch provides a way to distinguish between scheduler and
hazard recognizer mode. It is OK to work with emitted instructions
in the scheduler because we do not really know what will be emitted
later and its order. However, when pass works as a hazard recognizer
the schedule is already finalized, and we have full access to the
instructions for the whole function, so we can properly traverse
predecessors and their instructions.
Nico Weber [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 18:59:11 +0000 (18:59 +0000)]
gn build: Stop passing -DLLVM_LIBXML2_ENABLED to some targets
This is a remnant from before the gn build had a working config.h.
Defining LLVM_LIBXML2_ENABLED only for targets that depend on build/libs/xml is
nice in that only some of the codebase needs to be rebuilt when
llvm_enable_libxml2 changes -- but config.h already defines it and defining it
there and then redundantly a second time for some targets is worse than having
it just in config.h.
Simon Pilgrim [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 18:04:25 +0000 (18:04 +0000)]
[X86][BtVer2] Update latency of mmx horizontal operations
D56777 added +1cy local forwarding penalty for horizontal operations, but this penalty only affects sse2/xmm variants, the mmx variants don't suffer the penalty.
Sanjay Patel [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 17:46:35 +0000 (17:46 +0000)]
[AArch64] add more tests for buildvec to shuffle transform; NFC
These are copied from the sibling x86 file. I'm not sure which
of the current outputs (if any) is considered optimal, but
someone more familiar with AArch may want to take a look.
Sanjay Patel [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 17:30:14 +0000 (17:30 +0000)]
[DAGCombiner] fix crash when converting build vector to shuffle
The regression test is reduced from the example shown in D56281.
This does raise a question as noted in the test file: do we want
to handle this pattern? I don't have a motivating example for
that on x86 yet, but it seems like we could have that pattern
there too, so we could avoid the back-and-forth using a shuffle.
Andrea Di Biagio [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 12:04:10 +0000 (12:04 +0000)]
[X86][BtVer2] Update the WriteLoad latency.
r327630 introduced new write definitions for float/vector loads.
Before that revision, WriteLoad was used by both integer/float (scalar/vector)
load. So, WriteLoad had to conservatively declare a latency to 5cy. That is
because the load-to-use latency for float/vector load is 5cy.
Now that we have dedicated writes for float/vector loads, there is no reason why
we should keep the latency of WriteLoad to 5cy. At the moment, WriteLoad is only
used by scalar integer loads only; we can assume an optimstic 3cy latency for
them.
This patch changes that latency from 5cy to 3cy, and regenerates the affected
scheduling/mca tests.
Chandler Carruth [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 09:52:34 +0000 (09:52 +0000)]
Fix typos throughout the license files that somehow I and my reviewers
all missed!
Thanks to Alex Bradbury for pointing this out, and the fact that I never
added the intended `legacy` anchor to the developer policy. Add that
anchor too. With hope, this will cause the links to all resolve
successfully.
This patch introduces the field `ExpressionSize` in SCEV. This field is
calculated only once on SCEV creation, and it represents the complexity of
this SCEV from arithmetical point of view (not from the point of the number
of actual different SCEV nodes that are used in the expression). Roughly
saying, it is the number of operands and operations symbols when we print this
SCEV.
A formal definition is following: if SCEV `X` has operands
`Op1`, `Op2`, ..., `OpN`,
then
Size(X) = 1 + Size(Op1) + Size(Op2) + ... + Size(OpN).
Size of SCEVConstant and SCEVUnknown is one.
Expression size may be used as a universal way to limit SCEV transformations
for huge SCEVs. Currently, we have a bunch of options that represents various
limits (such as recursion depth limit) that may not make any sense from the
point of view of a LLVM users who is not familiar with SCEV internals, and all
these different options pursue one goal. A more general rule that may
potentially allow us to get rid of this redundancy in options is "do not make
transformations with SCEVs of huge size". It can apply to all SCEV traversals
and transformations that may need to visit a SCEV node more than once, hence
they are prone to combinatorial explosions.
This patch only introduces SCEV sizes calculation as NFC, its utilization will
be introduced in follow-up patches.
Dylan McKay [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 04:32:02 +0000 (04:32 +0000)]
[AVR] Insert unconditional branch when inserting MBBs between blocks with fallthrough
This updates the AVR Select8/Select16 expansion code so that, when
inserting the two basic blocks for true and false conditions, any
existing fallthrough on the previous block is preserved.
Prior to this patch, if the block before the Select pseudo fell through
to the subsequent block, two new basic blocks would be inserted at the
prior fallthrough point, changing the fallthrough destination.
The predecessor or successor lists were not updated, causing the
BranchFolding pass at -O1 and above the rearrange basic blocks, causing
an infinite loop. Not to mention the unconditional fallthrough to the
true block is incorrect in of itself.
This patch modifies the Select8/16 expansion so that, if inserting true
and false basic blocks at a fallthrough point, the implicit branch is
preserved by means of an explicit, unconditional branch to the previous
fallthrough destination.
Thanks to Carl Peto for reporting this bug.
This fixes avr-rust bug https://github.com/avr-rust/rust/issues/123.
Dylan McKay [Mon, 21 Jan 2019 02:44:09 +0000 (02:44 +0000)]
[AVR] Insert unconditional branch when inserting MBBs between blocks with fallthrough
This updates the AVR Select8/Select16 expansion code so that, when
inserting the two basic blocks for true and false conditions, any
existing fallthrough on the previous block is preserved.
Prior to this patch, if the block before the Select pseudo fell through
to the subsequent block, two new basic blocks would be inserted at the
prior fallthrough point, changing the fallthrough destination.
The predecessor or successor lists were not updated, causing the
BranchFolding pass at -O1 and above the rearrange basic blocks, causing
an infinite loop. Not to mention the unconditional fallthrough to the
true block is incorrect in of itself.
This patch modifies the Select8/16 expansion so that, if inserting true
and false basic blocks at a fallthrough point, the implicit branch is
preserved by means of an explicit, unconditional branch to the previous
fallthrough destination.
Thanks to Carl Peto for reporting this bug.
This fixes avr-rust bug https://github.com/avr-rust/rust/issues/123.
Serge Guelton [Sun, 20 Jan 2019 21:19:56 +0000 (21:19 +0000)]
Replace llvm::isPodLike<...> by llvm::is_trivially_copyable<...>
As noted in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36651, the specialization for
isPodLike<std::pair<...>> did not match the expectation of
std::is_trivially_copyable which makes the memcpy optimization invalid.
This patch renames the llvm::isPodLike trait into llvm::is_trivially_copyable.
Unfortunately std::is_trivially_copyable is not portable across compiler / STL
versions. So a portable version is provided too.
Note that the following specialization were invalid:
std::pair<T0, T1>
llvm::Optional<T>
Tests have been added to assert that former specialization are respected by the
standard usage of llvm::is_trivially_copyable, and that when a decent version
of std::is_trivially_copyable is available, llvm::is_trivially_copyable is
compared to std::is_trivially_copyable.
As of this patch, llvm::Optional is no longer considered trivially copyable,
even if T is. This is to be fixed in a later patch, as it has impact on a
long-running bug (see r347004)
Note that GCC warns about this UB, but this got silented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D50296.