This commit improves the diagnostics for vector (elementwise) builtins
in a couple of ways.
It primarily provides more precise type-checking diagnostics for
builtins with specific type requirements. Previously many builtins were
receiving a catch-all diagnostic suggesting types which aren't valid.
It also makes consistent the type-checking behaviour between various
binary and ternary builtins. The binary builtins would check for
mismatched argument types before specific type requirements, whereas
ternary builtins would perform the checks in the reverse order. The
binary builtins now behave as the ternary ones do.
Similar to the existing bitwise reduction builtins, this lowers to a llvm.vector.reduce.mul intrinsic call.
For other reductions, we've tried to share builtins for float/integer vectors, but the fmul reduction intrinsic also take a starting value argument and can either do unordered or serialized, but not reduction-trees as specified for the builtins. However we address fmul support this shouldn't affect the integer case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117829
Similar to the existing bitwise reduction builtins, this lowers to a llvm.vector.reduce.add intrinsic call.
For other reductions, we've tried to share builtins for float/integer vectors, but the fadd reduction intrinsics also take a starting value argument and can either do unordered or serialized, but not reduction-trees as specified for the builtins. However we address fadd support this shouldn't affect the integer case.
(Split off from D117829)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124741
This patch implements two builtins specified in D111529.
The last __builtin_reduce_add will be seperated into another one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116736
This patch implements __builtin_reduce_xor as specified in D111529.
Reviewed By: fhahn, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115231
This patch implements __builtin_reduce_max and __builtin_reduce_min as
specified in D111529.
The order of operations does not matter for min or max reductions and
they can be directly lowered to the corresponding
llvm.vector.reduce.{fmin,fmax,umin,umax,smin,smax} intrinsic calls.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112001