This change is part of this proposal:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-all-the-math-intrinsics/78294
- Return true for atan2 from isTriviallyVectorizable
- Add atan2 to VecFuncs.def for massv and accelerate libraries.
- Add atan2 to hasOptimizedCodeGen
- Add atan2 support in llvm/lib/Analysis/ValueTracking.cpp
llvm::getIntrinsicForCallSite and update vectorization tests
- Add atan2 name check to isLoweredToCall in
llvm/include/llvm/Analysis/TargetTransformInfoImpl.h
- Note: there's no test coverage for these names in isLoweredToCall, except that Transforms/TailCallElim/inf-recursion.ll is impacted by the "fabs" case
Thanks to @jroelofs for the atan2 accelerate veclib and associated test
additions, plus the hasOptimizedCodeGen addition.
Part of: Implement the atan2 HLSL Function #70096.
Utilize common API in PPCTargetParser
(https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/97541) to set default CPU
with same interfaces for LLC.
This will update AIX default CPU to pwr7 and LoP powerppc64 default CPU
to ppc64.
Similar to VFxUF, also add a VF VPValue to VPlan and use it to get the
runtime VF in VPWidenIntOrFpInductionRecipe. Code for VF is only
generated if there are users of VF, to avoid unnecessary test changes.
PR: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/95305
This is a follow up to 924907bc6, and is mostly motivated by consistency
but does include one additional optimization. In general, we prefer 0.0
over -0.0 as the identity value for an fadd. We use that value in
several places, but don't in others. So, let's be consistent and use the
same identity (when nsz allows) everywhere.
This creates a bunch of test churn, but due to 924907bc6, most of that
churn doesn't actually indicate a change in codegen. The exception is
that this change enables the use of 0.0 for nsz, but *not* reasoc, fadd
reductions. Or said differently, it allows the neutral value of an
ordered fadd reduction to be 0.0.
This patch moves branch condition creation to enter the scalar epilogue
loop to VPlan. Modeling the branch in the middle block also requires
modeling the successor blocks. This is done using the recently
introduced VPIRBasicBlock.
Note that the middle.block is still created as part of the skeleton and
then patched in during VPlan execution. Unfortunately the skeleton needs
to create the middle.block early on, as it is also used for induction
resume value creation and is also needed to properly update the
dominator tree during skeleton creation.
After this patch lands, I plan to move induction resume value and phi
node creation in the scalar preheader to VPlan. Once that is done, we
should be able to create the middle.block in VPlan directly.
This is a re-worked version based on the earlier
https://reviews.llvm.org/D150398 and the main change is the use of
VPIRBasicBlock.
Depends on https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/92525
PR: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/92651
Use VPIRBasicBlock to wrap the middle block and implement patching up
branches in predecessors in VPIRBasicBlock::execute. The IR middle block
is only created after skeleton creation. Initially a regular
VPBasicBlock is created, which will later be replaced by a
VPIRBasicBlock once the middle IR basic block has been created.
Note that this slightly changes the order of instructions created in the
middle block; code generated by recipe execution in the middle block
will now be inserted before the terminator (and in between the compare
to used by the terminator). The original order will be restored in
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/92651.
PR: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/95816
This patch introduces generating VP intrinsics in the Loop Vectorizer.
Currently the Loop Vectorizer supports vector predication in a very
limited capacity via tail-folding and masked load/store/gather/scatter
intrinsics. However, this does not let architectures with active vector
length predication support take advantage of their capabilities.
Architectures with general masked predication support also can only take
advantage of predication on memory operations. By having a way for the
Loop Vectorizer to generate Vector Predication intrinsics, which (will)
provide a target-independent way to model predicated vector
instructions. These architectures can make better use of their
predication capabilities.
Our first approach (implemented in this patch) builds on top of the
existing tail-folding mechanism in the LV (just adds a new tail-folding
mode using EVL), but instead of generating masked intrinsics for memory
operations it generates VP intrinsics for loads/stores instructions. The
patch adds a new VPlanTransforms to replace the wide header predicate
compare with EVL and updates codegen for load/stores to use VP
store/load with EVL.
Other important part of this approach is how the Explicit Vector Length
is computed. (VP intrinsics define this vector length parameter as
Explicit Vector Length (EVL)). We use an experimental intrinsic
`get_vector_length`, that can be lowered to architecture specific
instruction(s) to compute EVL.
Also, added a new recipe to emit instructions for computing EVL. Using
VPlan in this way will eventually help build and compare VPlans
corresponding to different strategies and alternatives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99750
Recent set of changes (PR #67725) in loop interleaving algorithm caused removal of the loop trip count threshold for allowing interleaving. Therefore configuration option interleave-small-loop-scalar-reduction is no longer needed.
[LV] Change loops' interleave count computation
A set of microbenchmarks in llvm-test-suite (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-test-suite/pull/56), when tested on a AArch64 platform, demonstrates that loop interleaving is beneficial when the vector loop runs at least twice or when the epilogue loop trip count (TC) is minimal. Therefore, we choose interleaving count (IC) between TC/VF & TC/2*VF (VF = vectorization factor), such that remainder TC for the epilogue loop is minimum while the IC is maximum in case the remainder TC is same for both.
The initial tests for this change were submitted in PRs:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/70272 and https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/74689.
Move vector pointer generation to a separate VPVectorPointerRecipe.
This untangles address computation from the memory recipes future
and is also needed to enable explicit unrolling in VPlan.
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/72164
Future patches will remove some redundant instructions for runtime
checks, which brings this test case slightly below the default limit of
128. Force a lower limit to preserve the original spirit of the test
(checking that no interleaving happens if the number of checks is
above he threshold)
There are many tests that specify a target triple/CPU flags but no
DataLayout which can lead to IR being generated that has unusual
behaviour. This commit attempts to use the default DataLayout based
on the relevant flags if there is no explicit override on the command
line or in the IR file.
One thing that is not currently possible to differentiate from a missing
datalayout `target datalayout = ""` in the IR file since the current
APIs don't allow detecting this case. If it is considered useful to
support this case (instead of passing "-data-layout=" on the command
line), I can change IR parsers to track whether they have seen such a
directive and change the callback type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141060
Currently the mappings from TLI are used to generate the list of
available "scalar to vector" mappings attached to scalar calls as
"vector-function-abi-variant" LLVM IR attribute. Function names from TLI
are wrapped in mangled name following the pattern:
_ZGV<isa><mask><vlen><parameters>_<scalar_name>[(<vector_redirection>)]
The problem is the mangled name uses _LLVM_ as the ISA name which
prevents the compiler to compute vectorization factor for scalable
vectors as it cannot make any decision based on the _LLVM_ ISA. If we
use "s" as the ISA name, the compiler can make decisions based on VFABI
specification where SVE spacific rules are described.
This patch is only a refactoring stage where there is no change to the
compiler's behaviour.
Try to avoid some unprofitable predication on PPC. Recognize in the cost model that computing on i1 values will require extra mask or compare operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D155876
This is a follow-up to b71edfaa4ec3c998aadb35255ce2f60bba2940b0
since I forgot the lit.local.cfg files in that one.
Reformatting is done with `black`.
If you end up having problems merging this commit because you
have made changes to a python file, the best way to handle that
is to run git checkout --ours <yourfile> and then reformat it
with black.
If you run into any problems, post to discourse about it and
we will try to help.
RFC Thread below:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-document-and-standardize-python-code-style
Reviewed By: barannikov88, kwk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150762
Previously, while calculating register usage due to invariants, it was assumed that invariant would always be part of widening
instructions. This resulted in calculating vector register types for vectors which cant be legalized(check the newly added test for more details).
An invariant might not always need a vector register. For e.g., invariant might just be used for iteration check.
This patch checks if the invariant is part of any widening instruction and considers register usage accordingly. Fixes issue 60493
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143422
Previously, while calculating register usage due to invariants, it was assumed that invariant would always be part of widening
instructions. This resulted in calculating vector register types for vectors which cant be legalized(check the newly added test for more details).
An invariant might not always need a vector register. For e.g., invariant might just be used for iteration check.
This patch checks if the invariant is part of any widening instruction and considers register usage accordingly. Fixes issue 60493
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143422
IR is now always parsed in opaque pointer mode, unless
-opaque-pointers=0 is explicitly given. There is no automatic
detection of typed pointers anymore.
The -opaque-pointers=0 option is added to any remaining IR tests
that haven't been migrated yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141912
This patch adds metadata to disable runtime unrolling to the vectorized
loop. If runtime unrolling/interleaving is considered profitable, LV
will interleave the loop directly. There should be no need to perform
runtime unrolling at a later stage.
Note that we already add metadata to disable runtime unrolling to the
scalar loop after vectorization.
The additional unrolling unnecessarily increases code size and compile
time. In addition to that we have several bug reports of unncessary
runtime unrolling for vectorized loops, e.g. PR40961
Compile-time improvements:
NewPM-O3: -1.04%
NewPM-ReleaseThinLTO: -0.59%
NewPM-ReleaseLTO-g: -0.97%
https://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=ce1be13a868d0f8afa367975558c1a6175cce33a&to=78bc2e67f22e9e10e61cdb6cdac4bb857d95eb1b&stat=instructions:uFixes#40306.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115261
Check lines for some of these tests were regenerated. The difference
is that with opaque pointers SCEVExpander always emits i8 GEPs,
making the address calculation explicit. This is a known problem
that will be solved long term by making all address calculations
explicit.
We call tail-call-elim near the beginning of the pipeline,
but that is too early to annotate calls that get added later.
In the motivating case from issue #47852, the missing 'tail'
on memset leads to sub-optimal codegen.
I experimented with removing the early instance of
tail-call-elim instead of just adding another pass, but that
appears to be slightly worse for compile-time:
+0.15% vs. +0.08% time.
"tailcall" shows adding the pass; "tailcall2" shows moving
the pass to later, then adding the original early pass back
(so 1596886802 is functionally equivalent to 180b0439dc ):
https://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/index.php?config=NewPM-O3&stat=instructions&remote=rotateright
Note that there was an effort to split the tail call functionality
into 2 passes - that could help reduce compile-time if we find
that this change costs more in compile-time than expected based
on the preliminary testing:
D60031
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130374
At the moment LV runs LoopSimplify and reconstructs LCSSA form after
generating the main vector loop and before generating the epilogue
vector loop.
In practice, this adds a new exit block for the scalar loop because the
middle block now also branches to the original exit block of the scalar
loop. It also requires adding a new LCSSA phi in the newly created exit
block.
This complicates things when modeling exit values in VPlan, because we
would need to update the VPlan for the epilogue loop to update the newly
created LCSSA phi node.
But none of that should be necessary, as all analysis requiring
loop-simplify form is already done at this point and LCSSA form of the
original loop is not broken.
Reviewed By: bmahjour
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125810
The runtime check threshold should also restrict interleave count.
Otherwise, too many runtime checks will be generated for some cases.
Reviewed By: fhahn, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122126
This reverts the revert commit ff93260bf6bddfbad1fa65c4d5184988885b900f.
The underlying issue causing the PPC bot failures has been fixed in
cbaac1473403 and a corresponding test case has been added in
ad2cad1c521c.
Original message:
This patch adds a new VPScalarIVStepsRecipe to handle building scalar
steps.
In the first patch, it only handles the case where there is no vector
induction variable needed.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115953
This patch adds a new VPScalarIVStepsRecipe to handle building scalar
steps.
In the first patch, it only handles the case where there is no vector
induction variable needed.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115953
After d4a8fc3a87a1 LV stopped adding metadata to disable runtime
unrolling to the vectorized epilogue loop. This was missed because
278aa65cc495 removed the relevant test coverage.
This patch fixes that by adding the relevant metadata after
vector loop generation.