Same implementation as G_SEXT_INREG.
Add a testcase to combine-sext-inreg for a concrete example, and a testcase
to KnownBitsTest.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96897
This adds a G_ASSERT_SEXT opcode, similar to G_ASSERT_ZEXT. This instruction
signifies that an operation was already sign extended from a smaller type.
This is useful for functions with sign-extended parameters.
E.g.
```
define void @foo(i16 signext %x) {
...
}
```
This adds verifier, regbankselect, and instruction selection support for
G_ASSERT_SEXT equivalent to G_ASSERT_ZEXT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96890
The API is a bit awkward since you need to index into an array in the
passed struct. I guess an alternative would be to pass all of the
individual fields.
The implementation for vectors is broken and doesn't seem to be used by
anything. Explicitly remove support for them, they can be added again
later when they're properly implemented.
Reviewed By: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95699
This combine tries to do inter-block hoisting of extends of G_PHIs, into the
originating blocks of the phi's incoming value. The idea is to expose further
optimization opportunities that are normally obscured by the PHI.
Some basic heuristics, and a target hook for AArch64 is added, to allow tuning.
E.g. if the extend is used by a G_PTR_ADD, it doesn't perform this combine
since it may be folded into the addressing mode during selection.
There are very minor code size improvements on AArch64 -Os, but the real benefit
is that it unlocks optimizations like AArch64 conditional compares on some
benchmarks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95703
Implements same logis as in SelectionDAG.
G_FMINNUM_IEEE and G_FMAXNUM_IEEE are never SNaN by definition and
never NaN when one operand is known non-NaN and other known non-SNaN.
G_FMINNUM and G_FMAXNUM are never NaN/SNaN when one of the operands
is known non-NaN/SNaN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91716
The builder was using the extend user as the insertion point, which meant that
we were incorrectly "moving" the load from its original position, and therefore
could violate memory operation ordering.
This was taking the calling convention from the parent function,
instead of the callee. Avoids regressions in a future patch when the
caller and callee have different type breakdowns.
For some reason AArch64's lowerFormalArguments seems to intentionally
ignore the parent isVarArg.
On AArch64 (which seems to be the only target that supports it), this
attribute allows codegen to avoid saving/restoring the value in x0
across a call.
Gives a 0.1% geomean -Os code size improvement on CTMark.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96099
These two cases have identical implementations other than an
unreachable part of `G_ADD` that checks if the scalar we're narrowing
is a vector. Combining them to avoid unnecessary divergence.
If the G_BR + G_BRCOND in this combine use the same MBB, then it will infinite
loop. Don't allow that to happen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95895
When replacing the dst reg with the src reg, we need to make sure that we
propagate the dst reg's register class through to the src.
Otherwise, we aren't meeting the requirements for G_ASSERT_ZEXT, and so the
verifier will fail.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95708
I think every target will want to remove these in the same way. Rather than
making them all implement the same code, let's just put this in
InstructionSelect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95652
Remove the call to setFlags in favour of creating the instruction with
the correct flags in the first place, so we don't have to explicitly
notify the observer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95681
This adds generic regbankselect support for G_ASSERT_ZEXT.
It inherits whatever register bank the source was given, always, on all targets.
I think that at the point where we run into these, the source register bank
should be decided.
This also adds some AArch64-specific code which makes sure we can handle
G_ASSERT_ZEXT when deciding on register banks for G_STORE, G_PHI, ... etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95649
It's the same as the ZEXT/TRUNC case, except SrcBitWidth is given by the
immediate operand.
Update KnownBitsTest.cpp and a MIR test for a concrete example.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95566
Treat hint instructions like G_ASSERT_ZEXT like COPY instructions in helpers
which walk through copies.
This ensures that instructions like G_ASSERT_ZEXT won't impact any optimizations
that rely on these helpers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95577
These are widened to a wider UADDE/USUBE, with the overflow value
unused, and with the same synthesis of a new overflow value as for the
O operations.
Reviewed By: paquette
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95326
This adds a generic opcode which communicates that a type has already been
zero-extended from a narrower type.
This is intended to be similar to AssertZext in SelectionDAG.
For example,
```
%x_was_extended:_(s64) = G_ASSERT_ZEXT %x, 16
```
Signifies that the top 48 bits of %x are known to be 0.
This is useful in cases like this:
```
define i1 @zeroext_param(i8 zeroext %x) {
%cmp = icmp ult i8 %x, -20
ret i1 %cmp
}
```
In AArch64, `%x` must use a 32-bit register, which is then truncated to a 8-bit
value.
If we know that `%x` is already zero-ed out in the relevant high bits, we can
avoid the truncate.
Currently, in GISel, this looks like this:
```
_zeroext_param:
and w8, w0, #0xff ; We don't actually need this!
cmp w8, #236
cset w0, lo
ret
```
While SDAG does not produce the truncation, since it knows that it's
unnecessary:
```
_zeroext_param:
cmp w0, #236
cset w0, lo
ret
```
This patch
- Adds G_ASSERT_ZEXT
- Adds MIRBuilder support for it
- Adds MachineVerifier support for it
- Documents it
It also puts G_ASSERT_ZEXT into its own class of "hint instruction." (There
should be a G_ASSERT_SEXT in the future, maybe a G_ASSERT_ALIGN as well.)
This allows us to skip over hints in the legalizer etc. These can then later
be selected like COPY instructions or removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95564
Just use the existing `Known.sextInReg` implementation.
- Update KnownBitsTest.cpp.
- Update combine-redundant-and.mir for a more concrete example.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95484
The current algorithm just tries to localize defs as far as they can go, and in
the case of G_PHI operands, it clones the def into the predecessor block for
each incoming edge. When multiple edges have the same register value, this can
cause unnecessary code bloat, and inhibit later optimizations.
This change checks if a given phi operand is unique in the phi, if not the
def of that register is not localized to the predecessor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95406
Implement widening for G_SADDO and G_SSUBO.
Add legalize-add/sub tests for narrow overflowing add/sub on AArch64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95034
The widenScalar implementation for signed and unsigned overflowing
operations were very similar: both are checked by truncating the result
and then re-sign/zero-extending it and checking that it matches the
computed operation.
Using a truncate + zero-extend for the unsigned case instead of manually
producing the AND instruction like before leads to an extra copy
instruction during legalization, but this should be harmless.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95035
Implement widening for G_SADDO and G_SSUBO. Previously it was only
implemented for G_UADDO and G_USUBO. Also add legalize-add/sub tests for
narrow overflowing add/sub on AArch64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95034
Make this look more like the DAG handling and move to common code.
I also noticed AArch64 seems to not be properly adding the
physreg:virtreg mapping to the function live ins.
If constants are hidden behind G_ANYEXT we can treat them same way as G_SEXT.
For that purpose we extend getConstantVRegValWithLookThrough with option
to handle G_ANYEXT same way as G_SEXT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92219
When constraining an operand register using constrainOperandRegClass(),
the function may emit a COPY in case the provided register class does
not match the current operand register class. However, the operand
itself is not updated to make use of the COPY, thereby resulting in
incorrect code. This patch fixes that bug by updating the machine
operand accordingly.
Reviewed By: dsanders
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91244
This is a restricted version of the combine in `DAGCombiner::MatchLoadCombine`.
(See D27861)
This tries to recognize patterns like below (assuming a little-endian target):
```
s8* x = ...
s32 val = a[0] | (a[1] << 8) | (a[2] << 16) | (a[3] << 24)
->
s32 val = *((i32)a)
s8* x = ...
s32 val = a[3] | (a[2] << 8) | (a[1] << 16) | (a[0] << 24)
->
s32 val = BSWAP(*((s32)a))
```
(This patch also handles the big-endian target case as well, in which the first
example above has a BSWAP, and the second example above does not.)
To recognize the pattern, this searches from the last G_OR in the expression
tree.
E.g.
```
Reg Reg
\ /
OR_1 Reg
\ /
OR_2
\ Reg
.. /
Root
```
Each non-OR register in the tree is put in a list. Each register in the list is
then checked to see if it's an appropriate load + shift logic.
If every register is a load + potentially a shift, the combine checks if those
loads + shifts, when OR'd together, are equivalent to a wide load (possibly with
a BSWAP.)
To simplify things, this patch
(1) Only handles G_ZEXTLOADs (which appear to be the common case)
(2) Only works in a single MachineBasicBlock
(3) Only handles G_SHL as the bit twiddling to stick the small load into a
specific location
An IR example of this is here: https://godbolt.org/z/4sP9Pj (lifted from
test/CodeGen/AArch64/load-combine.ll)
At -Os on AArch64, this is a 0.5% code size improvement for CTMark/sqlite3,
and a 0.4% improvement for CTMark/7zip-benchmark.
Also fix a bug in `isPredecessor` which caused it to fail whenever `DefMI` was
the first instruction in the block.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94350
This fixes double printing of insertion debug messages in the
legalizer.
Try to cleanup usage of observers. Currently the use of observers is
pretty hard to follow and it's not clear what is responsible for
them. Observers are referenced in 3 places:
1. In the MachineFunction
2. In the MachineIRBuilder
3. In the LegalizerHelper
The observers in the MachineFunction and MachineIRBuilder are both
called only on insertions, and are redundant with each other. The
source of the double printing was the same observer was added to both
the MachineFunction, and the MachineIRBuilder. One of these references
needs to be removed. Arguably observers in general should be fully
removed from one or the other, but it may be useful to have a local
observer in the MachineIRBuilder that is not added to the function's
observers. Alternatively, the wrapper observer could manage a local
observer in one place.
The LegalizerHelper only ever calls the observer on changing/changed
instructions, and never insertions. Logically these are two different
types of observers, for changes and for insertions.
Additionally, some places used the GISelObserverWrapper when they only
needed a single observer they could use directly.
Setting the observer in the LegalizerHelper constructor is not
flexible enough if the LegalizerHelper is constructed anywhere outside
the one used by the legalizer. AMDGPU calls the LegalizerHelper in
RegBankSelect, and needs to use a local observer to apply the regbank
to newly created instructions. Currently it accomplishes this by
constructing a local MachineIRBuilder. I'm trying to move the
MachineIRBuilder to be owned/maintained by the RegBankSelect pass
itself, but the locally constructed LegalizerHelper would reset the
observer.
Mips also has a special case use of the LegalizationArtifactCombiner
in applyMappingImpl; I think we do need to run the artifact combiner
during RegBankSelect, but in a more consistent way outside of
applyMappingImpl.