4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pavel Kosov
37fa99eda0 [SchedModels][CortexA55] Add ASIMD integer instructions
Depends on D114642

Original review https://reviews.llvm.org/D112201

OS Laboratory. Huawei Russian Research Institute. Saint-Petersburg

Reviewed By: dmgreen

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117003
2022-02-17 13:41:57 +03:00
David Green
adec922361 [AArch64] Make -mcpu=generic schedule for an in-order core
We would like to start pushing -mcpu=generic towards enabling the set of
features that improves performance for some CPUs, without hurting any
others. A blend of the performance options hopefully beneficial to all
CPUs. The largest part of that is enabling in-order scheduling using the
Cortex-A55 schedule model. This is similar to the Arm backend change
from eecb353d0e25ba which made -mcpu=generic perform in-order scheduling
using the cortex-a8 schedule model.

The idea is that in-order cpu's require the most help in instruction
scheduling, whereas out-of-order cpus can for the most part out-of-order
schedule around different codegen. Our benchmarking suggests that
hypothesis holds. When running on an in-order core this improved
performance by 3.8% geomean on a set of DSP workloads, 2% geomean on
some other embedded benchmark and between 1% and 1.8% on a set of
singlecore and multicore workloads, all running on a Cortex-A55 cluster.

On an out-of-order cpu the results are a lot more noisy but show flat
performance or an improvement. On the set of DSP and embedded
benchmarks, run on a Cortex-A78 there was a very noisy 1% speed
improvement. Using the most detailed results I could find, SPEC2006 runs
on a Neoverse N1 show a small increase in instruction count (+0.127%),
but a decrease in cycle counts (-0.155%, on average). The instruction
count is very low noise, the cycle count is more noisy with a 0.15%
decrease not being significant. SPEC2k17 shows a small decrease (-0.2%)
in instruction count leading to a -0.296% decrease in cycle count. These
results are within noise margins but tend to show a small improvement in
general.

When specifying an Apple target, clang will set "-target-cpu apple-a7"
on the command line, so should not be affected by this change when
running from clang. This also doesn't enable more runtime unrolling like
-mcpu=cortex-a55 does, only changing the schedule used.

A lot of existing tests have updated. This is a summary of the important
differences:
 - Most changes are the same instructions in a different order.
 - Sometimes this leads to very minor inefficiencies, such as requiring
   an extra mov to move variables into r0/v0 for the return value of a test
   function.
 - misched-fusion.ll was no longer fusing the pairs of instructions it
   should, as per D110561. I've changed the schedule used in the test
   for now.
 - neon-mla-mls.ll now uses "mul; sub" as opposed to "neg; mla" due to
   the different latencies. This seems fine to me.
 - Some SVE tests do not always remove movprfx where they did before due
   to different register allocation giving different destructive forms.
 - The tests argument-blocks-array-of-struct.ll and arm64-windows-calls.ll
   produce two LDR where they previously produced an LDP due to
   store-pair-suppress kicking in.
 - arm64-ldp.ll and arm64-neon-copy.ll are missing pre/postinc on LPD.
 - Some tests such as arm64-neon-mul-div.ll and
   ragreedy-local-interval-cost.ll have more, less or just different
   spilling.
 - In aarch64_generated_funcs.ll.generated.expected one part of the
   function is no longer outlined. Interestingly if I switch this to use
   any other scheduled even less is outlined.

Some of these are expected to happen, such as differences in outlining
or register spilling. There will be places where these result in worse
codegen, places where they are better, with the SPEC instruction counts
suggesting it is not a decrease overall, on average.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110830
2021-10-09 15:58:31 +01:00
Sanne Wouda
f2e7de81c6 [AArch64] Fix over-eager fusing of NEON SIMD MUL/ADD
Summary:
The ISel pattern for SIMD MLA is a bit too eager: it replaces the ADD with an
MLA even when the MUL cannot be eliminated, e.g. when it has another use.  An
MLA is usually has a higher latency than an ADD (and there are fewer pipes
available that can execute it), so trading an MLA for an ADD is not great.

ISel is not taking the number of uses of the MUL result into account, nor any
other factors such as the length of the critical path or other resource pressure.

The MachineCombiner is able to make these judgments so this patch ports the ISel
pattern for MUL/ADD fusing to the MachineCombiner.

Similarly for MUL/SUB -> MLS, as well as the indexed variants.

The change has no impact on SPEC CPU© intrate nor fprate.

Reviewers: dmgreen, SjoerdMeijer, fhahn, Gerolf

Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70673
2019-12-03 15:48:37 +00:00
Sanne Wouda
970d9719ea Precommit tests for D70673 2019-12-03 14:56:34 +00:00