Scalarization for scalable vectors is not (yet) supported, so the
LV discards a VF when scalarization is chosen as the widening
decision. It should therefore not assert that the VF is not scalable
when it computes the decision to scalarize.
The code can get here when both the interleave-cost, gather/scatter cost
and scalarization-cost are all illegal. This may e.g. happen for SVE
when the VF=1, to avoid generating `<vscale x 1 x eltty>` types that
the code-generator cannot yet handle.
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106656
This fixes an issue that was found in D105199, where a GEP instruction
is used both as the address of a store, as well as the value of a store.
For the former, the value is scalar after vectorization, but the latter
(as value) requires widening.
Other code in that function seems to prevent similar cases from happening,
but it seems this case was missed.
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106164
This reverts the revert commit b1777b04dc4b1a9fee0e7effa7e177892ab32ef0.
The patch originally got reverted due to a crash:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1232798#c2
The underlying issue was that we were not using the stored values from
the modified memory recipes, but the out-of-date values directly from
the IR (accessed via the VPlan). This should be fixed in d995d6376. A
reduced version of the reproducer has been added in 93664503be6b.
Add folds to instcombine to support the removal of select instruction when the masked_load is guaranteed to zero the same lanes, i.e. select(mask, mload(,,mask,0), 0) -> mload(,,mask,0).
Patch originally authored by @paulwalker-arm
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106376
I have added a new FastMathFlags parameter to getArithmeticReductionCost
to indicate what type of reduction we are performing:
1. Tree-wise. This is the typical fast-math reduction that involves
continually splitting a vector up into halves and adding each
half together until we get a scalar result. This is the default
behaviour for integers, whereas for floating point we only do this
if reassociation is allowed.
2. Ordered. This now allows us to estimate the cost of performing
a strict vector reduction by treating it as a series of scalar
operations in lane order. This is the case when FP reassociation
is not permitted. For scalable vectors this is more difficult
because at compile time we do not know how many lanes there are,
and so we use the worst case maximum vscale value.
I have also fixed getTypeBasedIntrinsicInstrCost to pass in the
FastMathFlags, which meant fixing up some X86 tests where we always
assumed the vector.reduce.fadd/mul intrinsics were 'fast'.
New tests have been added here:
Analysis/CostModel/AArch64/reduce-fadd.ll
Analysis/CostModel/AArch64/sve-intrinsics.ll
Transforms/LoopVectorize/AArch64/strict-fadd-cost.ll
Transforms/LoopVectorize/AArch64/sve-strict-fadd-cost.ll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105432
Makes clang crash: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105008#2903350
This reverts commit d2a73fb44ea0b8c981e4b923f811f18793fc4770.
Also revert a minor formatting follow-up:
This reverts commit 82834a673246f27a541ffcc57e0eb65b008102ef.
This patch avoids computing discounts for predicated instructions when the
VF is scalable.
There is no support for vectorization of loops with division because the
vectorizer cannot guarantee that zero divisions will not happen.
This loop now does not use VF scalable
```
for (long long i = 0; i < n; i++)
if (cond[i])
a[i] /= b[i];
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101916
As noticed on D106352, after we've folded "(select C, (gep Ptr, Idx), Ptr) -> (gep Ptr, (select C, Idx, 0))" if the inner Ptr was also a (now one use) gep we could then merge the geps, using the sum of the indices instead.
I've limited this to basic 2-op geps - a more general case further down InstCombinerImpl.visitGetElementPtrInst doesn't have the one-use limitation but only creates the add if it can be created via SimplifyAddInst.
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/f8pLfD (Thanks Roman!)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106450
If a reduction Phi has a single user which `AND`s the Phi with a type mask,
`lookThroughAnd` will return the user of the Phi and the narrower type represented
by the mask. Currently this is only used for arithmetic reductions, whereas loops
containing logical reductions will create a reduction intrinsic using the widened
type, for example:
for.body:
%phi = phi i32 [ %and, %for.body ], [ 255, %entry ]
%mask = and i32 %phi, 255
%gep = getelementptr inbounds i8, i8* %ptr, i32 %iv
%load = load i8, i8* %gep
%ext = zext i8 %load to i32
%and = and i32 %mask, %ext
...
^ this will generate an and reduction intrinsic such as the following:
call i32 @llvm.vector.reduce.and.v8i32(<8 x i32>...)
The same example for an add instruction would create an intrinsic of type i8:
call i8 @llvm.vector.reduce.add.v8i8(<8 x i8>...)
This patch changes AddReductionVar to call lookThroughAnd for other integer
reductions, allowing loops similar to the example above with reductions such
as and, or & xor to vectorize.
Reviewed By: david-arm, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105632
This patch adds a VPFirstOrderRecurrencePHIRecipe, to further untangle
VPWidenPHIRecipe into distinct recipes for distinct use cases/lowering.
See D104989 for a new recipe for reduction phis.
This patch also introduces a new `FirstOrderRecurrenceSplice`
VPInstruction opcode, which is used to make the forming of the vector
recurrence value explicit in VPlan. This more accurately models def-uses
in VPlan and also simplifies code-generation. Now, the vector recurrence
values are created at the right place during VPlan-codegeneration,
rather than during post-VPlan fixups.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105008
This fixes the lower and upper bound calculation of a
RuntimeCheckingPtrGroup when it has more than one loop
invariant pointers. Resolves PR50686.
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104148
This patch returns an Invalid cost from getInstructionCost() for alloca
instructions if the VF is scalable, as otherwise loops which contain
these instructions will crash when attempting to scalarize the alloca.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105824
The original patch was:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D105806
There were some issues with undeterministic behaviour of the sorting
function, which led to scalable-call.ll passing and/or failing. This
patch fixes the issue by numbering all instructions in the array first,
and using that number as the order, which should provide a consistent
ordering.
This reverts commit a607f64118240f70bf1b14ec121b65f49d63800d.
This change enables vectorization of multiple exit loops when the exit count is statically computable. That requirement - shared with the rest of LV - in turn requires each exit to be analyzeable and to dominate the latch.
The majority of work to support this was done in a set of previous patches. In particular,, 72314466 avoids having multiple edges from the middle block to the exits, and 4b33b2387 which added support for non-latch single exit and multiple exits with a single exiting block. As a result, this change is basically just removing a bailout and adjusting some tests now that the prerequisite work is done and has stuck in tree for a bit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105817
This reverts commit efaf3099c8cec1954831ee28a2f75a72096f50eb.
This reverts commit dc7bdc1e7121693df112f2fdb11cc6b88580ba4b.
Reverting patches due to buildbot failures.
The sort function for emitting an OptRemark was not deterministic,
which caused scalable-call.ll to fail on some buildbots. This patch
fixes that.
This patch also fixes an issue where `Instruction::comesBefore()`
is called when two Instructions are in different basic blocks,
which would otherwise cause an assertion failure.
This patch emits remarks for instructions that have invalid costs for
a given set of vectorization factors. Some example output:
t.c:4:19: remark: Instruction with invalid costs prevented vectorization at VF=(vscale x 1): load
dst[i] = sinf(src[i]);
^
t.c:4:14: remark: Instruction with invalid costs prevented vectorization at VF=(vscale x 1, vscale x 2, vscale x 4): call to llvm.sin.f32
dst[i] = sinf(src[i]);
^
t.c:4:12: remark: Instruction with invalid costs prevented vectorization at VF=(vscale x 1): store
dst[i] = sinf(src[i]);
^
Reviewed By: fhahn, kmclaughlin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105806
At the moment, <vscale x 1 x eltty> are not yet fully handled by the
code-generator, so to avoid vectorizing loops with that VF, we mark the
cost for these types as invalid.
The reason for not adding a new "TTI::getMinimumScalableVF" is because
the type is supposed to be a type that can be legalized. It partially is,
although the support for these types need some more work.
Reviewed By: paulwalker-arm, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103882
Update (mainly) vXf32/vXf64 -> vXi8/vXi16 fptosi/fptoui costs based on the worst case costs from the script in D103695.
Move to using legalized types wherever possible, which allows us to prune the cost tables.
Revived D101297 in its original form + added some changes in X86
legalization cehcking for masked gathers.
This solution is the most stable and the most correct one. We have to
check the legality before trying to build the masked gather in SLP.
Without this check we have incorrect cost (for SLP) in case if the masked gather
is not legal/slower than the gather. And we're missing some
vectorization opportunities.
This can be fixed in the cost model, but in this case we need to add
special checks for the cost of GEPs for ScatterVectorize node, add
special check for small trees, etc., i.e. there are a lot of corner
cases here and there, which insrease code base and make it harder to
maintain the code.
> Can't we rely on cost model to deal with this? This can be profitable for futher vectorization, when we can start from such gather loads as seed.
The question from D101297. Actually, no, it can't. Actually, simple
gather may give us better result, especially after we started
vectorization of insertelements. Plus, like I said before, the cost for
non-legal masked gathers leads to missed vectorization opportunities.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105042
Resubmit after the following changes:
* Fix a latent bug related to unrolling with required epilogue (see e49d65f). I believe this is the cause of the prior PPC buildbot failure.
* Disable non-latch exits for epilogue vectorization to be safe (9ffa90d)
* Split out assert movement (600624a) to reduce churn if this gets reverted again.
Previous commit message (try 3)
Resubmit after fixing test/Transforms/LoopVectorize/ARM/mve-gather-scatter-tailpred.ll
Previous commit message...
This is a resubmit of 3e5ce4 (which was reverted by 7fe41ac). The original commit caused a PPC build bot failure we never really got to the bottom of. I can't reproduce the issue, and the bot owner was non-responsive. In the meantime, we stumbled across an issue which seems possibly related, and worked around a latent bug in 80e8025. My best guess is that the original patch exposed that latent issue at higher frequency, but it really is just a guess.
Original commit message follows...
If we know that the scalar epilogue is required to run, modify the CFG to end the middle block with an unconditional branch to scalar preheader. This is instead of a conditional branch to either the preheader or the exit block.
The motivation to do this is to support multiple exit blocks. Specifically, the current structure forces us to identify immediate dominators and *which* exit block to branch from in the middle terminator. For the multiple exit case - where we know require scalar will hold - these questions are ill formed.
This is the last change needed to support multiple exit loops, but since the diffs are already large enough, I'm going to land this, and then enable separately. You can think of this as being NFCIish prep work, but the changes are a bit too involved for me to feel comfortable tagging the review that way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94892
This reverts commit 706bbfb35bd31051e46ac77aab3e9b2dbc3abe78.
The committed version moves the definition of VPReductionPHIRecipe out
of an ifdef only intended for ::print helpers. This should resolve the
build failures that caused the revert
This patch adds a TTI function, isElementTypeLegalForScalableVector, to query
whether it is possible to vectorize a given element type. This is called by
isLegalToVectorizeInstTypesForScalable to reject scalable vectorization if
any of the instruction types in the loop are unsupported, e.g:
int foo(__int128_t* ptr, int N)
#pragma clang loop vectorize_width(4, scalable)
for (int i=0; i<N; ++i)
ptr[i] = ptr[i] + 42;
This example currently crashes if we attempt to vectorize since i128 is not a
supported type for scalable vectorization.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen, david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102253
This reverts commit 3fed6d443f802c43aade1b5b1b09f5e2f8b3edb1,
bbcbf21ae60c928e07dde6a1c468763b3209d1e6 and
6c3451cd76cbd0cd973d9c2b08b168dcd0bce3c2.
The changes causing build failures with certain configurations, e.g.
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/67/builds/3365/steps/6/logs/stdio
lib/libLLVMVectorize.a(LoopVectorize.cpp.o): In function `llvm::VPRecipeBuilder::tryToCreateWidenRecipe(llvm::Instruction*, llvm::ArrayRef<llvm::VPValue*>, llvm::VFRange&, std::unique_ptr<llvm::VPlan, std::default_delete<llvm::VPlan> >&) [clone .localalias.8]':
LoopVectorize.cpp:(.text._ZN4llvm15VPRecipeBuilder22tryToCreateWidenRecipeEPNS_11InstructionENS_8ArrayRefIPNS_7VPValueEEERNS_7VFRangeERSt10unique_ptrINS_5VPlanESt14default_deleteISA_EE+0x63b): undefined reference to `vtable for llvm::VPReductionPHIRecipe'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
This patch is a first step towards splitting up VPWidenPHIRecipe into
separate recipes for the 3 distinct cases they model:
1. reduction phis,
2. first-order recurrence phis,
3. pointer induction phis.
This allows untangling the code generation and allows us to reduce the
reliance on LoopVectorizationCostModel during VPlan code generation.
Discussed/suggested in D100102, D100113, D104197.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104989
Loads of <4 x i8> vectors were modeled as extremely expensive. And while we
don't have a load instruction that supports this, it isn't that expensive to
create a vector of i8 elements. The codegen for this was fixed/optimised in
D105110. This now tweaks the cost model and enables SLP vectorisation of my
motivating case loadi8.ll.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103629
Update v4i64 -> v4f32/v4f64 uitofp costs based on the worst case costs from the script in D103695.
Fixes a few regressions before we start adding AVX costs for legalized types.
If we unroll a loop in the vectorizer (without vectorizing), and the cost model requires a epilogue be generated for correctness, the code generation must actually do so.
The included test case on an unmodified opt will access memory one past the expected bound. As a result, this patch is fixing a latent miscompile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103700
This patch fixes a crash when the target instruction for sinking is
dead. In that case, no recipe is created and trying to get the recipe
for it results in a crash. To ensure all sink targets are alive, find &
use the first previous alive instruction.
Note that the case where the sink source is dead is already handled.
Found by
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=35320
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104603
Previously in setCostBasedWideningDecision if we encountered an
invariant store we just assumed that we could scalarize the store
and called getUniformMemOpCost to get the associated cost.
However, for scalable vectors this is not an option because it is
not currently possibly to scalarize the store. At the moment we
crash in VPReplicateRecipe::execute when trying to scalarize the
store.
Therefore, I have changed setCostBasedWideningDecision so that if
we are storing a scalable vector out to a uniform address and the
target supports scatter instructions, then we should use those
instead.
Tests have been added here:
Transforms/LoopVectorize/AArch64/sve-inv-store.ll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104624
Currently we will allow loops with a fixed width VF of 1 to vectorize
if the -enable-strict-reductions flag is set. However, the loop vectorizer
will not use ordered reductions if `VF.isScalar()` and the resulting
vectorized loop will be out of order.
This patch removes `VF.isVector()` when checking if ordered reductions
should be used. Also, instead of converting the FAdds to reductions if the
VF = 1, operands of the FAdds are changed such that the order is preserved.
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104533
Sinking scalar operands into predicated-triangle regions may allow
merging regions. This patch adds a VPlan-to-VPlan transform that tries
to merge predicate-triangle regions after sinking.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100260
This patch updates VPWidenPHI recipes for first-order recurrences to
also track the incoming value from the back-edge. Similar to D99294,
which did the same for reductions.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104197
This patch handles sinking a replicate region after another replicate
region. In that case, we can connect the sink region after the target
region. This properly handles the case for which an assertion has been
added in 337d7652823f.
Fixes https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=34842.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103514
A backedge-taken count doesn't refer to memory; returning a pointer type
is nonsense. So make sure we always return an integer.
The obvious way to do this would be to just convert the operands of the
icmp to integers, but that doesn't quite work out at the moment:
isLoopEntryGuardedByCond currently gets confused by ptrtoint operations.
So we perform the ptrtoint conversion late for lt/gt operations.
The test changes are mostly innocuous. The most interesting changes are
more complex SCEV expressions of the form "(-1 * (ptrtoint i8* %ptr to
i64)) + %ptr)". This is expected: we can't fold this to zero because we
need to preserve the pointer base.
The call to isLoopEntryGuardedByCond in howFarToZero is less precise
because of ptrtoint operations; this shows up in the function
pr46786_c26_char in ptrtoint.ll. Fixing it here would require more
complex refactoring. It should eventually be fixed by future
improvements to isImpliedCond.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46786 for context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103656
This can be seen as a follow up to commit 0ee439b705e82a4fe20e2,
that changed the second argument of __powidf2, __powisf2 and
__powitf2 in compiler-rt from si_int to int. That was to align with
how those runtimes are defined in libgcc.
One thing that seem to have been missing in that patch was to make
sure that the rest of LLVM also handle that the argument now depends
on the size of int (not using the si_int machine mode for 32-bit).
When using __builtin_powi for a target with 16-bit int clang crashed.
And when emitting libcalls to those rtlib functions, typically when
lowering @llvm.powi), the backend would always prepare the exponent
argument as an i32 which caused miscompiles when the rtlib was
compiled with 16-bit int.
The solution used here is to use an overloaded type for the second
argument in @llvm.powi. This way clang can use the "correct" type
when lowering __builtin_powi, and then later when emitting the libcall
it is assumed that the type used in @llvm.powi matches the rtlib
function.
One thing that needed some extra attention was that when vectorizing
calls several passes did not support that several arguments could
be overloaded in the intrinsics. This patch allows overload of a
scalar operand by adding hasVectorInstrinsicOverloadedScalarOpd, with
an entry for powi.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99439