This tries to add some costs for the shuffle in a ST3/ST4 instruction,
which are represented in LLVM IR as store(interleaving shuffle). In
order to detect the store, it needs to add a CxtI context instruction to
check the users of the shuffle. LD3 and LD4 are added, LD2 should be a
zip1 shuffle, which will be added in another patch.
It should help fix some of the regressions from #87510.
It seems TypeSize is currently broken in the sense that:
TypeSize::Fixed(4) + TypeSize::Scalable(4) => TypeSize::Fixed(8)
without failing its assert that explicitly tests for this case:
assert(LHS.Scalable == RHS.Scalable && ...);
The reason this fails is that `Scalable` is a static method of class
TypeSize,
and LHS and RHS are both objects of class TypeSize. So this is
evaluating
if the pointer to the function Scalable == the pointer to the function
Scalable,
which is always true because LHS and RHS have the same class.
This patch fixes the issue by renaming `TypeSize::Scalable` ->
`TypeSize::getScalable`, as well as `TypeSize::Fixed` to
`TypeSize::getFixed`,
so that it no longer clashes with the variable in
FixedOrScalableQuantity.
The new methods now also better match the coding standard, which
specifies that:
* Variable names should be nouns (as they represent state)
* Function names should be verb phrases (as they represent actions)
In order to allow targets to disable interleaving for scalable vectors, pass the entire VF's ElementCount to getMaxInterleaveFactor.
This is based off of the approach used here: 8d36708507
The plan would then be to disable interleaving on scalable VFs on RISC-V in a follow up patch.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D143723#4132349
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144474
LoopUnroll estimates the loop size via getInstructionCost(),
but getInstructionCost() cannot pass CostKind to getVectorInstrCost().
And so does getShuffleCost() to getBroadcastShuffleOverhead(),
getPermuteShuffleOverhead(), getExtractSubvectorOverhead(),
and getInsertSubvectorOverhead().
To address this, this patch adds an argument CostKind to these
functions.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142116
Need to include the cost of the initial insertelement to the cost of the
broadcasts. Also, need to adjust the cost of the gather/buildvector if
the element is inserted into poison/undef vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140498
This has the effect of exposing the power-of-two property for use in memory op costing, but no target actually uses it yet. The main point of this change is simple consistency with the recently changes getArithmeticInstrCost, and to remove the last (interface) use of OperandValueKind.
This change completes the process of replacing OperandValueKind and OperandValueProperties which were previously passed independently in this API with a single container class which contains both.
This is the change which motivated the whole sequence which preceeded it. In an original spike version of this change, I'd noticed a nasty bug: I'd changed the signature without changing names, and as result, we silently passed additional information through a callsite which previously dropped the power-of-two fact. This might be harmless in most cases, but at least a couple clearly dependend for correctness on not passing that property through.
I did my best to split off prior changes which reduced the scope of this one, and which made it possible to use compiler assistance. For instance, every parameter which changes type in this change also changes name. This was intentional to make sure that every call site possible effected must show up in the diff. This let me audit each one closely.
Defaults to TCK_RecipThroughput - as most explicit calls were assuming TCK_RecipThroughput (vectorizers) or was just doing a before-vs-after comparison (vectorcombiner). Calls via getInstructionCost were just dropping the CostKind, so again there should be no change at this time (as getShuffleCost and its expansions don't use CostKind yet) - but it will make it easier for us to better account for size/latency shuffle costs in inline/unroll passes in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132287
* Replace getUserCost with getInstructionCost, covering all cost kinds.
* Remove getInstructionLatency, it's not implemented by any backends, and we should fold the functionality into getUserCost (now getInstructionCost) to make it easier for targets to handle the cost kinds with their existing cost callbacks.
Original Patch by @samparker (Sam Parker)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79483
TragetLowering had two last InstructionCost related `getTypeLegalizationCost()`
and `getScalingFactorCost()` members, but all other costs are processed in TTI.
E.g. it is not comfortable to use other TTI members in these two functions
overrided in a target.
Minor refactoring: `getTypeLegalizationCost()` now doesn't need DataLayout
parameter - it was always passed from TTI.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117723
I'm not sure this is the best way to approach this,
but the situation is rather not very detectable unless we explicitly call it out when refusing to advise to unroll.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107271
This patch changes the interface to take a RegisterKind, to indicate
whether the register bitwidth of a scalar register, fixed-width vector
register, or scalable vector register must be returned.
Reviewed By: paulwalker-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98874
This adds an Mask ArrayRef to getShuffleCost, so that if an exact mask
can be provided a more accurate cost can be provided by the backend.
For example VREV costs could be returned by the ARM backend. This should
be an NFC until then, laying the groundwork for that to be added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98206
As a followup to D95291, getOperandsScalarizationOverhead was still
using a VF as a vector factor if the arguments were scalar, and would
assert on certain matrix intrinsics with differently sized vector
arguments. This patch removes the VF arg, instead passing the Types
through directly. This should allow it to more accurately compute the
cost without having to guess at which operands will be vectorized,
something difficult with more complex intrinsics.
This adjusts one SVE test as it is now calling the wrong intrinsic vs
veccall. Without invalid InstructCosts the cost of the scalarized
intrinsic is too low. This should get fixed when the cost of
scalarization is accounted for with scalable types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96287
This refactors shouldFavorPostInc() and shouldFavorBackedgeIndex() into
getPreferredAddressingMode() so that we have one interface to steer LSR in
generating the preferred addressing mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96600
This will be needed in the loop-vectorizer where the minimum VF
requested may be a scalable VF. getMinimumVF now takes an additional
operand 'IsScalableVF' that indicates whether a scalable VF is required.
Reviewed By: kparzysz, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96020
This reverts the revert commit 408c4408facc3a79ee4ff7e9983cc972f797e176.
This version of the patch includes a fix for a crash caused by
treating ICmp/FCmp constant expressions as instructions.
Original message:
On some targets, like AArch64, vector selects can be efficiently lowered
if the vector condition is a compare with a supported predicate.
This patch adds a new argument to getCmpSelInstrCost, to indicate the
predicate of the feeding select condition. Note that it is not
sufficient to use the context instruction when querying the cost of a
vector select starting from a scalar one, because the condition of the
vector select could be composed of compares with different predicates.
This change greatly improves modeling the costs of certain
compare/select patterns on AArch64.
I am also planning on putting up patches to make use of the new argument in
SLPVectorizer & LV.
On some targets, like AArch64, vector selects can be efficiently lowered
if the vector condition is a compare with a supported predicate.
This patch adds a new argument to getCmpSelInstrCost, to indicate the
predicate of the feeding select condition. Note that it is not
sufficient to use the context instruction when querying the cost of a
vector select starting from a scalar one, because the condition of the
vector select could be composed of compares with different predicates.
This change greatly improves modeling the costs of certain
compare/select patterns on AArch64.
I am also planning on putting up patches to make use of the new argument in
SLPVectorizer & LV.
Reviewed By: dmgreen, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90070