There are some patterns in td files without MVT/class set
for some operands in target pattern that are from the source
pattern. This prevents GlobalISelEmitter from adding them as
a valid rule, because the target child operand is an
unsupported kind operand. For now, for a leaf child, only
IntInit and DefInit are handled in GlobalISelEmitter.
This issue can be workaround by adding MVT/class to the
patterns in the td files, like the workarounds for patterns
anyext and setcc in PPCInstrInfo.td in D140878.
To avoid adding the same workarounds for other patterns in
td files, this patch tries to handle the UnsetInit case in
GlobalISelEmitter.
Adding the new handling allows us to remove the workarounds
in the td files and also generates many selection rules for
PPC target.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141247
This makes it possible to write GlobalISel patterns generating
EXTRACT_SUBREG instructions applied to suboperands of ComplexPattern
operands. Currently, TableGen complains that such operands are not
declared in matcher.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146800
RFC to add a way to ignore COPY instructions when pattern-matching MIR in GISel.
- Add a new "GISelFlags" class to TableGen. Both `Pattern` and `PatFrags` defs can use it to alter matching behaviour.
- Flags start at zero and are scoped: the setter returns a `SaveAndRestore` object so that when the current scope ends, the flags are restored to their previous values. This allows child patterns to modify the flags without affecting the parent pattern.
- Child patterns always reuse the parent's pattern, but they can override its values. For more examples, see `GlobalISelEmitterFlags.td` tests.
- [AMDGPU] Use the IgnoreCopies flag in BFI patterns, which are known to be bothered by cross-regbank copies.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136234
Use deduction guides instead of helper functions.
The only non-automatic changes have been:
1. ArrayRef(some_uint8_pointer, 0) needs to be changed into ArrayRef(some_uint8_pointer, (size_t)0) to avoid an ambiguous call with ArrayRef((uint8_t*), (uint8_t*))
2. CVSymbol sym(makeArrayRef(symStorage)); needed to be rewritten as CVSymbol sym{ArrayRef(symStorage)}; otherwise the compiler is confused and thinks we have a (bad) function prototype. There was a few similar situation across the codebase.
3. ADL doesn't seem to work the same for deduction-guides and functions, so at some point the llvm namespace must be explicitly stated.
4. The "reference mode" of makeArrayRef(ArrayRef<T> &) that acts as no-op is not supported (a constructor cannot achieve that).
Per reviewers' comment, some useless makeArrayRef have been removed in the process.
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D140896 that introduced
the deduction guides.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140955
value() has undesired exception checking semantics and calls
__throw_bad_optional_access in libc++. Moreover, the API is unavailable without
_LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS on older Mach-O platforms (see
_LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_BAD_OPTIONAL_ACCESS).
This commit fixes LLVMAnalysis and its dependencies.
It is generally good practice, if you know how big the vector is going to be in the end, to reserve before continually calling "push_back" or "emplace_back"
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139483
This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated. The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.
This is part of an effort to migrate from
llvm::Optional to std::optional:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
Without it, the count of renderer functions is inaccurate and, in some
edge cases (like the patterns added in D134354), we can actually
go out of bounds (run out of pre-allocated renderer function spaces
in the GISel state)
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134861
Allows things like `(G_PTR_ADD (G_PTR_ADD a, b), c)` to be
simplified into a single ADD3 instruction instead of two adds.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131254
SelectionDAG has a target hook, getExtendForAtomicOps, which it uses
in the computeKnownBits implementation for ATOMIC_LOAD. This is pretty
ugly (as is having a separate load opcode for atomics), so instead
allow making use of atomic zextload. Enable this for AArch64 since the
DAG path defaults in to the zext behavior.
The tablegen changes are pretty ugly, but partially helps migrate
SelectionDAG from using ISD::ATOMIC_LOAD to regular ISD::LOAD with
atomic memory operands. For now the DAG emitter will emit matchers for
patterns which the DAG will not produce.
I'm still a bit confused by the intent of the isLoad/isStore/isAtomic
bits. The DAG implementation rejects trying to use any of these in
combination. For now I've opted to make the isLoad checks also check
isAtomic, although I think having isLoad and isAtomic set on these
makes most sense.
This change introduces the HasNoUse builtin predicate in PatFrags that
checks for the absence of use of the first result operand.
GlobalISelEmitter will allow source PatFrags with this predicate to be
matched with destination instructions with empty outs. This predicate is
required for selecting the no-return variant of atomic instructions in
AMDGPU.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125212
The builtin predicate handling has a strange behavior where the code
assumes that a PatFrag is a stack of PatFrags, and each level adds at
most one predicate. I don't think this particularly makes sense,
especially without a diagnostic to ensure you aren't trying to set
multiple at once.
This wasn't followed for address spaces and alignment, which could
potentially fall through to report no builtin predicate was
added. Just switch these to follow the existing convention for now.
Add void casts to mark the variables used, next to the places where
they are used in assert or `LLVM_DEBUG()` expressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123117
Based on the output of include-what-you-use.
It's an utility directory, so no much impact on other code areas.
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/utils/TableGen/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 4327274
after: 4316190
Related discourse thread: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118466
This reverts commit fd4808887ee47f3ec8a030e9211169ef4fb094c3.
This patch causes gcc to issue a lot of warnings like:
warning: base class ‘class llvm::MCParsedAsmOperand’ should be
explicitly initialized in the copy constructor [-Wextra]
Since 65b13610a5226b84889b923bae884ba395ad084d, raw_string_ostream has
been unbuffered by default. Based on an audit of llvm/utils/, this
commit removes every call to `raw_string_ostream::flush()` and any call
to `raw_string_ostream::str()` whose result is ignored or that doesn't
help with clarity.
I left behind a few calls to `str()`. In these cases, the underlying
std::string was declared pretty far away and never used again, whereas
stream recently had its last write. The code is easier to read as-is;
the no-op call to `flush()` inside `str()` isn't harmful, and when
https://reviews.llvm.org/D115421 lands it'll be gone anyway.
During rule optimization, identical SameOperandMatchers are hoisted into a common group,
however previously only one operand index was considered.
Commutable patterns can introduce SameOperandMatcher checks where the second index is commuted,
resulting in a different check that cannot be hoisted.
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111506
This patch relands https://reviews.llvm.org/D104454, but fixes some failing
builds on Mac OS which apparently has a different definition for size_t,
that caused 'ambiguous operator overload' for the implicit conversion
of TypeSize to a scalar value.
This reverts commit b732e6c9a8438e5204ac96c8ca76f9b11abf98ff.
To reflect that the size may be scalable, a TypeSize is returned
instead of an unsigned. In places where the result is used,
it currently relies on an implicit cast of TypeSize -> uint64_t,
which asserts that the type is not scalable.
This patch is NFC for fixed-width vectors.
Reviewed By: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104454
This also adds new interfaces for the fixed- and scalable case:
* LLT::fixed_vector
* LLT::scalable_vector
The strategy for migrating to the new interfaces was as follows:
* If the new LLT is a (modified) clone of another LLT, taking the
same number of elements, then use LLT::vector(OtherTy.getElementCount())
or if the number of elements is halfed/doubled, it uses .divideCoefficientBy(2)
or operator*. That is because there is no reason to specifically restrict
the types to 'fixed_vector'.
* If the algorithm works on the number of elements (as unsigned), then
just use fixed_vector. This will need to be fixed up in the future when
modifying the algorithm to also work for scalable vectors, and will need
then need additional tests to confirm the behaviour works the same for
scalable vectors.
* If the test used the '/*Scalable=*/true` flag of LLT::vector, then
this is replaced by LLT::scalable_vector.
Reviewed By: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104451
This patch aims to add the scalable property to LLT. The rest of the
patch-series changes the interfaces to take/return ElementCount and
TypeSize, which both have the ability to represent the scalable property.
The changes are mostly mechanical and aim to be non-functional changes
for fixed-width vectors.
For scalable vectors some unit tests have been added, but no effort has
been put into making any of the GlobalISel algorithms work with scalable
vectors yet. That will be left as future work.
The work is split into a series of 5 patches to make reviews easier.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104450