121 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nikita Popov
da48f08abf [SCCP][IR] Landing pads are not safe to remove
For landingpads with {} type, SCCP ended up dropping them, because
we considered them as safe to remove.
2022-03-14 14:59:32 +01:00
Nikita Popov
8f1350e03a [IR] Check GEP source type when comparing instructions
Two GEPs with same indices but different source type are not the
same.

Worth noting that FunctionComparator already handles this correctly.
2022-02-11 12:32:04 +01:00
serge-sans-paille
e188aae406 Cleanup header dependencies in LLVMCore
Based on the output of include-what-you-use.

This is a big chunk of changes. It is very likely to break downstream code
unless they took a lot of care in avoiding hidden ehader dependencies, something
the LLVM codebase doesn't do that well :-/

I've tried to summarize the biggest change below:

- llvm/include/llvm-c/Core.h: no longer includes llvm-c/ErrorHandling.h
- llvm/IR/DIBuilder.h no longer includes llvm/IR/DebugInfo.h
- llvm/IR/IRBuilder.h no longer includes llvm/IR/IntrinsicInst.h
- llvm/IR/LLVMRemarkStreamer.h no longer includes llvm/Support/ToolOutputFile.h
- llvm/IR/LegacyPassManager.h no longer include llvm/Pass.h
- llvm/IR/Type.h no longer includes llvm/ADT/SmallPtrSet.h
- llvm/IR/PassManager.h no longer includes llvm/Pass.h nor llvm/Support/Debug.h

And the usual count of preprocessed lines:
$ clang++ -E  -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/IR/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 6400831
after:  6189948

200k lines less to process is no that bad ;-)

Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118652
2022-02-02 06:54:20 +01:00
Philip Reames
c16fd6a376 Rename doesNotReadMemory to onlyWritesMemory globally [NFC]
The naming has come up as a source of confusion in several recent reviews.  onlyWritesMemory is consist with onlyReadsMemory which we use for the corresponding readonly case as well.
2022-01-05 08:52:55 -08:00
serge-sans-paille
9290ccc3c1 Introduce the AttributeMask class
This class is solely used as a lightweight and clean way to build a set of
attributes to be removed from an AttrBuilder. Previously AttrBuilder was used
both for building and removing, which introduced odd situation like creation of
Attribute with dummy value because the only relevant part was the attribute
kind.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116110
2022-01-04 15:37:46 +01:00
Philip Reames
423f19680a Add FMF to hasPoisonGeneratingFlags/dropPoisonGeneratingFlags
These flags are documented as generating poison values for particular input values. As such, we should really be consistent about their handling with how we handle nsw/nuw/exact/inbounds.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115460
2021-12-14 08:43:00 -08:00
Arthur Eubanks
f5687e0fd0 [NFC] Use getAlign() instead of getAlignment() in haveSameSpecialState()
getAlignment() is deprecated.
2021-12-09 13:19:42 -08:00
Philip Reames
ed6b69a38f Add a hasPoisonGeneratingFlags proxy wrapper to Instruction [NFC]
This just cuts down on casts to Operator.
2021-11-16 08:48:16 -08:00
Philip Reames
425cbbc602 [Operator] Add hasPoisonGeneratingFlags [mostly NFC]
This method parallels the dropPoisonGeneratingFlags on Instruction, but is hoisted to operator to handle constant expressions as well.

This is mostly code movement, but I did go ahead and add the inrange constexpr gep case.  This had been discussed previously, but apparently never followed up o.
2021-10-27 11:25:40 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
e6e29831dd [IR] Migrate from getNumArgOperands to arg_size (NFC)
Note that arg_operands is considered a legacy name.  See
llvm/include/llvm/IR/InstrTypes.h for details.
2021-10-04 08:40:25 -07:00
Dávid Bolvanský
5f2f611880 Fixed more warnings in LLVM produced by -Wbitwise-instead-of-logical 2021-10-03 13:58:10 +02:00
Arthur Eubanks
3f4d00bc3b [NFC] More get/removeAttribute() cleanup 2021-08-17 21:05:41 -07:00
Anna Thomas
8ee5759fd5 Strip undef implying attributes when moving calls
When hoisting/moving calls to locations, we strip unknown metadata. Such calls are usually marked `speculatable`, i.e. they are guaranteed to not cause undefined behaviour when run anywhere. So, we should strip attributes that can cause immediate undefined behaviour if those attributes are not valid in the context where the call is moved to.

This patch introduces such an API and uses it in relevant passes. See
updated tests.

Fix for PR50744.

Reviewed By: nikic, jdoerfert, lebedev.ri

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104641
2021-07-27 10:57:05 -04:00
Eli Friedman
5c486ce04d [LLVM IR] Allow volatile stores to trap.
Proposed alternative to D105338.

This is ugly, but short-term I think it's the best way forward: first,
let's formalize the hacks into a coherent model. Then we can consider
extensions of that model (we could have different flavors of volatile
with different rules).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106309
2021-07-26 10:51:00 -07:00
Nikita Popov
33146857e9 [IR] Consider non-willreturn as side effect (PR50511)
This adjusts mayHaveSideEffect() to return true for !willReturn()
instructions. Just like other side-effects, non-willreturn calls
(aka "divergence") cannot be removed and cannot be reordered relative
to other side effects. This fixes a number of bugs where
non-willreturn calls are either incorrectly dropped or moved. In
particular, it also fixes the last open problem in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50511.

I performed a cursory review of all current mayHaveSideEffect()
uses, which convinced me that these are indeed the desired default
semantics. Places that do not want to consider non-willreturn as a
sideeffect generally do not want mayHaveSideEffect() semantics at
all. I identified two such cases, which are addressed by D106591
and D106742. Finally, there is a use in SCEV for which we don't
really have an appropriate API right now -- what it wants is
basically "would this be considered forward progress". I've just
spelled out the previous semantics there.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106749
2021-07-26 16:35:14 +02:00
Daniil Seredkin
13140120dc [InstCombine] Relax constraints of uses for exp(X) * exp(Y) -> exp(X + Y)
InstCombine didn't perform the transformations when fmul's operands were
the same instruction because it required to have one use for each of them
which is false in the case. This patch fixes this + adds tests for them
and introduces a new function isOnlyUserOfAnyOperand to check these cases
in a single place.

This patch is a result of discussion in D102574.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102698
2021-06-01 08:33:23 -04:00
Arthur Eubanks
ea0e2ca1ac [SROA] Allow SROA on pointers with invariant group intrinsic uses
When we are able to SROA an alloca, we know all uses of it, meaning we
don't have to preserve the invariant group intrinsics and metadata.

It's possible that we could lose information regarding redundant
loads/stores, but that's unlikely to have any real impact since right
now the only user is Clang and vtables.

Reviewed By: rnk

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99760
2021-04-05 19:53:40 -07:00
Philip Reames
ffa15e9463 Extract isVolatile helper on Instruction [NFCI]
We have this logic duplicated in several cases, none of which were exhaustive.  Consolidate it in one place.

I don't believe this actually impacts behavior of the callers.  I think they all filter their inputs such that their partial implementations were correct.  If not, this might be fixing a cornercase bug.
2021-04-01 11:24:02 -07:00
Nikita Popov
370addb996 [IR] Move willReturn() to Instruction
This moves the willReturn() helper from CallBase to Instruction,
so that it can be used in a more generic manner. This will make
it easier to fix additional passes (ADCE and BDCE), and will give
us one place to change if additional instructions should become
non-willreturn (e.g. there has been talk about handling volatile
operations this way).

I have also included the IntrinsicInst workaround directly in
here, so that it gets applied consistently. (As such this change
is not entirely NFC -- FuncAttrs will now use this as well.)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96992
2021-02-19 11:56:01 +01:00
Hongtao Yu
1cb47a063e [CSSPGO] Unblock optimizations with pseudo probe instrumentation.
The IR/MIR pseudo probe intrinsics don't get materialized into real machine instructions and therefore they don't incur runtime cost directly. However, they come with indirect cost by blocking certain optimizations. Some of the blocking are intentional (such as blocking code merge) for better counts quality while the others are accidental. This change unblocks perf-critical optimizations that do not affect counts quality. They include:

1. IR InstCombine, sinking load operation to shorten lifetimes.
2. MIR LiveRangeShrink, similar to #1
3. MIR TwoAddressInstructionPass, i.e, opeq transform
4. MIR function argument copy elision
5. IR stack protection. (though not perf-critical but nice to have).

Reviewed By: wmi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95982
2021-02-10 12:43:17 -08:00
Richard Smith
925ae8c790 Revert "[ObjC][ARC] Annotate calls with attributes instead of emitting retainRV"
This reverts commit 53176c168061d6f26dcf3ce4fa59288b7d67255e, which
introduceed a layering violation. LLVM's IR library can't include
headers from Analysis.
2021-01-25 13:53:38 -08:00
Akira Hatanaka
53176c1680 [ObjC][ARC] Annotate calls with attributes instead of emitting retainRV
or claimRV calls in the IR

Background:

This patch makes changes to the front-end and middle-end that are
needed to fix a longstanding problem where llvm breaks ARC's autorelease
optimization (see the link below) by separating calls from the marker
instructions or retainRV/claimRV calls. The backend changes are in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92569.

https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AutomaticReferenceCounting.html#arc-runtime-objc-autoreleasereturnvalue

What this patch does to fix the problem:

- The front-end annotates calls with attribute "clang.arc.rv"="retain"
  or "clang.arc.rv"="claim", which indicates the call is implicitly
  followed by a marker instruction and a retainRV/claimRV call that
  consumes the call result. This is currently done only when the target
  is arm64 and the optimization level is higher than -O0.

- ARC optimizer temporarily emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the
  annotated calls in the IR and removes the inserted calls after
  processing the function.

- ARC contract pass emits retainRV/claimRV calls after the annotated
  calls. It doesn't remove the attribute on the call since the backend
  needs it to emit the marker instruction. The retainRV/claimRV calls
  are emitted late in the pipeline to prevent optimization passes from
  transforming the IR in a way that makes it harder for the ARC
  middle-end passes to figure out the def-use relationship between the
  call and the retainRV/claimRV calls (which is the cause of PR31925).

- The function inliner removes the autoreleaseRV call in the callee that
  returns the result if nothing in the callee prevents it from being
  paired up with the calls annotated with "clang.arc.rv"="retain/claim"
  in the caller. If the call is annotated with "claim", a release call
  is inserted since autoreleaseRV+claimRV is equivalent to a release. If
  it cannot find an autoreleaseRV call, it tries to transfer the
  attributes to a function call in the callee. This is important since
  ARC optimizer can remove the autoreleaseRV call returning the callee
  result, which makes it impossible to pair it up with the retainRV or
  claimRV call in the caller. If that fails, it simply emits a retain
  call in the IR if the call is annotated with "retain" and does nothing
  if it's annotated with "claim".

- This patch teaches dead argument elimination pass not to change the
  return type of a function if any of the calls to the function are
  annotated with attribute "clang.arc.rv". This is necessary since the
  pass can incorrectly determine nothing in the IR uses the function
  return, which can happen since the front-end no longer explicitly
  emits retainRV/claimRV calls in the IR, and change its return type to
  'void'.

Future work:

- Use the attribute on x86-64.

- Fix the auto upgrader to convert call+retainRV/claimRV pairs into
  calls annotated with the attributes.

rdar://71443534

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808
2021-01-25 11:57:08 -08:00
Hongtao Yu
f3c445697d [CSSPGO] IR intrinsic for pseudo-probe block instrumentation
This change introduces a new IR intrinsic named `llvm.pseudoprobe` for pseudo-probe block instrumentation. Please refer to https://reviews.llvm.org/D86193 for the whole story.

A pseudo probe is used to collect the execution count of the block where the probe is instrumented. This requires a pseudo probe to be persisting. The LLVM PGO instrumentation also instruments in similar places by placing a counter in the form of atomic read/write operations or runtime helper calls. While these operations are very persisting or optimization-resilient, in theory we can borrow the atomic read/write implementation from PGO counters and cut it off at the end of compilation with all the atomics converted into binary data. This was our initial design and we’ve seen promising sample correlation quality with it. However, the atomics approach has a couple issues:

1. IR Optimizations are blocked unexpectedly. Those atomic instructions are not going to be physically present in the binary code, but since they are on the IR till very end of compilation, they can still prevent certain IR optimizations and result in lower code quality.
2. The counter atomics may not be fully cleaned up from the code stream eventually.
3. Extra work is needed for re-targeting.

We choose to implement pseudo probes based on a special LLVM intrinsic, which is expected to have most of the semantics that comes with an atomic operation but does not block desired optimizations as much as possible. More specifically the semantics associated with the new intrinsic enforces a pseudo probe to be virtually executed exactly the same number of times before and after an IR optimization. The intrinsic also comes with certain flags that are carefully chosen so that the places they are probing are not going to be messed up by the optimizer while most of the IR optimizations still work. The core flags given to the special intrinsic is `IntrInaccessibleMemOnly`, which means the intrinsic accesses memory and does have a side effect so that it is not removable, but is does not access memory locations that are accessible by any original instructions. This way the intrinsic does not alias with any original instruction and thus it does not block optimizations as much as an atomic operation does. We also assign a function GUID and a block index to an intrinsic so that they are uniquely identified and not merged in order to achieve good correlation quality.

Let's now look at an example. Given the following LLVM IR:

```
define internal void @foo2(i32 %x, void (i32)* %f) !dbg !4 {
bb0:
  %cmp = icmp eq i32 %x, 0
   br i1 %cmp, label %bb1, label %bb2
bb1:
   br label %bb3
bb2:
   br label %bb3
bb3:
   ret void
}
```

The instrumented IR will look like below. Note that each `llvm.pseudoprobe` intrinsic call represents a pseudo probe at a block, of which the first parameter is the GUID of the probe’s owner function and the second parameter is the probe’s ID.

```
define internal void @foo2(i32 %x, void (i32)* %f) !dbg !4 {
bb0:
   %cmp = icmp eq i32 %x, 0
   call void @llvm.pseudoprobe(i64 837061429793323041, i64 1)
   br i1 %cmp, label %bb1, label %bb2
bb1:
   call void @llvm.pseudoprobe(i64 837061429793323041, i64 2)
   br label %bb3
bb2:
   call void @llvm.pseudoprobe(i64 837061429793323041, i64 3)
   br label %bb3
bb3:
   call void @llvm.pseudoprobe(i64 837061429793323041, i64 4)
   ret void
}

```

Reviewed By: wmi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86490
2020-11-20 10:39:24 -08:00
Serge Pavlov
7975b8c38d [IR] Merge metadata manipulation code into Value
Now there are two main classes in Value hierarchy, which support metadata,
these are Instruction and GlobalObject. They implement different APIs for
metadata manipulation, which however overlap. This change moves metadata
manipulation code into Value, so descendant classes can use this code for
their operations on metadata.

No functional changes intended.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67626
2020-10-23 11:08:26 +07:00
Sanjay Patel
e25449ff57 [IR][GVN] allow intrinsics in Instruction's isCommutative query (2nd try)
The 1st try was reverted because I missed an assert that
needed softening.

As discussed in D86798 / rG09652721 , we were potentially
returning a different result for whether an Instruction
is commutable depending on if we call the base class or
derived class method.

This requires relaxing asserts in GVN, but that pass
seems to be working otherwise.

NewGVN requires more work because it uses different
code paths for numbering binops and calls.
2020-08-31 16:01:19 -04:00
Sanjay Patel
badd7264e1 Revert "[IR][GVN] allow intrinsics in Instruction's isCommutative query"
This reverts commit 25597f7783e7038b8a2ee88bb49ac605b211b564.
It is causing crashing on bots such as:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/fuchsia-x86_64-linux/builds/10523/steps/ninja-build/logs/stdio
2020-08-30 17:02:51 -04:00
Sanjay Patel
25597f7783 [IR][GVN] allow intrinsics in Instruction's isCommutative query
As discussed in D86798 / rG09652721 , we were potentially
returning a different result for whether an Instruction
is commutable depending on if we call the base class or
derived class method.

This requires relaxing an assert in GVN, but that pass
seems to be working otherwise.

NewGVN requires more work because it uses different
code paths for numbering binops and calls.
2020-08-30 16:49:22 -04:00
Roman Lebedev
5ec2b757cc
[Instruction] Speculatively undo isIdenticalToWhenDefined() PHI handling changes
The stage2-stage3 differences persist even without instcombine-based
PHI CSE, so this is the only possible reason.
2020-08-29 19:38:57 +03:00
Roman Lebedev
65b3854e10
[NFC] Instruction::isIdenticalToWhenDefined(): s/nessesairly/necessarily/ 2020-08-29 15:10:13 +03:00
Roman Lebedev
3e69871ab5
[InstCombine] Take 2: Perform trivial PHI CSE
The original take was 6102310d814ad73eab60a88b21dd70874f7a056f,
which taught InstSimplify to do that, which seemed better at time,
since we got EarlyCSE support for free.

However, it was proven that we can not do that there,
the simplified-to PHI would not be reachable from the original PHI,
and that is not something InstSimplify is allowed to do,
as noted in the commit ed90f15efb40d26b5d3ead3bb8e9e284218e0186
that reverted it :
> It appears to cause compilation non-determinism and caused stage3 mismatches.

However InstCombine already does many different optimizations,
so it should be a safe place to do it here.

Note that we still can't just compare incoming values ranges,
because there is no guarantee that these PHI's we'd simplify to
were already re-visited and sorted.
However coming up with a test is problematic.

Effects on vanilla llvm test-suite + RawSpeed:
```
| statistic name                                     | baseline  | proposed  |      Δ |        % |      |%| |
|----------------------------------------------------|-----------|-----------|-------:|---------:|---------:|
| instcombine.NumPHICSEs                             | 0         | 22228     |  22228 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| asm-printer.EmittedInsts                           | 7942329   | 7942456   |    127 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| assembler.ObjectBytes                              | 254295632 | 254313792 |  18160 |    0.01% |    0.01% |
| early-cse.NumCSE                                   | 2183283   | 2183272   |    -11 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| early-cse.NumSimplify                              | 550105    | 541842    |  -8263 |   -1.50% |    1.50% |
| instcombine.NumAggregateReconstructionsSimplified  | 73        | 4506      |   4433 | 6072.60% | 6072.60% |
| instcombine.NumCombined                            | 3640311   | 3666911   |  26600 |    0.73% |    0.73% |
| instcombine.NumDeadInst                            | 1778204   | 1783318   |   5114 |    0.29% |    0.29% |
| instcount.NumCallInst                              | 1758395   | 1758804   |    409 |    0.02% |    0.02% |
| instcount.NumInvokeInst                            | 59478     | 59502     |     24 |    0.04% |    0.04% |
| instcount.NumPHIInst                               | 330557    | 330549    |     -8 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| instcount.TotalBlocks                              | 1077138   | 1077221   |     83 |    0.01% |    0.01% |
| instcount.TotalFuncs                               | 101442    | 101441    |     -1 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| instcount.TotalInsts                               | 8831946   | 8832611   |    665 |    0.01% |    0.01% |
| simplifycfg.NumInvokes                             | 4300      | 4410      |    110 |    2.56% |    2.56% |
| simplifycfg.NumSimpl                               | 1019813   | 999740    | -20073 |   -1.97% |    1.97% |
```
So it fires ~22k times, which is less than ~24k the take 1 did.
It allows foldAggregateConstructionIntoAggregateReuse() to actually work
after PHI-of-extractvalue folds did their thing. Previously SimplifyCFG
would have done this PHI CSE, of all places. Additionally, allows some
more `invoke`->`call` folds to happen (+110, +2.56%).

All in all, expectedly, this catches less things overall,
but all the motivational cases are still caught, so all good.
2020-08-29 13:13:06 +03:00
Owen Anderson
ed90f15efb Revert "[InstSimplify][EarlyCSE] Try to CSE PHI nodes in the same basic block"
This reverts commit 6102310d814ad73eab60a88b21dd70874f7a056f.  It
appears to cause compilation non-determinism and caused stage3
mismatches.
2020-08-28 23:43:42 +00:00
Roman Lebedev
6102310d81
[InstSimplify][EarlyCSE] Try to CSE PHI nodes in the same basic block
Apparently, we don't do this, neither in EarlyCSE, nor in InstSimplify,
nor in (old) GVN, but do in NewGVN and SimplifyCFG of all places..

While i could teach EarlyCSE how to hash PHI nodes,
we can't really do much (anything?) even if we find two identical
PHI nodes in different basic blocks, same-BB case is the interesting one,
and if we teach InstSimplify about it (which is what i wanted originally,
https://reviews.llvm.org/D86530), we get EarlyCSE support for free.

So i would think this is pretty uncontroversial.

On vanilla llvm test-suite + RawSpeed, this has the following effects:
```
| statistic name                                     | baseline  | proposed  |      Δ |        % |    \|%\| |
|----------------------------------------------------|-----------|-----------|-------:|---------:|---------:|
| instsimplify.NumPHICSE                             | 0         | 23779     |  23779 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| asm-printer.EmittedInsts                           | 7942328   | 7942392   |     64 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| assembler.ObjectBytes                              | 273069192 | 273084704 |  15512 |    0.01% |    0.01% |
| correlated-value-propagation.NumPhis               | 18412     | 18539     |    127 |    0.69% |    0.69% |
| early-cse.NumCSE                                   | 2183283   | 2183227   |    -56 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| early-cse.NumSimplify                              | 550105    | 542090    |  -8015 |   -1.46% |    1.46% |
| instcombine.NumAggregateReconstructionsSimplified  | 73        | 4506      |   4433 | 6072.60% | 6072.60% |
| instcombine.NumCombined                            | 3640264   | 3664769   |  24505 |    0.67% |    0.67% |
| instcombine.NumDeadInst                            | 1778193   | 1783183   |   4990 |    0.28% |    0.28% |
| instcount.NumCallInst                              | 1758401   | 1758799   |    398 |    0.02% |    0.02% |
| instcount.NumInvokeInst                            | 59478     | 59502     |     24 |    0.04% |    0.04% |
| instcount.NumPHIInst                               | 330557    | 330533    |    -24 |   -0.01% |    0.01% |
| instcount.TotalInsts                               | 8831952   | 8832286   |    334 |    0.00% |    0.00% |
| simplifycfg.NumInvokes                             | 4300      | 4410      |    110 |    2.56% |    2.56% |
| simplifycfg.NumSimpl                               | 1019808   | 999607    | -20201 |   -1.98% |    1.98% |
```
I.e. it fires ~24k times, causes +110 (+2.56%) more `invoke` -> `call`
transforms, and counter-intuitively results in *more* instructions total.

That being said, the PHI count doesn't decrease that much,
and looking at some examples, it seems at least some of them
were previously getting PHI CSE'd in SimplifyCFG of all places..

I'm adjusting `Instruction::isIdenticalToWhenDefined()` at the same time.
As a comment in `InstCombinerImpl::visitPHINode()` already stated,
there are no guarantees on the ordering of the operands of a PHI node,
so if we just naively compare them, we may false-negatively say that
the nodes are not equal when the only difference is operand order,
which is especially important since the fold is in InstSimplify,
so we can't rely on InstCombine sorting them beforehand.

Fixing this for the general case is costly (geomean +0.02%),
and does not appear to catch anything in test-suite, but for
the same-BB case, it's trivial, so let's fix at least that.

As per http://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=04879086b44348cad600a0a1ccbe1f7776cc3cf9&to=82bdedb888b945df1e9f130dd3ac4dd3c96e2925&stat=instructions
this appears to cause geomean +0.03% compile time increase (regression),
but geomean -0.01%..-0.04% code size decrease (improvement).
2020-08-27 18:47:04 +03:00
Yevgeny Rouban
417bcb8827 [Instruction] Remove setProfWeight()
Remove the function Instruction::setProfWeight() and make
use of Instruction::copyMetadata(.., {LLVMContext::MD_prof}).
This is correct for all use cases of setProfWeight() as it
is applied to CallBase instructions only.
This change results in prof metadata copied intact even if
the source has "VP". The old pair of calls
extractProfTotalWeight() + setProfWeight() resulted in
setting branch_weights if the source had "VP" data.

Reviewers: yamauchi, davidxl
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80987
2020-06-04 15:10:55 +07:00
Sanjay Patel
2ee4ec6b6f [IR] add set function for FMF 'contract'
This was missed when the flag was added with D31164.
2020-05-27 09:14:51 -04:00
Vedant Kumar
77ffce6954 [Instruction] Set metadata uses to undef on deletion
Summary:
Replace any extant metadata uses of a dying instruction with undef to
preserve debug info accuracy. Some alternatives include:

- Treat Instruction like any other Value, and point its extant metadata
  uses to an empty ValueAsMetadata node. This makes extant dbg.value uses
  trivially dead (i.e. fair game for deletion in many passes), leading to
  stale dbg.values being in effect for too long.

- Call salvageDebugInfoOrMarkUndef. Not needed to make instruction removal
  correct. OTOH results in wasted work in some common cases (e.g. when all
  instructions in a BasicBlock are deleted).

This came up while discussing some basic cases in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D80052.

Reviewers: jmorse, TWeaver, aprantl, dexonsmith, jdoerfert

Subscribers: jholewinski, qcolombet, hiraditya, jfb, sstefan1, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80264
2020-05-21 15:58:12 -07:00
Eli Friedman
1ee6ec2bf3 Remove "mask" operand from shufflevector.
Instead, represent the mask as out-of-line data in the instruction. This
should be more efficient in the places that currently use
getShuffleVector(), and paves the way for further changes to add new
shuffles for scalable vectors.

This doesn't change the syntax in textual IR. And I don't currently plan
to change the bitcode encoding in this patch, although we'll probably
need to do something once we extend shufflevector for scalable types.

I expect that once this is finished, we can then replace the raw "mask"
with something more appropriate for scalable vectors.  Not sure exactly
what this looks like at the moment, but there are a few different ways
we could handle it.  Maybe we could try to describe specific shuffles.
Or maybe we could define it in terms of a function to convert a fixed-length
array into an appropriate scalable vector, using a "step", or something
like that.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72467
2020-03-31 13:08:59 -07:00
Reid Kleckner
0c2b09a9b6 [IR] Lazily number instructions for local dominance queries
Essentially, fold OrderedBasicBlock into BasicBlock, and make it
auto-invalidate the instruction ordering when new instructions are
added. Notably, we don't need to invalidate it when removing
instructions, which is helpful when a pass mostly delete dead
instructions rather than transforming them.

The downside is that Instruction grows from 56 bytes to 64 bytes.  The
resulting LLVM code is substantially simpler and automatically handles
invalidation, which makes me think that this is the right speed and size
tradeoff.

The important change is in SymbolTableTraitsImpl.h, where the numbering
is invalidated. Everything else should be straightforward.

We probably want to implement a fancier re-numbering scheme so that
local updates don't invalidate the ordering, but I plan for that to be
future work, maybe for someone else.

Reviewed By: lattner, vsk, fhahn, dexonsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51664
2020-02-18 14:44:24 -08:00
aqjune
e87d71668e [IR] Redefine Freeze instruction
Summary:
This patch redefines freeze instruction from being UnaryOperator to a subclass of UnaryInstruction.

ConstantExpr freeze is removed, as discussed in the previous review.
FreezeOperator is not added because there's no ConstantExpr freeze.
`freeze i8* null` test is added to `test/Bindings/llvm-c/freeze.ll` as well, because the null pointer-related bug in `tools/llvm-c/echo.cpp` is now fixed.
InstVisitor has visitFreeze now because freeze is not unaryop anymore.

Reviewers: whitequark, deadalnix, craig.topper, jdoerfert, lebedev.ri

Reviewed By: craig.topper, lebedev.ri

Subscribers: regehr, nlopes, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, jfb, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69932
2019-11-12 10:49:00 +09:00
aqjune
58acbce3de [IR] Add Freeze instruction
Summary:
- Define Instruction::Freeze, let it be UnaryOperator
- Add support for freeze to LLLexer/LLParser/BitcodeReader/BitcodeWriter
  The format is `%x = freeze <ty> %v`
- Add support for freeze instruction to llvm-c interface.
- Add m_Freeze in PatternMatch.
- Erase freeze when lowering IR to SelDag.

Reviewers: deadalnix, hfinkel, efriedma, lebedev.ri, nlopes, jdoerfert, regehr, filcab, delcypher, whitequark

Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, jdoerfert

Subscribers: jfb, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, lebedev.ri, steven_wu, dexonsmith, xbolva00, delcypher, spatel, regehr, trentxintong, vsk, filcab, nlopes, mehdi_amini, deadalnix, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29011
2019-11-05 15:54:56 +09:00
Yevgeny Rouban
5e5af533ab [IR] Fix mayReadFromMemory() for writeonly calls
Current implementation of Instruction::mayReadFromMemory()
returns !doesNotAccessMemory() which is !ReadNone. This
does not take into account that the writeonly attribute
also indicates that the call does not read from memory.

The patch changes the predicate to !doesNotReadMemory()
that reflects the intended behavior.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69086

llvm-svn: 375389
2019-10-21 06:52:08 +00:00
Philip Reames
f47a313e71 Add a transform pass to make the executable semantics of poison explicit in the IR
Implements a transform pass which instruments IR such that poison semantics are made explicit. That is, it provides a (possibly partial) executable semantics for every instruction w.r.t. poison as specified in the LLVM LangRef. There are obvious parallels to the sanitizer tools, but this pass is focused purely on the semantics of LLVM IR, not any particular source language.

The target audience for this tool is developers working on or targetting LLVM from a frontend. The idea is to be able to take arbitrary IR (with the assumption of known inputs), and evaluate it concretely after having made poison semantics explicit to detect cases where either a) the original code executes UB, or b) a transform pass introduces UB which didn't exist in the original program.

At the moment, this is mostly the framework and still needs to be fleshed out. By reusing existing code we have decent coverage, but there's a lot of cases not yet handled. What's here is good enough to handle interesting cases though; for instance, one of the recent LFTR bugs involved UB being triggered by integer induction variables with nsw/nuw flags would be reported by the current code.

(See comment in PoisonChecking.cpp for full explanation and context)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64215

llvm-svn: 365536
2019-07-09 18:49:29 +00:00
Roman Lebedev
7ad5d14f3a [NFC] Instruction: introduce replaceSuccessorWith() function, use it
Summary:
There is `Instruction::getNumSuccessors()`, `Instruction::getSuccessor()`
and `Instruction::setSuccessor()`, but no function to replace every
specified `BasicBlock*` successor with some other specified `BasicBlock*`.
I've found one place where it should clearly be used.

Reviewers: chandlerc, craig.topper, spatel, danielcdh

Reviewed By: craig.topper

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61010

llvm-svn: 359994
2019-05-05 18:59:22 +00:00
Wei Mi
01f8d556aa [PGO/SamplePGO][NFC] Move the function updateProfWeight from Instruction
to CallInst.

The issue was raised here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60903#1472783

The function Instruction::updateProfWeight is only used for CallInst in
profile update. From the current interface, it is very easy to think that
the function can also be used for branch instruction. However, Branch
instruction does't need the scaling the function provides for
branch_weights and VP (value profile), in addition, scaling may introduce
inaccuracy for branch probablity.

The patch moves the function updateProfWeight from Instruction class to
CallInst to remove the confusion. The patch also changes the scaling of
branch_weights from a loop to a block because we know that ProfileData
for branch_weights of CallInst will only have two operands at most.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60911

llvm-svn: 358900
2019-04-22 17:04:51 +00:00
Craig Topper
784929d045 Implementation of asm-goto support in LLVM
This patch accompanies the RFC posted here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-October/127239.html

This patch adds a new CallBr IR instruction to support asm-goto
inline assembly like gcc as used by the linux kernel. This
instruction is both a call instruction and a terminator
instruction with multiple successors. Only inline assembly
usage is supported today.

This also adds a new INLINEASM_BR opcode to SelectionDAG and
MachineIR to represent an INLINEASM block that is also
considered a terminator instruction.

There will likely be more bug fixes and optimizations to follow
this, but we felt it had reached a point where we would like to
switch to an incremental development model.

Patch by Craig Topper, Alexander Ivchenko, Mikhail Dvoretckii

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53765

llvm-svn: 353563
2019-02-08 20:48:56 +00:00
Craig Topper
0b5e6b11c3 [IR] Use CallBase to reduce code duplication. NFC
Noticed in the asm-goto patch. Callbr needs to go here too. One cast and call is better than 3.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57295

llvm-svn: 352563
2019-01-29 23:31:54 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Vedant Kumar
b264d69de7 [IR] Add Instruction::isLifetimeStartOrEnd, NFC
Instruction::isLifetimeStartOrEnd() checks whether an Instruction is an
llvm.lifetime.start or an llvm.lifetime.end intrinsic.

This was suggested as a cleanup in D55967.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56019

llvm-svn: 349964
2018-12-21 21:49:40 +00:00
Cameron McInally
cbde0d9c7b [IR] Add a dedicated FNeg IR Instruction
The IEEE-754 Standard makes it clear that fneg(x) and
fsub(-0.0, x) are two different operations. The former is a bitwise
operation, while the latter is an arithmetic operation. This patch
creates a dedicated FNeg IR Instruction to model that behavior.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53877

llvm-svn: 346774
2018-11-13 18:15:47 +00:00
Carlos Alberto Enciso
fa9cf89734 [DebugInfo][Dexter] Unreachable line stepped onto after SimplifyCFG.
In SimplifyCFG when given a conditional branch that goes to BB1 and BB2, the hoisted common terminator instruction in the two blocks, caused debug line records associated with subsequent select instructions to become ambiguous. It causes the debugger to display unreachable source lines.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53390

llvm-svn: 346481
2018-11-09 09:42:10 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
9ae926b973 [IR] Replace isa<TerminatorInst> with isTerminator().
This is a bit awkward in a handful of places where we didn't even have
an instruction and now we have to see if we can build one. But on the
whole, this seems like a win and at worst a reasonable cost for removing
`TerminatorInst`.

All of this is part of the removal of `TerminatorInst` from the
`Instruction` type hierarchy.

llvm-svn: 340701
2018-08-26 09:51:22 +00:00