Chris Lattner | 086c014 | 2006-02-03 06:21:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Target Independent Opportunities: |
| 2 | |
Chris Lattner | f308ea0 | 2006-09-28 06:01:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 3 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 4 | |
Chris Lattner | 9b62b45 | 2006-11-14 01:57:53 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 5 | With the recent changes to make the implicit def/use set explicit in |
| 6 | machineinstrs, we should change the target descriptions for 'call' instructions |
| 7 | so that the .td files don't list all the call-clobbered registers as implicit |
| 8 | defs. Instead, these should be added by the code generator (e.g. on the dag). |
| 9 | |
| 10 | This has a number of uses: |
| 11 | |
| 12 | 1. PPC32/64 and X86 32/64 can avoid having multiple copies of call instructions |
| 13 | for their different impdef sets. |
| 14 | 2. Targets with multiple calling convs (e.g. x86) which have different clobber |
| 15 | sets don't need copies of call instructions. |
| 16 | 3. 'Interprocedural register allocation' can be done to reduce the clobber sets |
| 17 | of calls. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 20 | |
Chris Lattner | 08859ff | 2010-12-15 07:25:55 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 21 | We should recognized various "overflow detection" idioms and translate them into |
Chris Lattner | e5cbdca | 2010-12-19 19:37:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 22 | llvm.uadd.with.overflow and similar intrinsics. Here is a multiply idiom: |
Chris Lattner | 9448184 | 2010-12-15 07:28:58 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 23 | |
| 24 | unsigned int mul(unsigned int a,unsigned int b) { |
| 25 | if ((unsigned long long)a*b>0xffffffff) |
| 26 | exit(0); |
| 27 | return a*b; |
| 28 | } |
| 29 | |
Chris Lattner | 527b47d | 2011-01-02 18:31:38 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 30 | The legalization code for mul-with-overflow needs to be made more robust before |
| 31 | this can be implemented though. |
| 32 | |
Nate Begeman | 81e8097 | 2006-03-17 01:40:33 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 33 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 086c014 | 2006-02-03 06:21:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 34 | |
| 35 | Get the C front-end to expand hypot(x,y) -> llvm.sqrt(x*x+y*y) when errno and |
Chris Lattner | 2dae65d | 2008-12-10 01:30:48 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 36 | precision don't matter (ffastmath). Misc/mandel will like this. :) This isn't |
| 37 | safe in general, even on darwin. See the libm implementation of hypot for |
| 38 | examples (which special case when x/y are exactly zero to get signed zeros etc |
| 39 | right). |
Chris Lattner | 086c014 | 2006-02-03 06:21:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 40 | |
Chris Lattner | 086c014 | 2006-02-03 06:21:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 41 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 42 | |
Chris Lattner | b27b69f | 2006-03-04 01:19:34 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 43 | On targets with expensive 64-bit multiply, we could LSR this: |
| 44 | |
| 45 | for (i = ...; ++i) { |
| 46 | x = 1ULL << i; |
| 47 | |
| 48 | into: |
| 49 | long long tmp = 1; |
| 50 | for (i = ...; ++i, tmp+=tmp) |
| 51 | x = tmp; |
| 52 | |
| 53 | This would be a win on ppc32, but not x86 or ppc64. |
| 54 | |
Chris Lattner | ad01993 | 2006-03-04 08:44:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 55 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 5b0fe7d | 2006-03-05 20:00:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 56 | |
| 57 | Shrink: (setlt (loadi32 P), 0) -> (setlt (loadi8 Phi), 0) |
| 58 | |
| 59 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 549f27d2 | 2006-03-07 02:46:26 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 60 | |
Chris Lattner | 398ffba | 2010-01-01 01:29:26 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 61 | Reassociate should turn things like: |
| 62 | |
| 63 | int factorial(int X) { |
| 64 | return X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X; |
| 65 | } |
| 66 | |
| 67 | into llvm.powi calls, allowing the code generator to produce balanced |
| 68 | multiplication trees. |
| 69 | |
| 70 | First, the intrinsic needs to be extended to support integers, and second the |
| 71 | code generator needs to be enhanced to lower these to multiplication trees. |
Chris Lattner | c20995e | 2006-03-11 20:17:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 72 | |
| 73 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 74 | |
Chris Lattner | 74cfb7d | 2006-03-11 20:20:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 75 | Interesting? testcase for add/shift/mul reassoc: |
| 76 | |
| 77 | int bar(int x, int y) { |
| 78 | return x*x*x+y+x*x*x*x*x*y*y*y*y; |
| 79 | } |
| 80 | int foo(int z, int n) { |
| 81 | return bar(z, n) + bar(2*z, 2*n); |
| 82 | } |
| 83 | |
Chris Lattner | 398ffba | 2010-01-01 01:29:26 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 84 | This is blocked on not handling X*X*X -> powi(X, 3) (see note above). The issue |
| 85 | is that we end up getting t = 2*X s = t*t and don't turn this into 4*X*X, |
| 86 | which is the same number of multiplies and is canonical, because the 2*X has |
| 87 | multiple uses. Here's a simple example: |
| 88 | |
| 89 | define i32 @test15(i32 %X1) { |
| 90 | %B = mul i32 %X1, 47 ; X1*47 |
| 91 | %C = mul i32 %B, %B |
| 92 | ret i32 %C |
| 93 | } |
| 94 | |
| 95 | |
| 96 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 97 | |
| 98 | Reassociate should handle the example in GCC PR16157: |
| 99 | |
| 100 | extern int a0, a1, a2, a3, a4; extern int b0, b1, b2, b3, b4; |
| 101 | void f () { /* this can be optimized to four additions... */ |
| 102 | b4 = a4 + a3 + a2 + a1 + a0; |
| 103 | b3 = a3 + a2 + a1 + a0; |
| 104 | b2 = a2 + a1 + a0; |
| 105 | b1 = a1 + a0; |
| 106 | } |
| 107 | |
| 108 | This requires reassociating to forms of expressions that are already available, |
| 109 | something that reassoc doesn't think about yet. |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 110 | |
Chris Lattner | 10c4245 | 2010-01-24 20:01:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 111 | |
| 112 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 113 | |
| 114 | This function: (derived from GCC PR19988) |
| 115 | double foo(double x, double y) { |
| 116 | return ((x + 0.1234 * y) * (x + -0.1234 * y)); |
| 117 | } |
| 118 | |
| 119 | compiles to: |
| 120 | _foo: |
| 121 | movapd %xmm1, %xmm2 |
| 122 | mulsd LCPI1_1(%rip), %xmm1 |
| 123 | mulsd LCPI1_0(%rip), %xmm2 |
| 124 | addsd %xmm0, %xmm1 |
| 125 | addsd %xmm0, %xmm2 |
| 126 | movapd %xmm1, %xmm0 |
| 127 | mulsd %xmm2, %xmm0 |
| 128 | ret |
| 129 | |
Chris Lattner | 43dc2e6 | 2010-01-24 20:17:09 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 130 | Reassociate should be able to turn it into: |
Chris Lattner | 10c4245 | 2010-01-24 20:01:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 131 | |
| 132 | double foo(double x, double y) { |
| 133 | return ((x + 0.1234 * y) * (x - 0.1234 * y)); |
| 134 | } |
| 135 | |
| 136 | Which allows the multiply by constant to be CSE'd, producing: |
| 137 | |
| 138 | _foo: |
| 139 | mulsd LCPI1_0(%rip), %xmm1 |
| 140 | movapd %xmm1, %xmm2 |
| 141 | addsd %xmm0, %xmm2 |
| 142 | subsd %xmm1, %xmm0 |
| 143 | mulsd %xmm2, %xmm0 |
| 144 | ret |
| 145 | |
| 146 | This doesn't need -ffast-math support at all. This is particularly bad because |
| 147 | the llvm-gcc frontend is canonicalizing the later into the former, but clang |
| 148 | doesn't have this problem. |
| 149 | |
Chris Lattner | 74cfb7d | 2006-03-11 20:20:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 150 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 151 | |
Chris Lattner | 82c78b2 | 2006-03-09 20:13:21 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 152 | These two functions should generate the same code on big-endian systems: |
| 153 | |
| 154 | int g(int *j,int *l) { return memcmp(j,l,4); } |
| 155 | int h(int *j, int *l) { return *j - *l; } |
| 156 | |
| 157 | this could be done in SelectionDAGISel.cpp, along with other special cases, |
| 158 | for 1,2,4,8 bytes. |
| 159 | |
| 160 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 161 | |
Chris Lattner | c04b423 | 2006-03-22 07:33:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 162 | It would be nice to revert this patch: |
| 163 | http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20060213/031986.html |
| 164 | |
| 165 | And teach the dag combiner enough to simplify the code expanded before |
| 166 | legalize. It seems plausible that this knowledge would let it simplify other |
| 167 | stuff too. |
| 168 | |
Chris Lattner | e6cd96d | 2006-03-24 19:59:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 169 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 170 | |
Reid Spencer | ac9dcb9 | 2007-02-15 03:39:18 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 171 | For vector types, TargetData.cpp::getTypeInfo() returns alignment that is equal |
Evan Cheng | 67d3d4c | 2006-03-31 22:35:14 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 172 | to the type size. It works but can be overly conservative as the alignment of |
Reid Spencer | ac9dcb9 | 2007-02-15 03:39:18 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 173 | specific vector types are target dependent. |
Chris Lattner | eaa7c06 | 2006-04-01 04:08:29 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 174 | |
| 175 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 176 | |
Dan Gohman | 1f3be1a | 2009-05-11 18:51:16 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 177 | We should produce an unaligned load from code like this: |
Chris Lattner | eaa7c06 | 2006-04-01 04:08:29 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 178 | |
| 179 | v4sf example(float *P) { |
| 180 | return (v4sf){P[0], P[1], P[2], P[3] }; |
| 181 | } |
| 182 | |
| 183 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 184 | |
Chris Lattner | 16abfdf | 2006-05-18 18:26:13 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 185 | Add support for conditional increments, and other related patterns. Instead |
| 186 | of: |
| 187 | |
| 188 | movl 136(%esp), %eax |
| 189 | cmpl $0, %eax |
| 190 | je LBB16_2 #cond_next |
| 191 | LBB16_1: #cond_true |
| 192 | incl _foo |
| 193 | LBB16_2: #cond_next |
| 194 | |
| 195 | emit: |
| 196 | movl _foo, %eax |
| 197 | cmpl $1, %edi |
| 198 | sbbl $-1, %eax |
| 199 | movl %eax, _foo |
| 200 | |
| 201 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 870cf1b | 2006-05-19 20:45:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 202 | |
| 203 | Combine: a = sin(x), b = cos(x) into a,b = sincos(x). |
| 204 | |
| 205 | Expand these to calls of sin/cos and stores: |
| 206 | double sincos(double x, double *sin, double *cos); |
| 207 | float sincosf(float x, float *sin, float *cos); |
| 208 | long double sincosl(long double x, long double *sin, long double *cos); |
| 209 | |
| 210 | Doing so could allow SROA of the destination pointers. See also: |
| 211 | http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17687 |
| 212 | |
Chris Lattner | 2dae65d | 2008-12-10 01:30:48 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 213 | This is now easily doable with MRVs. We could even make an intrinsic for this |
| 214 | if anyone cared enough about sincos. |
| 215 | |
Chris Lattner | 870cf1b | 2006-05-19 20:45:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 216 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | f00f68a | 2006-05-19 21:01:38 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 217 | |
Chris Lattner | 7ed96ab | 2006-09-16 23:57:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 218 | quantum_sigma_x in 462.libquantum contains the following loop: |
| 219 | |
| 220 | for(i=0; i<reg->size; i++) |
| 221 | { |
| 222 | /* Flip the target bit of each basis state */ |
| 223 | reg->node[i].state ^= ((MAX_UNSIGNED) 1 << target); |
| 224 | } |
| 225 | |
| 226 | Where MAX_UNSIGNED/state is a 64-bit int. On a 32-bit platform it would be just |
| 227 | so cool to turn it into something like: |
| 228 | |
Chris Lattner | b33a42a | 2006-09-18 04:54:35 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 229 | long long Res = ((MAX_UNSIGNED) 1 << target); |
Chris Lattner | 7ed96ab | 2006-09-16 23:57:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 230 | if (target < 32) { |
| 231 | for(i=0; i<reg->size; i++) |
Chris Lattner | b33a42a | 2006-09-18 04:54:35 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 232 | reg->node[i].state ^= Res & 0xFFFFFFFFULL; |
Chris Lattner | 7ed96ab | 2006-09-16 23:57:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 233 | } else { |
| 234 | for(i=0; i<reg->size; i++) |
Chris Lattner | b33a42a | 2006-09-18 04:54:35 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 235 | reg->node[i].state ^= Res & 0xFFFFFFFF00000000ULL |
Chris Lattner | 7ed96ab | 2006-09-16 23:57:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 236 | } |
| 237 | |
| 238 | ... which would only do one 32-bit XOR per loop iteration instead of two. |
| 239 | |
| 240 | It would also be nice to recognize the reg->size doesn't alias reg->node[i], but |
Chris Lattner | 9c6a0dc | 2009-11-26 01:51:18 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 241 | this requires TBAA. |
Chris Lattner | faa6adf | 2009-09-21 06:04:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 242 | |
| 243 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 244 | |
Chris Lattner | b1ac769 | 2008-10-05 02:16:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 245 | This isn't recognized as bswap by instcombine (yes, it really is bswap): |
Chris Lattner | f9bae43 | 2006-12-08 02:01:32 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 246 | |
| 247 | unsigned long reverse(unsigned v) { |
| 248 | unsigned t; |
| 249 | t = v ^ ((v << 16) | (v >> 16)); |
| 250 | t &= ~0xff0000; |
| 251 | v = (v << 24) | (v >> 8); |
| 252 | return v ^ (t >> 8); |
| 253 | } |
| 254 | |
Chris Lattner | fb981f3 | 2006-09-25 17:12:14 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 255 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 256 | |
Chris Lattner | 19310fc | 2011-02-21 02:13:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 257 | [LOOP DELETION] |
| 258 | |
| 259 | We don't delete this output free loop, because trip count analysis doesn't |
| 260 | realize that it is finite (if it were infinite, it would be undefined). Not |
| 261 | having this blocks Loop Idiom from matching strlen and friends. |
| 262 | |
| 263 | void foo(char *C) { |
| 264 | int x = 0; |
| 265 | while (*C) |
| 266 | ++x,++C; |
| 267 | } |
| 268 | |
| 269 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 270 | |
Chris Lattner | 818ff34 | 2010-01-23 18:49:30 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 271 | [LOOP RECOGNITION] |
| 272 | |
Chris Lattner | f4fee2a | 2008-10-15 16:02:15 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 273 | These idioms should be recognized as popcount (see PR1488): |
| 274 | |
| 275 | unsigned countbits_slow(unsigned v) { |
| 276 | unsigned c; |
| 277 | for (c = 0; v; v >>= 1) |
| 278 | c += v & 1; |
| 279 | return c; |
| 280 | } |
| 281 | unsigned countbits_fast(unsigned v){ |
| 282 | unsigned c; |
| 283 | for (c = 0; v; c++) |
| 284 | v &= v - 1; // clear the least significant bit set |
| 285 | return c; |
| 286 | } |
| 287 | |
| 288 | BITBOARD = unsigned long long |
| 289 | int PopCnt(register BITBOARD a) { |
| 290 | register int c=0; |
| 291 | while(a) { |
| 292 | c++; |
| 293 | a &= a - 1; |
| 294 | } |
| 295 | return c; |
| 296 | } |
| 297 | unsigned int popcount(unsigned int input) { |
| 298 | unsigned int count = 0; |
| 299 | for (unsigned int i = 0; i < 4 * 8; i++) |
| 300 | count += (input >> i) & i; |
| 301 | return count; |
| 302 | } |
| 303 | |
Chris Lattner | 477a988 | 2011-02-21 01:33:38 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 304 | This should be recognized as CLZ: rdar://8459039 |
| 305 | |
| 306 | unsigned clz_a(unsigned a) { |
| 307 | int i; |
| 308 | for (i=0;i<32;i++) |
| 309 | if (a & (1<<(31-i))) |
| 310 | return i; |
| 311 | return 32; |
| 312 | } |
| 313 | |
Chris Lattner | 527b47d | 2011-01-02 18:31:38 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 314 | This sort of thing should be added to the loop idiom pass. |
Chris Lattner | 9c6a0dc | 2009-11-26 01:51:18 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 315 | |
Chris Lattner | f4fee2a | 2008-10-15 16:02:15 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 316 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 317 | |
Chris Lattner | fb981f3 | 2006-09-25 17:12:14 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 318 | These should turn into single 16-bit (unaligned?) loads on little/big endian |
| 319 | processors. |
| 320 | |
| 321 | unsigned short read_16_le(const unsigned char *adr) { |
| 322 | return adr[0] | (adr[1] << 8); |
| 323 | } |
| 324 | unsigned short read_16_be(const unsigned char *adr) { |
| 325 | return (adr[0] << 8) | adr[1]; |
| 326 | } |
| 327 | |
| 328 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | cf10391 | 2006-10-24 16:12:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 329 | |
Reid Spencer | 1628cec | 2006-10-26 06:15:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 330 | -instcombine should handle this transform: |
Reid Spencer | e4d87aa | 2006-12-23 06:05:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 331 | icmp pred (sdiv X / C1 ), C2 |
Reid Spencer | 1628cec | 2006-10-26 06:15:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 332 | when X, C1, and C2 are unsigned. Similarly for udiv and signed operands. |
| 333 | |
| 334 | Currently InstCombine avoids this transform but will do it when the signs of |
| 335 | the operands and the sign of the divide match. See the FIXME in |
| 336 | InstructionCombining.cpp in the visitSetCondInst method after the switch case |
| 337 | for Instruction::UDiv (around line 4447) for more details. |
| 338 | |
| 339 | The SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/hash and hash2 tests have examples of |
| 340 | this construct. |
Chris Lattner | d7c628d | 2006-11-03 22:27:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 341 | |
| 342 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 343 | |
Chris Lattner | aa306c2 | 2010-01-23 17:59:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 344 | [LOOP OPTIMIZATION] |
| 345 | |
| 346 | SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/dt.c shows several interesting optimization |
| 347 | opportunities in its double_array_divs_variable function: it needs loop |
| 348 | interchange, memory promotion (which LICM already does), vectorization and |
| 349 | variable trip count loop unrolling (since it has a constant trip count). ICC |
| 350 | apparently produces this very nice code with -ffast-math: |
| 351 | |
| 352 | ..B1.70: # Preds ..B1.70 ..B1.69 |
| 353 | mulpd %xmm0, %xmm1 #108.2 |
| 354 | mulpd %xmm0, %xmm1 #108.2 |
| 355 | mulpd %xmm0, %xmm1 #108.2 |
| 356 | mulpd %xmm0, %xmm1 #108.2 |
| 357 | addl $8, %edx # |
| 358 | cmpl $131072, %edx #108.2 |
| 359 | jb ..B1.70 # Prob 99% #108.2 |
| 360 | |
| 361 | It would be better to count down to zero, but this is a lot better than what we |
| 362 | do. |
| 363 | |
| 364 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 365 | |
Chris Lattner | 03a6d96 | 2007-01-16 06:39:48 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 366 | Consider: |
| 367 | |
| 368 | typedef unsigned U32; |
| 369 | typedef unsigned long long U64; |
| 370 | int test (U32 *inst, U64 *regs) { |
| 371 | U64 effective_addr2; |
| 372 | U32 temp = *inst; |
| 373 | int r1 = (temp >> 20) & 0xf; |
| 374 | int b2 = (temp >> 16) & 0xf; |
| 375 | effective_addr2 = temp & 0xfff; |
| 376 | if (b2) effective_addr2 += regs[b2]; |
| 377 | b2 = (temp >> 12) & 0xf; |
| 378 | if (b2) effective_addr2 += regs[b2]; |
| 379 | effective_addr2 &= regs[4]; |
| 380 | if ((effective_addr2 & 3) == 0) |
| 381 | return 1; |
| 382 | return 0; |
| 383 | } |
| 384 | |
| 385 | Note that only the low 2 bits of effective_addr2 are used. On 32-bit systems, |
| 386 | we don't eliminate the computation of the top half of effective_addr2 because |
| 387 | we don't have whole-function selection dags. On x86, this means we use one |
| 388 | extra register for the function when effective_addr2 is declared as U64 than |
| 389 | when it is declared U32. |
| 390 | |
Chris Lattner | 1742498 | 2009-11-10 23:47:45 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 391 | PHI Slicing could be extended to do this. |
| 392 | |
Chris Lattner | 03a6d96 | 2007-01-16 06:39:48 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 393 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 394 | |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 395 | Tail call elim should be more aggressive, checking to see if the call is |
| 396 | followed by an uncond branch to an exit block. |
| 397 | |
| 398 | ; This testcase is due to tail-duplication not wanting to copy the return |
| 399 | ; instruction into the terminating blocks because there was other code |
| 400 | ; optimized out of the function after the taildup happened. |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 401 | ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | opt -tailcallelim | llvm-dis | not grep call |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 402 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 403 | define i32 @t4(i32 %a) { |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 404 | entry: |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 405 | %tmp.1 = and i32 %a, 1 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 406 | %tmp.2 = icmp ne i32 %tmp.1, 0 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 407 | br i1 %tmp.2, label %then.0, label %else.0 |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 408 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 409 | then.0: ; preds = %entry |
| 410 | %tmp.5 = add i32 %a, -1 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 411 | %tmp.3 = call i32 @t4( i32 %tmp.5 ) ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 412 | br label %return |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 413 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 414 | else.0: ; preds = %entry |
| 415 | %tmp.7 = icmp ne i32 %a, 0 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 416 | br i1 %tmp.7, label %then.1, label %return |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 417 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 418 | then.1: ; preds = %else.0 |
| 419 | %tmp.11 = add i32 %a, -2 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 420 | %tmp.9 = call i32 @t4( i32 %tmp.11 ) ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 421 | br label %return |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 422 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 423 | return: ; preds = %then.1, %else.0, %then.0 |
| 424 | %result.0 = phi i32 [ 0, %else.0 ], [ %tmp.3, %then.0 ], |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 425 | [ %tmp.9, %then.1 ] |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 426 | ret i32 %result.0 |
Chris Lattner | 5e14b0d | 2007-05-05 22:29:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 427 | } |
Chris Lattner | f110a2b | 2007-05-05 22:44:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 428 | |
| 429 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 430 | |
Chris Lattner | c90b866 | 2008-08-10 00:47:21 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 431 | Tail recursion elimination should handle: |
| 432 | |
| 433 | int pow2m1(int n) { |
| 434 | if (n == 0) |
| 435 | return 0; |
| 436 | return 2 * pow2m1 (n - 1) + 1; |
| 437 | } |
| 438 | |
| 439 | Also, multiplies can be turned into SHL's, so they should be handled as if |
| 440 | they were associative. "return foo() << 1" can be tail recursion eliminated. |
| 441 | |
| 442 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 443 | |
Chris Lattner | f110a2b | 2007-05-05 22:44:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 444 | Argument promotion should promote arguments for recursive functions, like |
| 445 | this: |
| 446 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 447 | ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | opt -argpromotion | llvm-dis | grep x.val |
Chris Lattner | f110a2b | 2007-05-05 22:44:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 448 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 449 | define internal i32 @foo(i32* %x) { |
Chris Lattner | f110a2b | 2007-05-05 22:44:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 450 | entry: |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 451 | %tmp = load i32* %x ; <i32> [#uses=0] |
| 452 | %tmp.foo = call i32 @foo( i32* %x ) ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 453 | ret i32 %tmp.foo |
Chris Lattner | f110a2b | 2007-05-05 22:44:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 454 | } |
| 455 | |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 456 | define i32 @bar(i32* %x) { |
Chris Lattner | f110a2b | 2007-05-05 22:44:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 457 | entry: |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 458 | %tmp3 = call i32 @foo( i32* %x ) ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 459 | ret i32 %tmp3 |
Chris Lattner | f110a2b | 2007-05-05 22:44:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 460 | } |
| 461 | |
Chris Lattner | 81f2d71 | 2007-12-05 23:05:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 462 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 166a268 | 2007-12-28 04:42:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 463 | |
Chris Lattner | a1643ba | 2007-12-28 22:30:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 464 | We should investigate an instruction sinking pass. Consider this silly |
| 465 | example in pic mode: |
| 466 | |
| 467 | #include <assert.h> |
| 468 | void foo(int x) { |
| 469 | assert(x); |
| 470 | //... |
| 471 | } |
| 472 | |
| 473 | we compile this to: |
| 474 | _foo: |
| 475 | subl $28, %esp |
| 476 | call "L1$pb" |
| 477 | "L1$pb": |
| 478 | popl %eax |
| 479 | cmpl $0, 32(%esp) |
| 480 | je LBB1_2 # cond_true |
| 481 | LBB1_1: # return |
| 482 | # ... |
| 483 | addl $28, %esp |
| 484 | ret |
| 485 | LBB1_2: # cond_true |
| 486 | ... |
| 487 | |
| 488 | The PIC base computation (call+popl) is only used on one path through the |
| 489 | code, but is currently always computed in the entry block. It would be |
| 490 | better to sink the picbase computation down into the block for the |
| 491 | assertion, as it is the only one that uses it. This happens for a lot of |
| 492 | code with early outs. |
| 493 | |
Chris Lattner | 92c06a0 | 2007-12-29 01:05:01 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 494 | Another example is loads of arguments, which are usually emitted into the |
| 495 | entry block on targets like x86. If not used in all paths through a |
| 496 | function, they should be sunk into the ones that do. |
| 497 | |
Chris Lattner | a1643ba | 2007-12-28 22:30:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 498 | In this case, whole-function-isel would also handle this. |
Chris Lattner | 166a268 | 2007-12-28 04:42:05 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 499 | |
| 500 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | b304194 | 2008-01-07 21:38:14 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 501 | |
| 502 | Investigate lowering of sparse switch statements into perfect hash tables: |
| 503 | http://burtleburtle.net/bob/hash/perfect.html |
| 504 | |
| 505 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | f61b63e | 2008-01-09 00:17:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 506 | |
| 507 | We should turn things like "load+fabs+store" and "load+fneg+store" into the |
| 508 | corresponding integer operations. On a yonah, this loop: |
| 509 | |
| 510 | double a[256]; |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 511 | void foo() { |
| 512 | int i, b; |
| 513 | for (b = 0; b < 10000000; b++) |
| 514 | for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) |
| 515 | a[i] = -a[i]; |
| 516 | } |
Chris Lattner | f61b63e | 2008-01-09 00:17:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 517 | |
| 518 | is twice as slow as this loop: |
| 519 | |
| 520 | long long a[256]; |
Chris Lattner | 7c4e9a4 | 2008-02-18 18:46:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 521 | void foo() { |
| 522 | int i, b; |
| 523 | for (b = 0; b < 10000000; b++) |
| 524 | for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) |
| 525 | a[i] ^= (1ULL << 63); |
| 526 | } |
Chris Lattner | f61b63e | 2008-01-09 00:17:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 527 | |
| 528 | and I suspect other processors are similar. On X86 in particular this is a |
| 529 | big win because doing this with integers allows the use of read/modify/write |
| 530 | instructions. |
| 531 | |
| 532 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 8372601 | 2008-01-10 18:25:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 533 | |
| 534 | DAG Combiner should try to combine small loads into larger loads when |
| 535 | profitable. For example, we compile this C++ example: |
| 536 | |
| 537 | struct THotKey { short Key; bool Control; bool Shift; bool Alt; }; |
| 538 | extern THotKey m_HotKey; |
| 539 | THotKey GetHotKey () { return m_HotKey; } |
| 540 | |
Chris Lattner | 527b47d | 2011-01-02 18:31:38 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 541 | into (-m64 -O3 -fno-exceptions -static -fomit-frame-pointer): |
Chris Lattner | 8372601 | 2008-01-10 18:25:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 542 | |
Chris Lattner | 527b47d | 2011-01-02 18:31:38 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 543 | __Z9GetHotKeyv: ## @_Z9GetHotKeyv |
| 544 | movq _m_HotKey@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax |
| 545 | movzwl (%rax), %ecx |
| 546 | movzbl 2(%rax), %edx |
| 547 | shlq $16, %rdx |
| 548 | orq %rcx, %rdx |
| 549 | movzbl 3(%rax), %ecx |
| 550 | shlq $24, %rcx |
| 551 | orq %rdx, %rcx |
| 552 | movzbl 4(%rax), %eax |
| 553 | shlq $32, %rax |
| 554 | orq %rcx, %rax |
| 555 | ret |
Chris Lattner | 8372601 | 2008-01-10 18:25:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 556 | |
| 557 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 497b7e9 | 2008-01-11 06:17:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 558 | |
Nate Begeman | e9fe65c | 2008-02-18 18:39:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 559 | We should add an FRINT node to the DAG to model targets that have legal |
| 560 | implementations of ceil/floor/rint. |
Chris Lattner | 48840f8 | 2008-02-28 05:34:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 561 | |
| 562 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 563 | |
| 564 | Consider: |
| 565 | |
| 566 | int test() { |
Benjamin Kramer | 9d071cb | 2010-12-23 15:32:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 567 | long long input[8] = {1,0,1,0,1,0,1,0}; |
Chris Lattner | 48840f8 | 2008-02-28 05:34:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 568 | foo(input); |
| 569 | } |
| 570 | |
Chris Lattner | 9c8fb9e | 2011-01-01 22:52:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 571 | Clang compiles this into: |
Chris Lattner | 48840f8 | 2008-02-28 05:34:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 572 | |
Chris Lattner | 9c8fb9e | 2011-01-01 22:52:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 573 | call void @llvm.memset.p0i8.i64(i8* %tmp, i8 0, i64 64, i32 16, i1 false) |
| 574 | %0 = getelementptr [8 x i64]* %input, i64 0, i64 0 |
| 575 | store i64 1, i64* %0, align 16 |
| 576 | %1 = getelementptr [8 x i64]* %input, i64 0, i64 2 |
| 577 | store i64 1, i64* %1, align 16 |
| 578 | %2 = getelementptr [8 x i64]* %input, i64 0, i64 4 |
| 579 | store i64 1, i64* %2, align 16 |
| 580 | %3 = getelementptr [8 x i64]* %input, i64 0, i64 6 |
| 581 | store i64 1, i64* %3, align 16 |
Chris Lattner | 48840f8 | 2008-02-28 05:34:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 582 | |
Chris Lattner | 9c8fb9e | 2011-01-01 22:52:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 583 | Which gets codegen'd into: |
| 584 | |
| 585 | pxor %xmm0, %xmm0 |
| 586 | movaps %xmm0, -16(%rbp) |
| 587 | movaps %xmm0, -32(%rbp) |
| 588 | movaps %xmm0, -48(%rbp) |
| 589 | movaps %xmm0, -64(%rbp) |
| 590 | movq $1, -64(%rbp) |
| 591 | movq $1, -48(%rbp) |
| 592 | movq $1, -32(%rbp) |
| 593 | movq $1, -16(%rbp) |
| 594 | |
| 595 | It would be better to have 4 movq's of 0 instead of the movaps's. |
Chris Lattner | 48840f8 | 2008-02-28 05:34:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 596 | |
| 597 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | a11deb0 | 2008-03-02 02:51:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 598 | |
| 599 | http://llvm.org/PR717: |
| 600 | |
| 601 | The following code should compile into "ret int undef". Instead, LLVM |
| 602 | produces "ret int 0": |
| 603 | |
| 604 | int f() { |
| 605 | int x = 4; |
| 606 | int y; |
| 607 | if (x == 3) y = 0; |
| 608 | return y; |
| 609 | } |
| 610 | |
| 611 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 53b7277 | 2008-03-02 19:29:42 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 612 | |
| 613 | The loop unroller should partially unroll loops (instead of peeling them) |
| 614 | when code growth isn't too bad and when an unroll count allows simplification |
| 615 | of some code within the loop. One trivial example is: |
| 616 | |
| 617 | #include <stdio.h> |
| 618 | int main() { |
| 619 | int nRet = 17; |
| 620 | int nLoop; |
| 621 | for ( nLoop = 0; nLoop < 1000; nLoop++ ) { |
| 622 | if ( nLoop & 1 ) |
| 623 | nRet += 2; |
| 624 | else |
| 625 | nRet -= 1; |
| 626 | } |
| 627 | return nRet; |
| 628 | } |
| 629 | |
| 630 | Unrolling by 2 would eliminate the '&1' in both copies, leading to a net |
| 631 | reduction in code size. The resultant code would then also be suitable for |
| 632 | exit value computation. |
| 633 | |
| 634 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 349155b | 2008-03-17 01:47:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 635 | |
| 636 | We miss a bunch of rotate opportunities on various targets, including ppc, x86, |
| 637 | etc. On X86, we miss a bunch of 'rotate by variable' cases because the rotate |
| 638 | matching code in dag combine doesn't look through truncates aggressively |
| 639 | enough. Here are some testcases reduces from GCC PR17886: |
| 640 | |
Chris Lattner | 349155b | 2008-03-17 01:47:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 641 | unsigned long long f5(unsigned long long x, unsigned long long y) { |
| 642 | return (x << 8) | ((y >> 48) & 0xffull); |
| 643 | } |
| 644 | unsigned long long f6(unsigned long long x, unsigned long long y, int z) { |
| 645 | switch(z) { |
| 646 | case 1: |
| 647 | return (x << 8) | ((y >> 48) & 0xffull); |
| 648 | case 2: |
| 649 | return (x << 16) | ((y >> 40) & 0xffffull); |
| 650 | case 3: |
| 651 | return (x << 24) | ((y >> 32) & 0xffffffull); |
| 652 | case 4: |
| 653 | return (x << 32) | ((y >> 24) & 0xffffffffull); |
| 654 | default: |
| 655 | return (x << 40) | ((y >> 16) & 0xffffffffffull); |
| 656 | } |
| 657 | } |
| 658 | |
Chris Lattner | 349155b | 2008-03-17 01:47:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 659 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | f70107f | 2008-03-20 04:46:13 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 660 | |
Chris Lattner | ef17f08 | 2010-12-15 07:10:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 661 | This (and similar related idioms): |
| 662 | |
| 663 | unsigned int foo(unsigned char i) { |
| 664 | return i | (i<<8) | (i<<16) | (i<<24); |
| 665 | } |
| 666 | |
| 667 | compiles into: |
| 668 | |
| 669 | define i32 @foo(i8 zeroext %i) nounwind readnone ssp noredzone { |
| 670 | entry: |
| 671 | %conv = zext i8 %i to i32 |
| 672 | %shl = shl i32 %conv, 8 |
| 673 | %shl5 = shl i32 %conv, 16 |
| 674 | %shl9 = shl i32 %conv, 24 |
| 675 | %or = or i32 %shl9, %conv |
| 676 | %or6 = or i32 %or, %shl5 |
| 677 | %or10 = or i32 %or6, %shl |
| 678 | ret i32 %or10 |
| 679 | } |
| 680 | |
| 681 | it would be better as: |
| 682 | |
| 683 | unsigned int bar(unsigned char i) { |
| 684 | unsigned int j=i | (i << 8); |
| 685 | return j | (j<<16); |
| 686 | } |
| 687 | |
| 688 | aka: |
| 689 | |
| 690 | define i32 @bar(i8 zeroext %i) nounwind readnone ssp noredzone { |
| 691 | entry: |
| 692 | %conv = zext i8 %i to i32 |
| 693 | %shl = shl i32 %conv, 8 |
| 694 | %or = or i32 %shl, %conv |
| 695 | %shl5 = shl i32 %or, 16 |
| 696 | %or6 = or i32 %shl5, %or |
| 697 | ret i32 %or6 |
| 698 | } |
| 699 | |
| 700 | or even i*0x01010101, depending on the speed of the multiplier. The best way to |
| 701 | handle this is to canonicalize it to a multiply in IR and have codegen handle |
| 702 | lowering multiplies to shifts on cpus where shifts are faster. |
| 703 | |
| 704 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 705 | |
Chris Lattner | f70107f | 2008-03-20 04:46:13 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 706 | We do a number of simplifications in simplify libcalls to strength reduce |
| 707 | standard library functions, but we don't currently merge them together. For |
| 708 | example, it is useful to merge memcpy(a,b,strlen(b)) -> strcpy. This can only |
| 709 | be done safely if "b" isn't modified between the strlen and memcpy of course. |
| 710 | |
| 711 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 712 | |
Chris Lattner | 26e150f | 2008-08-10 01:14:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 713 | We compile this program: (from GCC PR11680) |
| 714 | http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/attachment.cgi?id=4487 |
| 715 | |
| 716 | Into code that runs the same speed in fast/slow modes, but both modes run 2x |
| 717 | slower than when compile with GCC (either 4.0 or 4.2): |
| 718 | |
| 719 | $ llvm-g++ perf.cpp -O3 -fno-exceptions |
| 720 | $ time ./a.out fast |
| 721 | 1.821u 0.003s 0:01.82 100.0% 0+0k 0+0io 0pf+0w |
| 722 | |
| 723 | $ g++ perf.cpp -O3 -fno-exceptions |
| 724 | $ time ./a.out fast |
| 725 | 0.821u 0.001s 0:00.82 100.0% 0+0k 0+0io 0pf+0w |
| 726 | |
| 727 | It looks like we are making the same inlining decisions, so this may be raw |
| 728 | codegen badness or something else (haven't investigated). |
| 729 | |
| 730 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 731 | |
Chris Lattner | 26e150f | 2008-08-10 01:14:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 732 | Divisibility by constant can be simplified (according to GCC PR12849) from |
| 733 | being a mulhi to being a mul lo (cheaper). Testcase: |
| 734 | |
| 735 | void bar(unsigned n) { |
| 736 | if (n % 3 == 0) |
| 737 | true(); |
| 738 | } |
| 739 | |
Eli Friedman | bcae205 | 2009-12-12 23:23:43 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 740 | This is equivalent to the following, where 2863311531 is the multiplicative |
| 741 | inverse of 3, and 1431655766 is ((2^32)-1)/3+1: |
| 742 | void bar(unsigned n) { |
| 743 | if (n * 2863311531U < 1431655766U) |
| 744 | true(); |
| 745 | } |
| 746 | |
| 747 | The same transformation can work with an even modulo with the addition of a |
| 748 | rotate: rotate the result of the multiply to the right by the number of bits |
| 749 | which need to be zero for the condition to be true, and shrink the compare RHS |
| 750 | by the same amount. Unless the target supports rotates, though, that |
| 751 | transformation probably isn't worthwhile. |
| 752 | |
| 753 | The transformation can also easily be made to work with non-zero equality |
| 754 | comparisons: just transform, for example, "n % 3 == 1" to "(n-1) % 3 == 0". |
Chris Lattner | 26e150f | 2008-08-10 01:14:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 755 | |
| 756 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 23f35bc | 2008-08-19 06:22:16 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 757 | |
Chris Lattner | db03983 | 2008-10-15 16:06:03 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 758 | Better mod/ref analysis for scanf would allow us to eliminate the vtable and a |
| 759 | bunch of other stuff from this example (see PR1604): |
| 760 | |
| 761 | #include <cstdio> |
| 762 | struct test { |
| 763 | int val; |
| 764 | virtual ~test() {} |
| 765 | }; |
| 766 | |
| 767 | int main() { |
| 768 | test t; |
| 769 | std::scanf("%d", &t.val); |
| 770 | std::printf("%d\n", t.val); |
| 771 | } |
| 772 | |
| 773 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 774 | |
Nick Lewycky | d2f0db1 | 2008-11-27 22:41:45 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 775 | These functions perform the same computation, but produce different assembly. |
Nick Lewycky | df563ca | 2008-11-27 22:12:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 776 | |
| 777 | define i8 @select(i8 %x) readnone nounwind { |
| 778 | %A = icmp ult i8 %x, 250 |
| 779 | %B = select i1 %A, i8 0, i8 1 |
| 780 | ret i8 %B |
| 781 | } |
| 782 | |
| 783 | define i8 @addshr(i8 %x) readnone nounwind { |
| 784 | %A = zext i8 %x to i9 |
| 785 | %B = add i9 %A, 6 ;; 256 - 250 == 6 |
| 786 | %C = lshr i9 %B, 8 |
| 787 | %D = trunc i9 %C to i8 |
| 788 | ret i8 %D |
| 789 | } |
| 790 | |
| 791 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Eli Friedman | 4e16b29 | 2008-11-30 07:36:04 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 792 | |
| 793 | From gcc bug 24696: |
| 794 | int |
| 795 | f (unsigned long a, unsigned long b, unsigned long c) |
| 796 | { |
| 797 | return ((a & (c - 1)) != 0) || ((b & (c - 1)) != 0); |
| 798 | } |
| 799 | int |
| 800 | f (unsigned long a, unsigned long b, unsigned long c) |
| 801 | { |
| 802 | return ((a & (c - 1)) != 0) | ((b & (c - 1)) != 0); |
| 803 | } |
| 804 | Both should combine to ((a|b) & (c-1)) != 0. Currently not optimized with |
| 805 | "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 806 | |
| 807 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 808 | |
| 809 | From GCC Bug 20192: |
| 810 | #define PMD_MASK (~((1UL << 23) - 1)) |
| 811 | void clear_pmd_range(unsigned long start, unsigned long end) |
| 812 | { |
| 813 | if (!(start & ~PMD_MASK) && !(end & ~PMD_MASK)) |
| 814 | f(); |
| 815 | } |
| 816 | The expression should optimize to something like |
| 817 | "!((start|end)&~PMD_MASK). Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 818 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 819 | |
| 820 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 821 | |
Eli Friedman | 4e16b29 | 2008-11-30 07:36:04 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 822 | unsigned int f(unsigned int i, unsigned int n) {++i; if (i == n) ++i; return |
| 823 | i;} |
| 824 | unsigned int f2(unsigned int i, unsigned int n) {++i; i += i == n; return i;} |
| 825 | These should combine to the same thing. Currently, the first function |
| 826 | produces better code on X86. |
| 827 | |
| 828 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 829 | |
Eli Friedman | 4e16b29 | 2008-11-30 07:36:04 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 830 | From GCC Bug 15784: |
| 831 | #define abs(x) x>0?x:-x |
| 832 | int f(int x, int y) |
| 833 | { |
| 834 | return (abs(x)) >= 0; |
| 835 | } |
| 836 | This should optimize to x == INT_MIN. (With -fwrapv.) Currently not |
| 837 | optimized with "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 838 | |
| 839 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 840 | |
| 841 | From GCC Bug 14753: |
| 842 | void |
| 843 | rotate_cst (unsigned int a) |
| 844 | { |
| 845 | a = (a << 10) | (a >> 22); |
| 846 | if (a == 123) |
| 847 | bar (); |
| 848 | } |
| 849 | void |
| 850 | minus_cst (unsigned int a) |
| 851 | { |
| 852 | unsigned int tem; |
| 853 | |
| 854 | tem = 20 - a; |
| 855 | if (tem == 5) |
| 856 | bar (); |
| 857 | } |
| 858 | void |
| 859 | mask_gt (unsigned int a) |
| 860 | { |
| 861 | /* This is equivalent to a > 15. */ |
| 862 | if ((a & ~7) > 8) |
| 863 | bar (); |
| 864 | } |
| 865 | void |
| 866 | rshift_gt (unsigned int a) |
| 867 | { |
| 868 | /* This is equivalent to a > 23. */ |
| 869 | if ((a >> 2) > 5) |
| 870 | bar (); |
| 871 | } |
Chris Lattner | cb40195 | 2011-02-17 01:43:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 872 | |
Eli Friedman | 4e16b29 | 2008-11-30 07:36:04 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 873 | All should simplify to a single comparison. All of these are |
| 874 | currently not optimized with "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt |
| 875 | -std-compile-opts". |
| 876 | |
| 877 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 878 | |
| 879 | From GCC Bug 32605: |
| 880 | int c(int* x) {return (char*)x+2 == (char*)x;} |
| 881 | Should combine to 0. Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 882 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts" (although llc can optimize it). |
| 883 | |
| 884 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 885 | |
Eli Friedman | 4e16b29 | 2008-11-30 07:36:04 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 886 | int a(unsigned b) {return ((b << 31) | (b << 30)) >> 31;} |
| 887 | Should be combined to "((b >> 1) | b) & 1". Currently not optimized |
| 888 | with "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 889 | |
| 890 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 891 | |
| 892 | unsigned a(unsigned x, unsigned y) { return x | (y & 1) | (y & 2);} |
| 893 | Should combine to "x | (y & 3)". Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 894 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 895 | |
| 896 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 897 | |
Eli Friedman | 4e16b29 | 2008-11-30 07:36:04 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 898 | int a(int a, int b, int c) {return (~a & c) | ((c|a) & b);} |
| 899 | Should fold to "(~a & c) | (a & b)". Currently not optimized with |
| 900 | "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 901 | |
| 902 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 903 | |
| 904 | int a(int a,int b) {return (~(a|b))|a;} |
| 905 | Should fold to "a|~b". Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 906 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 907 | |
| 908 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 909 | |
| 910 | int a(int a, int b) {return (a&&b) || (a&&!b);} |
| 911 | Should fold to "a". Currently not optimized with "clang -emit-llvm-bc |
| 912 | | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 913 | |
| 914 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 915 | |
| 916 | int a(int a, int b, int c) {return (a&&b) || (!a&&c);} |
| 917 | Should fold to "a ? b : c", or at least something sane. Currently not |
| 918 | optimized with "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 919 | |
| 920 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 921 | |
| 922 | int a(int a, int b, int c) {return (a&&b) || (a&&c) || (a&&b&&c);} |
| 923 | Should fold to a && (b || c). Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 924 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 925 | |
| 926 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 927 | |
| 928 | int a(int x) {return x | ((x & 8) ^ 8);} |
| 929 | Should combine to x | 8. Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 930 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 931 | |
| 932 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 933 | |
| 934 | int a(int x) {return x ^ ((x & 8) ^ 8);} |
| 935 | Should also combine to x | 8. Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 936 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 937 | |
| 938 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 939 | |
Eli Friedman | 4e16b29 | 2008-11-30 07:36:04 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 940 | int a(int x) {return ((x | -9) ^ 8) & x;} |
| 941 | Should combine to x & -9. Currently not optimized with "clang |
| 942 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 943 | |
| 944 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 945 | |
| 946 | unsigned a(unsigned a) {return a * 0x11111111 >> 28 & 1;} |
| 947 | Should combine to "a * 0x88888888 >> 31". Currently not optimized |
| 948 | with "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 949 | |
| 950 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 951 | |
| 952 | unsigned a(char* x) {if ((*x & 32) == 0) return b();} |
| 953 | There's an unnecessary zext in the generated code with "clang |
| 954 | -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 955 | |
| 956 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 957 | |
| 958 | unsigned a(unsigned long long x) {return 40 * (x >> 1);} |
| 959 | Should combine to "20 * (((unsigned)x) & -2)". Currently not |
| 960 | optimized with "clang -emit-llvm-bc | opt -std-compile-opts". |
| 961 | |
| 962 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Bill Wendling | 3bdcda8 | 2008-12-02 05:12:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 963 | |
Chris Lattner | 88d84b2 | 2008-12-02 06:32:34 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 964 | This was noticed in the entryblock for grokdeclarator in 403.gcc: |
| 965 | |
| 966 | %tmp = icmp eq i32 %decl_context, 4 |
| 967 | %decl_context_addr.0 = select i1 %tmp, i32 3, i32 %decl_context |
| 968 | %tmp1 = icmp eq i32 %decl_context_addr.0, 1 |
| 969 | %decl_context_addr.1 = select i1 %tmp1, i32 0, i32 %decl_context_addr.0 |
| 970 | |
| 971 | tmp1 should be simplified to something like: |
| 972 | (!tmp || decl_context == 1) |
| 973 | |
| 974 | This allows recursive simplifications, tmp1 is used all over the place in |
| 975 | the function, e.g. by: |
| 976 | |
| 977 | %tmp23 = icmp eq i32 %decl_context_addr.1, 0 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 978 | %tmp24 = xor i1 %tmp1, true ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 979 | %or.cond8 = and i1 %tmp23, %tmp24 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 980 | |
| 981 | later. |
| 982 | |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 983 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 984 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 985 | [STORE SINKING] |
| 986 | |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 987 | Store sinking: This code: |
| 988 | |
| 989 | void f (int n, int *cond, int *res) { |
| 990 | int i; |
| 991 | *res = 0; |
| 992 | for (i = 0; i < n; i++) |
| 993 | if (*cond) |
| 994 | *res ^= 234; /* (*) */ |
| 995 | } |
| 996 | |
| 997 | On this function GVN hoists the fully redundant value of *res, but nothing |
| 998 | moves the store out. This gives us this code: |
| 999 | |
| 1000 | bb: ; preds = %bb2, %entry |
| 1001 | %.rle = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %.rle6, %bb2 ] |
| 1002 | %i.05 = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %indvar.next, %bb2 ] |
| 1003 | %1 = load i32* %cond, align 4 |
| 1004 | %2 = icmp eq i32 %1, 0 |
| 1005 | br i1 %2, label %bb2, label %bb1 |
| 1006 | |
| 1007 | bb1: ; preds = %bb |
| 1008 | %3 = xor i32 %.rle, 234 |
| 1009 | store i32 %3, i32* %res, align 4 |
| 1010 | br label %bb2 |
| 1011 | |
| 1012 | bb2: ; preds = %bb, %bb1 |
| 1013 | %.rle6 = phi i32 [ %3, %bb1 ], [ %.rle, %bb ] |
| 1014 | %indvar.next = add i32 %i.05, 1 |
| 1015 | %exitcond = icmp eq i32 %indvar.next, %n |
| 1016 | br i1 %exitcond, label %return, label %bb |
| 1017 | |
| 1018 | DSE should sink partially dead stores to get the store out of the loop. |
| 1019 | |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1020 | Here's another partial dead case: |
| 1021 | http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=12395 |
| 1022 | |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1023 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1024 | |
| 1025 | Scalar PRE hoists the mul in the common block up to the else: |
| 1026 | |
| 1027 | int test (int a, int b, int c, int g) { |
| 1028 | int d, e; |
| 1029 | if (a) |
| 1030 | d = b * c; |
| 1031 | else |
| 1032 | d = b - c; |
| 1033 | e = b * c + g; |
| 1034 | return d + e; |
| 1035 | } |
| 1036 | |
| 1037 | It would be better to do the mul once to reduce codesize above the if. |
| 1038 | This is GCC PR38204. |
| 1039 | |
Chris Lattner | cce240d | 2011-01-06 07:41:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1040 | |
| 1041 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1042 | This simple function from 179.art: |
| 1043 | |
| 1044 | int winner, numf2s; |
| 1045 | struct { double y; int reset; } *Y; |
| 1046 | |
| 1047 | void find_match() { |
| 1048 | int i; |
| 1049 | winner = 0; |
| 1050 | for (i=0;i<numf2s;i++) |
| 1051 | if (Y[i].y > Y[winner].y) |
| 1052 | winner =i; |
| 1053 | } |
| 1054 | |
| 1055 | Compiles into (with clang TBAA): |
| 1056 | |
| 1057 | for.body: ; preds = %for.inc, %bb.nph |
| 1058 | %indvar = phi i64 [ 0, %bb.nph ], [ %indvar.next, %for.inc ] |
| 1059 | %i.01718 = phi i32 [ 0, %bb.nph ], [ %i.01719, %for.inc ] |
| 1060 | %tmp4 = getelementptr inbounds %struct.anon* %tmp3, i64 %indvar, i32 0 |
| 1061 | %tmp5 = load double* %tmp4, align 8, !tbaa !4 |
| 1062 | %idxprom7 = sext i32 %i.01718 to i64 |
| 1063 | %tmp10 = getelementptr inbounds %struct.anon* %tmp3, i64 %idxprom7, i32 0 |
| 1064 | %tmp11 = load double* %tmp10, align 8, !tbaa !4 |
| 1065 | %cmp12 = fcmp ogt double %tmp5, %tmp11 |
| 1066 | br i1 %cmp12, label %if.then, label %for.inc |
| 1067 | |
| 1068 | if.then: ; preds = %for.body |
| 1069 | %i.017 = trunc i64 %indvar to i32 |
| 1070 | br label %for.inc |
| 1071 | |
| 1072 | for.inc: ; preds = %for.body, %if.then |
| 1073 | %i.01719 = phi i32 [ %i.01718, %for.body ], [ %i.017, %if.then ] |
| 1074 | %indvar.next = add i64 %indvar, 1 |
| 1075 | %exitcond = icmp eq i64 %indvar.next, %tmp22 |
| 1076 | br i1 %exitcond, label %for.cond.for.end_crit_edge, label %for.body |
| 1077 | |
| 1078 | |
| 1079 | It is good that we hoisted the reloads of numf2's, and Y out of the loop and |
| 1080 | sunk the store to winner out. |
| 1081 | |
| 1082 | However, this is awful on several levels: the conditional truncate in the loop |
| 1083 | (-indvars at fault? why can't we completely promote the IV to i64?). |
| 1084 | |
| 1085 | Beyond that, we have a partially redundant load in the loop: if "winner" (aka |
| 1086 | %i.01718) isn't updated, we reload Y[winner].y the next time through the loop. |
| 1087 | Similarly, the addressing that feeds it (including the sext) is redundant. In |
| 1088 | the end we get this generated assembly: |
| 1089 | |
| 1090 | LBB0_2: ## %for.body |
| 1091 | ## =>This Inner Loop Header: Depth=1 |
| 1092 | movsd (%rdi), %xmm0 |
| 1093 | movslq %edx, %r8 |
| 1094 | shlq $4, %r8 |
| 1095 | ucomisd (%rcx,%r8), %xmm0 |
| 1096 | jbe LBB0_4 |
| 1097 | movl %esi, %edx |
| 1098 | LBB0_4: ## %for.inc |
| 1099 | addq $16, %rdi |
| 1100 | incq %rsi |
| 1101 | cmpq %rsi, %rax |
| 1102 | jne LBB0_2 |
| 1103 | |
| 1104 | All things considered this isn't too bad, but we shouldn't need the movslq or |
| 1105 | the shlq instruction, or the load folded into ucomisd every time through the |
| 1106 | loop. |
| 1107 | |
| 1108 | On an x86-specific topic, if the loop can't be restructure, the movl should be a |
| 1109 | cmov. |
| 1110 | |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1111 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1112 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1113 | [STORE SINKING] |
| 1114 | |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1115 | GCC PR37810 is an interesting case where we should sink load/store reload |
| 1116 | into the if block and outside the loop, so we don't reload/store it on the |
| 1117 | non-call path. |
| 1118 | |
| 1119 | for () { |
| 1120 | *P += 1; |
| 1121 | if () |
| 1122 | call(); |
| 1123 | else |
| 1124 | ... |
| 1125 | -> |
| 1126 | tmp = *P |
| 1127 | for () { |
| 1128 | tmp += 1; |
| 1129 | if () { |
| 1130 | *P = tmp; |
| 1131 | call(); |
| 1132 | tmp = *P; |
| 1133 | } else ... |
| 1134 | } |
| 1135 | *P = tmp; |
| 1136 | |
Chris Lattner | 8f416f3 | 2008-12-15 07:49:24 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1137 | We now hoist the reload after the call (Transforms/GVN/lpre-call-wrap.ll), but |
| 1138 | we don't sink the store. We need partially dead store sinking. |
| 1139 | |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1140 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1141 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1142 | [LOAD PRE CRIT EDGE SPLITTING] |
Chris Lattner | 8f416f3 | 2008-12-15 07:49:24 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1143 | |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1144 | GCC PR37166: Sinking of loads prevents SROA'ing the "g" struct on the stack |
| 1145 | leading to excess stack traffic. This could be handled by GVN with some crazy |
| 1146 | symbolic phi translation. The code we get looks like (g is on the stack): |
| 1147 | |
| 1148 | bb2: ; preds = %bb1 |
| 1149 | .. |
| 1150 | %9 = getelementptr %struct.f* %g, i32 0, i32 0 |
| 1151 | store i32 %8, i32* %9, align bel %bb3 |
| 1152 | |
| 1153 | bb3: ; preds = %bb1, %bb2, %bb |
| 1154 | %c_addr.0 = phi %struct.f* [ %g, %bb2 ], [ %c, %bb ], [ %c, %bb1 ] |
| 1155 | %b_addr.0 = phi %struct.f* [ %b, %bb2 ], [ %g, %bb ], [ %b, %bb1 ] |
| 1156 | %10 = getelementptr %struct.f* %c_addr.0, i32 0, i32 0 |
| 1157 | %11 = load i32* %10, align 4 |
| 1158 | |
Chris Lattner | 6d94926 | 2009-11-27 16:53:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1159 | %11 is partially redundant, an in BB2 it should have the value %8. |
Chris Lattner | 78a7e7c | 2008-12-06 19:28:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1160 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1161 | GCC PR33344 and PR35287 are similar cases. |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1162 | |
Chris Lattner | 6c9fab7 | 2009-11-05 18:19:19 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1163 | |
| 1164 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1165 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1166 | [LOAD PRE] |
| 1167 | |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1168 | There are many load PRE testcases in testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/loadpre* in the |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1169 | GCC testsuite, ones we don't get yet are (checked through loadpre25): |
| 1170 | |
| 1171 | [CRIT EDGE BREAKING] |
| 1172 | loadpre3.c predcom-4.c |
| 1173 | |
| 1174 | [PRE OF READONLY CALL] |
| 1175 | loadpre5.c |
| 1176 | |
| 1177 | [TURN SELECT INTO BRANCH] |
| 1178 | loadpre14.c loadpre15.c |
| 1179 | |
| 1180 | actually a conditional increment: loadpre18.c loadpre19.c |
| 1181 | |
Chris Lattner | 2fc36e1 | 2010-12-15 06:38:24 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1182 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1183 | |
| 1184 | [LOAD PRE / STORE SINKING / SPEC HACK] |
| 1185 | |
| 1186 | This is a chunk of code from 456.hmmer: |
| 1187 | |
| 1188 | int f(int M, int *mc, int *mpp, int *tpmm, int *ip, int *tpim, int *dpp, |
| 1189 | int *tpdm, int xmb, int *bp, int *ms) { |
| 1190 | int k, sc; |
| 1191 | for (k = 1; k <= M; k++) { |
| 1192 | mc[k] = mpp[k-1] + tpmm[k-1]; |
| 1193 | if ((sc = ip[k-1] + tpim[k-1]) > mc[k]) mc[k] = sc; |
| 1194 | if ((sc = dpp[k-1] + tpdm[k-1]) > mc[k]) mc[k] = sc; |
| 1195 | if ((sc = xmb + bp[k]) > mc[k]) mc[k] = sc; |
| 1196 | mc[k] += ms[k]; |
| 1197 | } |
| 1198 | } |
| 1199 | |
| 1200 | It is very profitable for this benchmark to turn the conditional stores to mc[k] |
| 1201 | into a conditional move (select instr in IR) and allow the final store to do the |
| 1202 | store. See GCC PR27313 for more details. Note that this is valid to xform even |
| 1203 | with the new C++ memory model, since mc[k] is previously loaded and later |
| 1204 | stored. |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1205 | |
| 1206 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1207 | |
| 1208 | [SCALAR PRE] |
| 1209 | There are many PRE testcases in testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/ssa-pre-*.c in the |
| 1210 | GCC testsuite. |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1211 | |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1212 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1213 | |
| 1214 | There are some interesting cases in testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/pred-comm* in the |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1215 | GCC testsuite. For example, we get the first example in predcom-1.c, but |
| 1216 | miss the second one: |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1217 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1218 | unsigned fib[1000]; |
| 1219 | unsigned avg[1000]; |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1220 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1221 | __attribute__ ((noinline)) |
| 1222 | void count_averages(int n) { |
| 1223 | int i; |
| 1224 | for (i = 1; i < n; i++) |
| 1225 | avg[i] = (((unsigned long) fib[i - 1] + fib[i] + fib[i + 1]) / 3) & 0xffff; |
| 1226 | } |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1227 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1228 | which compiles into two loads instead of one in the loop. |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1229 | |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1230 | predcom-2.c is the same as predcom-1.c |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1231 | |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1232 | predcom-3.c is very similar but needs loads feeding each other instead of |
| 1233 | store->load. |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1234 | |
| 1235 | |
| 1236 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1237 | |
Chris Lattner | aa306c2 | 2010-01-23 17:59:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1238 | [ALIAS ANALYSIS] |
| 1239 | |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1240 | Type based alias analysis: |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1241 | http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14705 |
| 1242 | |
Chris Lattner | aa306c2 | 2010-01-23 17:59:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1243 | We should do better analysis of posix_memalign. At the least it should |
| 1244 | no-capture its pointer argument, at best, we should know that the out-value |
| 1245 | result doesn't point to anything (like malloc). One example of this is in |
| 1246 | SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/dt.c |
| 1247 | |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1248 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1249 | |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1250 | Interesting missed case because of control flow flattening (should be 2 loads): |
| 1251 | http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26629 |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1252 | With: llvm-gcc t2.c -S -o - -O0 -emit-llvm | llvm-as | |
| 1253 | opt -mem2reg -gvn -instcombine | llvm-dis |
Chris Lattner | d4137f4 | 2009-11-29 02:19:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1254 | we miss it because we need 1) CRIT EDGE 2) MULTIPLE DIFFERENT |
Chris Lattner | 582048d | 2008-12-15 08:32:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1255 | VALS PRODUCED BY ONE BLOCK OVER DIFFERENT PATHS |
Chris Lattner | 6a09a74 | 2008-12-06 22:52:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1256 | |
| 1257 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1258 | |
| 1259 | http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19633 |
| 1260 | We could eliminate the branch condition here, loading from null is undefined: |
| 1261 | |
| 1262 | struct S { int w, x, y, z; }; |
| 1263 | struct T { int r; struct S s; }; |
| 1264 | void bar (struct S, int); |
| 1265 | void foo (int a, struct T b) |
| 1266 | { |
| 1267 | struct S *c = 0; |
| 1268 | if (a) |
| 1269 | c = &b.s; |
| 1270 | bar (*c, a); |
| 1271 | } |
| 1272 | |
| 1273 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 88d84b2 | 2008-12-02 06:32:34 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1274 | |
Chris Lattner | 9cf8ef6 | 2008-12-23 20:52:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1275 | simplifylibcalls should do several optimizations for strspn/strcspn: |
| 1276 | |
Chris Lattner | 9cf8ef6 | 2008-12-23 20:52:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1277 | strcspn(x, "a") -> inlined loop for up to 3 letters (similarly for strspn): |
| 1278 | |
| 1279 | size_t __strcspn_c3 (__const char *__s, int __reject1, int __reject2, |
| 1280 | int __reject3) { |
| 1281 | register size_t __result = 0; |
| 1282 | while (__s[__result] != '\0' && __s[__result] != __reject1 && |
| 1283 | __s[__result] != __reject2 && __s[__result] != __reject3) |
| 1284 | ++__result; |
| 1285 | return __result; |
| 1286 | } |
| 1287 | |
| 1288 | This should turn into a switch on the character. See PR3253 for some notes on |
| 1289 | codegen. |
| 1290 | |
| 1291 | 456.hmmer apparently uses strcspn and strspn a lot. 471.omnetpp uses strspn. |
| 1292 | |
| 1293 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | d23b799 | 2008-12-31 00:54:13 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1294 | |
Chris Lattner | d3e768e | 2011-03-01 00:24:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1295 | simplifylibcalls should turn these snprintf idioms into memcpy (GCC PR47917) |
| 1296 | |
| 1297 | char buf1[6], buf2[6], buf3[4], buf4[4]; |
| 1298 | int i; |
| 1299 | |
| 1300 | int foo (void) { |
| 1301 | int ret = snprintf (buf1, sizeof buf1, "abcde"); |
| 1302 | ret += snprintf (buf2, sizeof buf2, "abcdef") * 16; |
| 1303 | ret += snprintf (buf3, sizeof buf3, "%s", i++ < 6 ? "abc" : "def") * 256; |
| 1304 | ret += snprintf (buf4, sizeof buf4, "%s", i++ > 10 ? "abcde" : "defgh")*4096; |
| 1305 | return ret; |
| 1306 | } |
| 1307 | |
| 1308 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1309 | |
Chris Lattner | d23b799 | 2008-12-31 00:54:13 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1310 | "gas" uses this idiom: |
| 1311 | else if (strchr ("+-/*%|&^:[]()~", *intel_parser.op_string)) |
| 1312 | .. |
| 1313 | else if (strchr ("<>", *intel_parser.op_string) |
| 1314 | |
| 1315 | Those should be turned into a switch. |
| 1316 | |
| 1317 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | ffb08f5 | 2009-01-08 06:52:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1318 | |
| 1319 | 252.eon contains this interesting code: |
| 1320 | |
| 1321 | %3072 = getelementptr [100 x i8]* %tempString, i32 0, i32 0 |
| 1322 | %3073 = call i8* @strcpy(i8* %3072, i8* %3071) nounwind |
| 1323 | %strlen = call i32 @strlen(i8* %3072) ; uses = 1 |
| 1324 | %endptr = getelementptr [100 x i8]* %tempString, i32 0, i32 %strlen |
| 1325 | call void @llvm.memcpy.i32(i8* %endptr, |
| 1326 | i8* getelementptr ([5 x i8]* @"\01LC42", i32 0, i32 0), i32 5, i32 1) |
| 1327 | %3074 = call i32 @strlen(i8* %endptr) nounwind readonly |
| 1328 | |
| 1329 | This is interesting for a couple reasons. First, in this: |
| 1330 | |
Benjamin Kramer | 9d071cb | 2010-12-23 15:32:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1331 | The memcpy+strlen strlen can be replaced with: |
Chris Lattner | ffb08f5 | 2009-01-08 06:52:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1332 | |
| 1333 | %3074 = call i32 @strlen([5 x i8]* @"\01LC42") nounwind readonly |
| 1334 | |
| 1335 | Because the destination was just copied into the specified memory buffer. This, |
| 1336 | in turn, can be constant folded to "4". |
| 1337 | |
| 1338 | In other code, it contains: |
| 1339 | |
| 1340 | %endptr6978 = bitcast i8* %endptr69 to i32* |
| 1341 | store i32 7107374, i32* %endptr6978, align 1 |
| 1342 | %3167 = call i32 @strlen(i8* %endptr69) nounwind readonly |
| 1343 | |
| 1344 | Which could also be constant folded. Whatever is producing this should probably |
| 1345 | be fixed to leave this as a memcpy from a string. |
| 1346 | |
| 1347 | Further, eon also has an interesting partially redundant strlen call: |
| 1348 | |
| 1349 | bb8: ; preds = %_ZN18eonImageCalculatorC1Ev.exit |
| 1350 | %682 = getelementptr i8** %argv, i32 6 ; <i8**> [#uses=2] |
| 1351 | %683 = load i8** %682, align 4 ; <i8*> [#uses=4] |
| 1352 | %684 = load i8* %683, align 1 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1353 | %685 = icmp eq i8 %684, 0 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 1354 | br i1 %685, label %bb10, label %bb9 |
| 1355 | |
| 1356 | bb9: ; preds = %bb8 |
| 1357 | %686 = call i32 @strlen(i8* %683) nounwind readonly |
| 1358 | %687 = icmp ugt i32 %686, 254 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 1359 | br i1 %687, label %bb10, label %bb11 |
| 1360 | |
| 1361 | bb10: ; preds = %bb9, %bb8 |
| 1362 | %688 = call i32 @strlen(i8* %683) nounwind readonly |
| 1363 | |
| 1364 | This could be eliminated by doing the strlen once in bb8, saving code size and |
| 1365 | improving perf on the bb8->9->10 path. |
| 1366 | |
| 1367 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 9fee08f | 2009-01-08 07:34:55 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1368 | |
| 1369 | I see an interesting fully redundant call to strlen left in 186.crafty:InputMove |
| 1370 | which looks like: |
| 1371 | %movetext11 = getelementptr [128 x i8]* %movetext, i32 0, i32 0 |
| 1372 | |
| 1373 | |
| 1374 | bb62: ; preds = %bb55, %bb53 |
| 1375 | %promote.0 = phi i32 [ %169, %bb55 ], [ 0, %bb53 ] |
| 1376 | %171 = call i32 @strlen(i8* %movetext11) nounwind readonly align 1 |
| 1377 | %172 = add i32 %171, -1 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1378 | %173 = getelementptr [128 x i8]* %movetext, i32 0, i32 %172 |
| 1379 | |
| 1380 | ... no stores ... |
| 1381 | br i1 %or.cond, label %bb65, label %bb72 |
| 1382 | |
| 1383 | bb65: ; preds = %bb62 |
| 1384 | store i8 0, i8* %173, align 1 |
| 1385 | br label %bb72 |
| 1386 | |
| 1387 | bb72: ; preds = %bb65, %bb62 |
| 1388 | %trank.1 = phi i32 [ %176, %bb65 ], [ -1, %bb62 ] |
| 1389 | %177 = call i32 @strlen(i8* %movetext11) nounwind readonly align 1 |
| 1390 | |
| 1391 | Note that on the bb62->bb72 path, that the %177 strlen call is partially |
| 1392 | redundant with the %171 call. At worst, we could shove the %177 strlen call |
| 1393 | up into the bb65 block moving it out of the bb62->bb72 path. However, note |
| 1394 | that bb65 stores to the string, zeroing out the last byte. This means that on |
| 1395 | that path the value of %177 is actually just %171-1. A sub is cheaper than a |
| 1396 | strlen! |
| 1397 | |
| 1398 | This pattern repeats several times, basically doing: |
| 1399 | |
| 1400 | A = strlen(P); |
| 1401 | P[A-1] = 0; |
| 1402 | B = strlen(P); |
| 1403 | where it is "obvious" that B = A-1. |
| 1404 | |
| 1405 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1406 | |
Chris Lattner | 9fee08f | 2009-01-08 07:34:55 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1407 | 186.crafty has this interesting pattern with the "out.4543" variable: |
| 1408 | |
| 1409 | call void @llvm.memcpy.i32( |
| 1410 | i8* getelementptr ([10 x i8]* @out.4543, i32 0, i32 0), |
| 1411 | i8* getelementptr ([7 x i8]* @"\01LC28700", i32 0, i32 0), i32 7, i32 1) |
| 1412 | %101 = call@printf(i8* ... @out.4543, i32 0, i32 0)) nounwind |
| 1413 | |
| 1414 | It is basically doing: |
| 1415 | |
| 1416 | memcpy(globalarray, "string"); |
| 1417 | printf(..., globalarray); |
| 1418 | |
| 1419 | Anyway, by knowing that printf just reads the memory and forward substituting |
| 1420 | the string directly into the printf, this eliminates reads from globalarray. |
| 1421 | Since this pattern occurs frequently in crafty (due to the "DisplayTime" and |
| 1422 | other similar functions) there are many stores to "out". Once all the printfs |
| 1423 | stop using "out", all that is left is the memcpy's into it. This should allow |
| 1424 | globalopt to remove the "stored only" global. |
| 1425 | |
| 1426 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1427 | |
Dan Gohman | 8289b05 | 2009-01-20 01:07:33 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1428 | This code: |
| 1429 | |
| 1430 | define inreg i32 @foo(i8* inreg %p) nounwind { |
| 1431 | %tmp0 = load i8* %p |
| 1432 | %tmp1 = ashr i8 %tmp0, 5 |
| 1433 | %tmp2 = sext i8 %tmp1 to i32 |
| 1434 | ret i32 %tmp2 |
| 1435 | } |
| 1436 | |
| 1437 | could be dagcombine'd to a sign-extending load with a shift. |
| 1438 | For example, on x86 this currently gets this: |
| 1439 | |
| 1440 | movb (%eax), %al |
| 1441 | sarb $5, %al |
| 1442 | movsbl %al, %eax |
| 1443 | |
| 1444 | while it could get this: |
| 1445 | |
| 1446 | movsbl (%eax), %eax |
| 1447 | sarl $5, %eax |
| 1448 | |
| 1449 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 256baa4 | 2009-01-22 07:16:03 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1450 | |
| 1451 | GCC PR31029: |
| 1452 | |
| 1453 | int test(int x) { return 1-x == x; } // --> return false |
| 1454 | int test2(int x) { return 2-x == x; } // --> return x == 1 ? |
| 1455 | |
| 1456 | Always foldable for odd constants, what is the rule for even? |
| 1457 | |
| 1458 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1459 | |
Torok Edwin | e46a686 | 2009-01-24 19:30:25 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1460 | PR 3381: GEP to field of size 0 inside a struct could be turned into GEP |
| 1461 | for next field in struct (which is at same address). |
| 1462 | |
| 1463 | For example: store of float into { {{}}, float } could be turned into a store to |
| 1464 | the float directly. |
| 1465 | |
Torok Edwin | 474479f | 2009-02-20 18:42:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1466 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Nick Lewycky | 20babb1 | 2009-02-25 06:52:48 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1467 | |
Chris Lattner | 32c5f17 | 2009-05-11 17:41:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1468 | The arg promotion pass should make use of nocapture to make its alias analysis |
| 1469 | stuff much more precise. |
| 1470 | |
| 1471 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1472 | |
| 1473 | The following functions should be optimized to use a select instead of a |
| 1474 | branch (from gcc PR40072): |
| 1475 | |
| 1476 | char char_int(int m) {if(m>7) return 0; return m;} |
| 1477 | int int_char(char m) {if(m>7) return 0; return m;} |
| 1478 | |
| 1479 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1480 | |
Bill Wendling | 5a56927 | 2009-10-27 22:48:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1481 | int func(int a, int b) { if (a & 0x80) b |= 0x80; else b &= ~0x80; return b; } |
| 1482 | |
| 1483 | Generates this: |
| 1484 | |
| 1485 | define i32 @func(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone ssp { |
| 1486 | entry: |
| 1487 | %0 = and i32 %a, 128 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1488 | %1 = icmp eq i32 %0, 0 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 1489 | %2 = or i32 %b, 128 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1490 | %3 = and i32 %b, -129 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1491 | %b_addr.0 = select i1 %1, i32 %3, i32 %2 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1492 | ret i32 %b_addr.0 |
| 1493 | } |
| 1494 | |
| 1495 | However, it's functionally equivalent to: |
| 1496 | |
| 1497 | b = (b & ~0x80) | (a & 0x80); |
| 1498 | |
| 1499 | Which generates this: |
| 1500 | |
| 1501 | define i32 @func(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone ssp { |
| 1502 | entry: |
| 1503 | %0 = and i32 %b, -129 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1504 | %1 = and i32 %a, 128 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1505 | %2 = or i32 %0, %1 ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1506 | ret i32 %2 |
| 1507 | } |
| 1508 | |
| 1509 | This can be generalized for other forms: |
| 1510 | |
| 1511 | b = (b & ~0x80) | (a & 0x40) << 1; |
| 1512 | |
| 1513 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Bill Wendling | c872e9c | 2009-10-27 23:30:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1514 | |
| 1515 | These two functions produce different code. They shouldn't: |
| 1516 | |
| 1517 | #include <stdint.h> |
| 1518 | |
| 1519 | uint8_t p1(uint8_t b, uint8_t a) { |
| 1520 | b = (b & ~0xc0) | (a & 0xc0); |
| 1521 | return (b); |
| 1522 | } |
| 1523 | |
| 1524 | uint8_t p2(uint8_t b, uint8_t a) { |
| 1525 | b = (b & ~0x40) | (a & 0x40); |
| 1526 | b = (b & ~0x80) | (a & 0x80); |
| 1527 | return (b); |
| 1528 | } |
| 1529 | |
| 1530 | define zeroext i8 @p1(i8 zeroext %b, i8 zeroext %a) nounwind readnone ssp { |
| 1531 | entry: |
| 1532 | %0 = and i8 %b, 63 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1533 | %1 = and i8 %a, -64 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1534 | %2 = or i8 %1, %0 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1535 | ret i8 %2 |
| 1536 | } |
| 1537 | |
| 1538 | define zeroext i8 @p2(i8 zeroext %b, i8 zeroext %a) nounwind readnone ssp { |
| 1539 | entry: |
| 1540 | %0 = and i8 %b, 63 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1541 | %.masked = and i8 %a, 64 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1542 | %1 = and i8 %a, -128 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1543 | %2 = or i8 %1, %0 ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1544 | %3 = or i8 %2, %.masked ; <i8> [#uses=1] |
| 1545 | ret i8 %3 |
| 1546 | } |
| 1547 | |
| 1548 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 6fdfc9c | 2009-11-11 17:51:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1549 | |
| 1550 | IPSCCP does not currently propagate argument dependent constants through |
| 1551 | functions where it does not not all of the callers. This includes functions |
| 1552 | with normal external linkage as well as templates, C99 inline functions etc. |
| 1553 | Specifically, it does nothing to: |
| 1554 | |
| 1555 | define i32 @test(i32 %x, i32 %y, i32 %z) nounwind { |
| 1556 | entry: |
| 1557 | %0 = add nsw i32 %y, %z |
| 1558 | %1 = mul i32 %0, %x |
| 1559 | %2 = mul i32 %y, %z |
| 1560 | %3 = add nsw i32 %1, %2 |
| 1561 | ret i32 %3 |
| 1562 | } |
| 1563 | |
| 1564 | define i32 @test2() nounwind { |
| 1565 | entry: |
| 1566 | %0 = call i32 @test(i32 1, i32 2, i32 4) nounwind |
| 1567 | ret i32 %0 |
| 1568 | } |
| 1569 | |
| 1570 | It would be interesting extend IPSCCP to be able to handle simple cases like |
| 1571 | this, where all of the arguments to a call are constant. Because IPSCCP runs |
| 1572 | before inlining, trivial templates and inline functions are not yet inlined. |
| 1573 | The results for a function + set of constant arguments should be memoized in a |
| 1574 | map. |
| 1575 | |
| 1576 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | fc926c2 | 2009-11-11 17:54:02 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1577 | |
| 1578 | The libcall constant folding stuff should be moved out of SimplifyLibcalls into |
| 1579 | libanalysis' constantfolding logic. This would allow IPSCCP to be able to |
| 1580 | handle simple things like this: |
| 1581 | |
| 1582 | static int foo(const char *X) { return strlen(X); } |
| 1583 | int bar() { return foo("abcd"); } |
| 1584 | |
| 1585 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Nick Lewycky | 93f9f7a | 2009-11-15 17:51:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1586 | |
Duncan Sands | e10920d | 2010-01-06 15:37:47 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1587 | functionattrs doesn't know much about memcpy/memset. This function should be |
Duncan Sands | 7c422ac | 2010-01-06 08:45:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1588 | marked readnone rather than readonly, since it only twiddles local memory, but |
| 1589 | functionattrs doesn't handle memset/memcpy/memmove aggressively: |
Chris Lattner | 89742c2 | 2009-12-03 07:43:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1590 | |
| 1591 | struct X { int *p; int *q; }; |
| 1592 | int foo() { |
| 1593 | int i = 0, j = 1; |
| 1594 | struct X x, y; |
| 1595 | int **p; |
| 1596 | y.p = &i; |
| 1597 | x.q = &j; |
| 1598 | p = __builtin_memcpy (&x, &y, sizeof (int *)); |
| 1599 | return **p; |
| 1600 | } |
| 1601 | |
Chris Lattner | 9c8fb9e | 2011-01-01 22:52:11 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1602 | This can be seen at: |
| 1603 | $ clang t.c -S -o - -mkernel -O0 -emit-llvm | opt -functionattrs -S |
| 1604 | |
| 1605 | |
Chris Lattner | 0533217 | 2009-12-03 07:41:54 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1606 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1607 | |
Eli Friedman | 9cfb3ad | 2010-01-18 22:36:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1608 | Missed instcombine transformation: |
| 1609 | define i1 @a(i32 %x) nounwind readnone { |
| 1610 | entry: |
| 1611 | %cmp = icmp eq i32 %x, 30 |
| 1612 | %sub = add i32 %x, -30 |
| 1613 | %cmp2 = icmp ugt i32 %sub, 9 |
| 1614 | %or = or i1 %cmp, %cmp2 |
| 1615 | ret i1 %or |
| 1616 | } |
| 1617 | This should be optimized to a single compare. Testcase derived from gcc. |
| 1618 | |
| 1619 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1620 | |
Eli Friedman | 9cfb3ad | 2010-01-18 22:36:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1621 | Missed instcombine or reassociate transformation: |
| 1622 | int a(int a, int b) { return (a==12)&(b>47)&(b<58); } |
| 1623 | |
| 1624 | The sgt and slt should be combined into a single comparison. Testcase derived |
| 1625 | from gcc. |
| 1626 | |
| 1627 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1628 | |
| 1629 | Missed instcombine transformation: |
Chris Lattner | 3e41106 | 2010-11-21 07:05:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1630 | |
| 1631 | %382 = srem i32 %tmp14.i, 64 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1632 | %383 = zext i32 %382 to i64 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1633 | %384 = shl i64 %381, %383 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1634 | %385 = icmp slt i32 %tmp14.i, 64 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1635 | |
Benjamin Kramer | c21a821 | 2010-11-23 20:33:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1636 | The srem can be transformed to an and because if %tmp14.i is negative, the |
| 1637 | shift is undefined. Testcase derived from 403.gcc. |
Chris Lattner | 3e41106 | 2010-11-21 07:05:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1638 | |
| 1639 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1640 | |
| 1641 | This is a range comparison on a divided result (from 403.gcc): |
| 1642 | |
| 1643 | %1337 = sdiv i32 %1336, 8 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1644 | %.off.i208 = add i32 %1336, 7 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1645 | %1338 = icmp ult i32 %.off.i208, 15 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1646 | |
| 1647 | We already catch this (removing the sdiv) if there isn't an add, we should |
| 1648 | handle the 'add' as well. This is a common idiom with it's builtin_alloca code. |
| 1649 | C testcase: |
| 1650 | |
| 1651 | int a(int x) { return (unsigned)(x/16+7) < 15; } |
| 1652 | |
| 1653 | Another similar case involves truncations on 64-bit targets: |
| 1654 | |
| 1655 | %361 = sdiv i64 %.046, 8 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1656 | %362 = trunc i64 %361 to i32 ; [#uses=2] |
| 1657 | ... |
| 1658 | %367 = icmp eq i32 %362, 0 ; [#uses=1] |
| 1659 | |
Eli Friedman | 1144d7e | 2010-01-31 04:55:32 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1660 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1661 | |
| 1662 | Missed instcombine/dagcombine transformation: |
| 1663 | define void @lshift_lt(i8 zeroext %a) nounwind { |
| 1664 | entry: |
| 1665 | %conv = zext i8 %a to i32 |
| 1666 | %shl = shl i32 %conv, 3 |
| 1667 | %cmp = icmp ult i32 %shl, 33 |
| 1668 | br i1 %cmp, label %if.then, label %if.end |
| 1669 | |
| 1670 | if.then: |
| 1671 | tail call void @bar() nounwind |
| 1672 | ret void |
| 1673 | |
| 1674 | if.end: |
| 1675 | ret void |
| 1676 | } |
| 1677 | declare void @bar() nounwind |
| 1678 | |
| 1679 | The shift should be eliminated. Testcase derived from gcc. |
Eli Friedman | 9cfb3ad | 2010-01-18 22:36:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1680 | |
| 1681 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | cf031f6 | 2010-02-09 00:11:10 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1682 | |
| 1683 | These compile into different code, one gets recognized as a switch and the |
| 1684 | other doesn't due to phase ordering issues (PR6212): |
| 1685 | |
| 1686 | int test1(int mainType, int subType) { |
| 1687 | if (mainType == 7) |
| 1688 | subType = 4; |
| 1689 | else if (mainType == 9) |
| 1690 | subType = 6; |
| 1691 | else if (mainType == 11) |
| 1692 | subType = 9; |
| 1693 | return subType; |
| 1694 | } |
| 1695 | |
| 1696 | int test2(int mainType, int subType) { |
| 1697 | if (mainType == 7) |
| 1698 | subType = 4; |
| 1699 | if (mainType == 9) |
| 1700 | subType = 6; |
| 1701 | if (mainType == 11) |
| 1702 | subType = 9; |
| 1703 | return subType; |
| 1704 | } |
| 1705 | |
| 1706 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 6663670 | 2010-03-10 21:42:42 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1707 | |
| 1708 | The following test case (from PR6576): |
| 1709 | |
| 1710 | define i32 @mul(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone { |
| 1711 | entry: |
| 1712 | %cond1 = icmp eq i32 %b, 0 ; <i1> [#uses=1] |
| 1713 | br i1 %cond1, label %exit, label %bb.nph |
| 1714 | bb.nph: ; preds = %entry |
| 1715 | %tmp = mul i32 %b, %a ; <i32> [#uses=1] |
| 1716 | ret i32 %tmp |
| 1717 | exit: ; preds = %entry |
| 1718 | ret i32 0 |
| 1719 | } |
| 1720 | |
| 1721 | could be reduced to: |
| 1722 | |
| 1723 | define i32 @mul(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone { |
| 1724 | entry: |
| 1725 | %tmp = mul i32 %b, %a |
| 1726 | ret i32 %tmp |
| 1727 | } |
| 1728 | |
| 1729 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1730 | |
Chris Lattner | 9484689 | 2010-04-16 23:52:30 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1731 | We should use DSE + llvm.lifetime.end to delete dead vtable pointer updates. |
| 1732 | See GCC PR34949 |
| 1733 | |
Chris Lattner | c2685a9 | 2010-05-21 23:16:21 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1734 | Another interesting case is that something related could be used for variables |
| 1735 | that go const after their ctor has finished. In these cases, globalopt (which |
| 1736 | can statically run the constructor) could mark the global const (so it gets put |
| 1737 | in the readonly section). A testcase would be: |
| 1738 | |
| 1739 | #include <complex> |
| 1740 | using namespace std; |
| 1741 | const complex<char> should_be_in_rodata (42,-42); |
| 1742 | complex<char> should_be_in_data (42,-42); |
| 1743 | complex<char> should_be_in_bss; |
| 1744 | |
| 1745 | Where we currently evaluate the ctors but the globals don't become const because |
| 1746 | the optimizer doesn't know they "become const" after the ctor is done. See |
| 1747 | GCC PR4131 for more examples. |
| 1748 | |
Chris Lattner | 9484689 | 2010-04-16 23:52:30 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1749 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1750 | |
Dan Gohman | 3a2a484 | 2010-05-03 14:31:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1751 | In this code: |
| 1752 | |
| 1753 | long foo(long x) { |
| 1754 | return x > 1 ? x : 1; |
| 1755 | } |
| 1756 | |
| 1757 | LLVM emits a comparison with 1 instead of 0. 0 would be equivalent |
| 1758 | and cheaper on most targets. |
| 1759 | |
| 1760 | LLVM prefers comparisons with zero over non-zero in general, but in this |
| 1761 | case it choses instead to keep the max operation obvious. |
| 1762 | |
| 1763 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Eli Friedman | 8c47d3b | 2010-06-12 05:54:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1764 | |
Eli Friedman | b4a74c1 | 2010-07-03 07:38:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1765 | define void @a(i32 %x) nounwind { |
| 1766 | entry: |
| 1767 | switch i32 %x, label %if.end [ |
| 1768 | i32 0, label %if.then |
| 1769 | i32 1, label %if.then |
| 1770 | i32 2, label %if.then |
| 1771 | i32 3, label %if.then |
| 1772 | i32 5, label %if.then |
| 1773 | ] |
| 1774 | if.then: |
| 1775 | tail call void @foo() nounwind |
| 1776 | ret void |
| 1777 | if.end: |
| 1778 | ret void |
| 1779 | } |
| 1780 | declare void @foo() |
| 1781 | |
| 1782 | Generated code on x86-64 (other platforms give similar results): |
| 1783 | a: |
| 1784 | cmpl $5, %edi |
Benjamin Kramer | 3ff2551 | 2011-07-14 01:38:42 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1785 | ja LBB2_2 |
| 1786 | cmpl $4, %edi |
| 1787 | jne LBB2_3 |
Eli Friedman | b4a74c1 | 2010-07-03 07:38:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1788 | .LBB0_2: |
| 1789 | ret |
| 1790 | .LBB0_3: |
Eli Friedman | b482829 | 2010-07-03 08:43:32 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1791 | jmp foo # TAILCALL |
Eli Friedman | b4a74c1 | 2010-07-03 07:38:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1792 | |
Benjamin Kramer | 3ff2551 | 2011-07-14 01:38:42 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1793 | If we wanted to be really clever, we could simplify the whole thing to |
Eli Friedman | b482829 | 2010-07-03 08:43:32 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1794 | something like the following, which eliminates a branch: |
| 1795 | xorl $1, %edi |
| 1796 | cmpl $4, %edi |
| 1797 | ja .LBB0_2 |
| 1798 | ret |
| 1799 | .LBB0_2: |
| 1800 | jmp foo # TAILCALL |
| 1801 | |
Eli Friedman | b4a74c1 | 2010-07-03 07:38:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1802 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 274191f | 2010-11-09 19:37:28 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1803 | |
Chris Lattner | af510f1 | 2010-11-11 18:23:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1804 | We compile this: |
| 1805 | |
| 1806 | int foo(int a) { return (a & (~15)) / 16; } |
| 1807 | |
| 1808 | Into: |
| 1809 | |
| 1810 | define i32 @foo(i32 %a) nounwind readnone ssp { |
| 1811 | entry: |
| 1812 | %and = and i32 %a, -16 |
| 1813 | %div = sdiv i32 %and, 16 |
| 1814 | ret i32 %div |
| 1815 | } |
| 1816 | |
| 1817 | but this code (X & -A)/A is X >> log2(A) when A is a power of 2, so this case |
| 1818 | should be instcombined into just "a >> 4". |
| 1819 | |
| 1820 | We do get this at the codegen level, so something knows about it, but |
| 1821 | instcombine should catch it earlier: |
| 1822 | |
| 1823 | _foo: ## @foo |
| 1824 | ## BB#0: ## %entry |
| 1825 | movl %edi, %eax |
| 1826 | sarl $4, %eax |
| 1827 | ret |
| 1828 | |
| 1829 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1830 | |
Chris Lattner | a97c91f | 2010-12-13 00:15:25 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1831 | This code (from GCC PR28685): |
| 1832 | |
| 1833 | int test(int a, int b) { |
| 1834 | int lt = a < b; |
| 1835 | int eq = a == b; |
| 1836 | if (lt) |
| 1837 | return 1; |
| 1838 | return eq; |
| 1839 | } |
| 1840 | |
| 1841 | Is compiled to: |
| 1842 | |
| 1843 | define i32 @test(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone ssp { |
| 1844 | entry: |
| 1845 | %cmp = icmp slt i32 %a, %b |
| 1846 | br i1 %cmp, label %return, label %if.end |
| 1847 | |
| 1848 | if.end: ; preds = %entry |
| 1849 | %cmp5 = icmp eq i32 %a, %b |
| 1850 | %conv6 = zext i1 %cmp5 to i32 |
| 1851 | ret i32 %conv6 |
| 1852 | |
| 1853 | return: ; preds = %entry |
| 1854 | ret i32 1 |
| 1855 | } |
| 1856 | |
| 1857 | it could be: |
| 1858 | |
| 1859 | define i32 @test__(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone ssp { |
| 1860 | entry: |
| 1861 | %0 = icmp sle i32 %a, %b |
| 1862 | %retval = zext i1 %0 to i32 |
| 1863 | ret i32 %retval |
| 1864 | } |
| 1865 | |
| 1866 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Duncan Sands | 124708d | 2011-01-01 20:08:02 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1867 | |
Benjamin Kramer | eaff66a | 2011-01-07 20:42:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1868 | This code can be seen in viterbi: |
| 1869 | |
| 1870 | %64 = call noalias i8* @malloc(i64 %62) nounwind |
| 1871 | ... |
| 1872 | %67 = call i64 @llvm.objectsize.i64(i8* %64, i1 false) nounwind |
| 1873 | %68 = call i8* @__memset_chk(i8* %64, i32 0, i64 %62, i64 %67) nounwind |
| 1874 | |
| 1875 | llvm.objectsize.i64 should be taught about malloc/calloc, allowing it to |
| 1876 | fold to %62. This is a security win (overflows of malloc will get caught) |
| 1877 | and also a performance win by exposing more memsets to the optimizer. |
| 1878 | |
| 1879 | This occurs several times in viterbi. |
| 1880 | |
| 1881 | Note that this would change the semantics of @llvm.objectsize which by its |
| 1882 | current definition always folds to a constant. We also should make sure that |
| 1883 | we remove checking in code like |
| 1884 | |
| 1885 | char *p = malloc(strlen(s)+1); |
| 1886 | __strcpy_chk(p, s, __builtin_objectsize(p, 0)); |
| 1887 | |
| 1888 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 1889 | |
Chris Lattner | c1853e4 | 2011-01-06 07:09:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1890 | This code (from Benchmarks/Dhrystone/dry.c): |
| 1891 | |
| 1892 | define i32 @Func1(i32, i32) nounwind readnone optsize ssp { |
| 1893 | entry: |
| 1894 | %sext = shl i32 %0, 24 |
| 1895 | %conv = ashr i32 %sext, 24 |
| 1896 | %sext6 = shl i32 %1, 24 |
| 1897 | %conv4 = ashr i32 %sext6, 24 |
| 1898 | %cmp = icmp eq i32 %conv, %conv4 |
| 1899 | %. = select i1 %cmp, i32 10000, i32 0 |
| 1900 | ret i32 %. |
| 1901 | } |
| 1902 | |
| 1903 | Should be simplified into something like: |
| 1904 | |
| 1905 | define i32 @Func1(i32, i32) nounwind readnone optsize ssp { |
| 1906 | entry: |
| 1907 | %sext = shl i32 %0, 24 |
| 1908 | %conv = and i32 %sext, 0xFF000000 |
| 1909 | %sext6 = shl i32 %1, 24 |
| 1910 | %conv4 = and i32 %sext6, 0xFF000000 |
| 1911 | %cmp = icmp eq i32 %conv, %conv4 |
| 1912 | %. = select i1 %cmp, i32 10000, i32 0 |
| 1913 | ret i32 %. |
| 1914 | } |
| 1915 | |
| 1916 | and then to: |
| 1917 | |
| 1918 | define i32 @Func1(i32, i32) nounwind readnone optsize ssp { |
| 1919 | entry: |
| 1920 | %conv = and i32 %0, 0xFF |
| 1921 | %conv4 = and i32 %1, 0xFF |
| 1922 | %cmp = icmp eq i32 %conv, %conv4 |
| 1923 | %. = select i1 %cmp, i32 10000, i32 0 |
| 1924 | ret i32 %. |
| 1925 | } |
| 1926 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 15df044 | 2011-01-01 22:57:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1927 | |
Benjamin Kramer | fa36680 | 2011-01-06 17:35:50 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1928 | clang -O3 currently compiles this code |
| 1929 | |
| 1930 | int g(unsigned int a) { |
| 1931 | unsigned int c[100]; |
| 1932 | c[10] = a; |
| 1933 | c[11] = a; |
| 1934 | unsigned int b = c[10] + c[11]; |
| 1935 | if(b > a*2) a = 4; |
| 1936 | else a = 8; |
| 1937 | return a + 7; |
| 1938 | } |
| 1939 | |
| 1940 | into |
| 1941 | |
| 1942 | define i32 @g(i32 a) nounwind readnone { |
| 1943 | %add = shl i32 %a, 1 |
| 1944 | %mul = shl i32 %a, 1 |
| 1945 | %cmp = icmp ugt i32 %add, %mul |
| 1946 | %a.addr.0 = select i1 %cmp, i32 11, i32 15 |
| 1947 | ret i32 %a.addr.0 |
| 1948 | } |
| 1949 | |
| 1950 | The icmp should fold to false. This CSE opportunity is only available |
| 1951 | after GVN and InstCombine have run. |
| 1952 | |
| 1953 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 01cdc20 | 2011-01-06 22:25:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1954 | |
| 1955 | memcpyopt should turn this: |
| 1956 | |
| 1957 | define i8* @test10(i32 %x) { |
| 1958 | %alloc = call noalias i8* @malloc(i32 %x) nounwind |
| 1959 | call void @llvm.memset.p0i8.i32(i8* %alloc, i8 0, i32 %x, i32 1, i1 false) |
| 1960 | ret i8* %alloc |
| 1961 | } |
| 1962 | |
| 1963 | into a call to calloc. We should make sure that we analyze calloc as |
| 1964 | aggressively as malloc though. |
| 1965 | |
| 1966 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chandler Carruth | 75fbd37 | 2011-01-09 01:32:55 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1967 | |
Chris Lattner | 4a6fb94 | 2011-01-10 21:01:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1968 | clang -O3 doesn't optimize this: |
Chandler Carruth | 75fbd37 | 2011-01-09 01:32:55 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1969 | |
| 1970 | void f1(int* begin, int* end) { |
| 1971 | std::fill(begin, end, 0); |
| 1972 | } |
| 1973 | |
Chris Lattner | 66d7a57 | 2011-01-09 23:48:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1974 | into a memset. This is PR8942. |
Chandler Carruth | 75fbd37 | 2011-01-09 01:32:55 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1975 | |
| 1976 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chandler Carruth | d8723a9 | 2011-01-09 09:58:33 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1977 | |
| 1978 | clang -O3 -fno-exceptions currently compiles this code: |
| 1979 | |
| 1980 | void f(int N) { |
| 1981 | std::vector<int> v(N); |
Chandler Carruth | 27a2a13 | 2011-01-09 10:10:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1982 | |
| 1983 | extern void sink(void*); sink(&v); |
Chandler Carruth | d8723a9 | 2011-01-09 09:58:33 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1984 | } |
| 1985 | |
| 1986 | into |
| 1987 | |
| 1988 | define void @_Z1fi(i32 %N) nounwind { |
| 1989 | entry: |
| 1990 | %v2 = alloca [3 x i32*], align 8 |
| 1991 | %v2.sub = getelementptr inbounds [3 x i32*]* %v2, i64 0, i64 0 |
| 1992 | %tmpcast = bitcast [3 x i32*]* %v2 to %"class.std::vector"* |
| 1993 | %conv = sext i32 %N to i64 |
| 1994 | store i32* null, i32** %v2.sub, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 1995 | %tmp3.i.i.i.i.i = getelementptr inbounds [3 x i32*]* %v2, i64 0, i64 1 |
| 1996 | store i32* null, i32** %tmp3.i.i.i.i.i, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 1997 | %tmp4.i.i.i.i.i = getelementptr inbounds [3 x i32*]* %v2, i64 0, i64 2 |
| 1998 | store i32* null, i32** %tmp4.i.i.i.i.i, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 1999 | %cmp.i.i.i.i = icmp eq i32 %N, 0 |
| 2000 | br i1 %cmp.i.i.i.i, label %_ZNSt12_Vector_baseIiSaIiEEC2EmRKS0_.exit.thread.i.i, label %cond.true.i.i.i.i |
| 2001 | |
| 2002 | _ZNSt12_Vector_baseIiSaIiEEC2EmRKS0_.exit.thread.i.i: ; preds = %entry |
| 2003 | store i32* null, i32** %v2.sub, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 2004 | store i32* null, i32** %tmp3.i.i.i.i.i, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 2005 | %add.ptr.i5.i.i = getelementptr inbounds i32* null, i64 %conv |
| 2006 | store i32* %add.ptr.i5.i.i, i32** %tmp4.i.i.i.i.i, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 2007 | br label %_ZNSt6vectorIiSaIiEEC1EmRKiRKS0_.exit |
| 2008 | |
| 2009 | cond.true.i.i.i.i: ; preds = %entry |
| 2010 | %cmp.i.i.i.i.i = icmp slt i32 %N, 0 |
| 2011 | br i1 %cmp.i.i.i.i.i, label %if.then.i.i.i.i.i, label %_ZNSt12_Vector_baseIiSaIiEEC2EmRKS0_.exit.i.i |
| 2012 | |
| 2013 | if.then.i.i.i.i.i: ; preds = %cond.true.i.i.i.i |
| 2014 | call void @_ZSt17__throw_bad_allocv() noreturn nounwind |
| 2015 | unreachable |
| 2016 | |
| 2017 | _ZNSt12_Vector_baseIiSaIiEEC2EmRKS0_.exit.i.i: ; preds = %cond.true.i.i.i.i |
| 2018 | %mul.i.i.i.i.i = shl i64 %conv, 2 |
| 2019 | %call3.i.i.i.i.i = call noalias i8* @_Znwm(i64 %mul.i.i.i.i.i) nounwind |
| 2020 | %0 = bitcast i8* %call3.i.i.i.i.i to i32* |
| 2021 | store i32* %0, i32** %v2.sub, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 2022 | store i32* %0, i32** %tmp3.i.i.i.i.i, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 2023 | %add.ptr.i.i.i = getelementptr inbounds i32* %0, i64 %conv |
| 2024 | store i32* %add.ptr.i.i.i, i32** %tmp4.i.i.i.i.i, align 8, !tbaa !0 |
| 2025 | call void @llvm.memset.p0i8.i64(i8* %call3.i.i.i.i.i, i8 0, i64 %mul.i.i.i.i.i, i32 4, i1 false) |
| 2026 | br label %_ZNSt6vectorIiSaIiEEC1EmRKiRKS0_.exit |
| 2027 | |
| 2028 | This is just the handling the construction of the vector. Most surprising here |
Chris Lattner | b0daffc | 2011-01-16 06:39:44 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2029 | is the fact that all three null stores in %entry are dead (because we do no |
| 2030 | cross-block DSE). |
| 2031 | |
Chandler Carruth | d8723a9 | 2011-01-09 09:58:33 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2032 | Also surprising is that %conv isn't simplified to 0 in %....exit.thread.i.i. |
Chris Lattner | b0daffc | 2011-01-16 06:39:44 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2033 | This is a because the client of LazyValueInfo doesn't simplify all instruction |
| 2034 | operands, just selected ones. |
Chandler Carruth | d8723a9 | 2011-01-09 09:58:33 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2035 | |
| 2036 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chandler Carruth | e5ca494 | 2011-01-09 09:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2037 | |
| 2038 | clang -O3 -fno-exceptions currently compiles this code: |
| 2039 | |
Chandler Carruth | cad33c6 | 2011-01-16 01:40:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2040 | void f(char* a, int n) { |
| 2041 | __builtin_memset(a, 0, n); |
| 2042 | for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) |
| 2043 | a[i] = 0; |
Chandler Carruth | e5ca494 | 2011-01-09 09:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2044 | } |
| 2045 | |
Chandler Carruth | cad33c6 | 2011-01-16 01:40:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2046 | into: |
Chandler Carruth | e5ca494 | 2011-01-09 09:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2047 | |
Chandler Carruth | cad33c6 | 2011-01-16 01:40:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2048 | define void @_Z1fPci(i8* nocapture %a, i32 %n) nounwind { |
| 2049 | entry: |
| 2050 | %conv = sext i32 %n to i64 |
| 2051 | tail call void @llvm.memset.p0i8.i64(i8* %a, i8 0, i64 %conv, i32 1, i1 false) |
| 2052 | %cmp8 = icmp sgt i32 %n, 0 |
| 2053 | br i1 %cmp8, label %for.body.lr.ph, label %for.end |
Chandler Carruth | e5ca494 | 2011-01-09 09:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2054 | |
Chandler Carruth | cad33c6 | 2011-01-16 01:40:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2055 | for.body.lr.ph: ; preds = %entry |
| 2056 | %tmp10 = add i32 %n, -1 |
| 2057 | %tmp11 = zext i32 %tmp10 to i64 |
| 2058 | %tmp12 = add i64 %tmp11, 1 |
| 2059 | call void @llvm.memset.p0i8.i64(i8* %a, i8 0, i64 %tmp12, i32 1, i1 false) |
| 2060 | ret void |
Chandler Carruth | e5ca494 | 2011-01-09 09:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2061 | |
Chandler Carruth | cad33c6 | 2011-01-16 01:40:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2062 | for.end: ; preds = %entry |
| 2063 | ret void |
| 2064 | } |
| 2065 | |
| 2066 | This shouldn't need the ((zext (%n - 1)) + 1) game, and it should ideally fold |
Eli Friedman | 97ab580 | 2011-03-22 20:49:53 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2067 | the two memset's together. |
Chandler Carruth | e5ca494 | 2011-01-09 09:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2068 | |
Eli Friedman | 97ab580 | 2011-03-22 20:49:53 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2069 | The issue with the addition only occurs in 64-bit mode, and appears to be at |
| 2070 | least partially caused by Scalar Evolution not keeping its cache updated: it |
| 2071 | returns the "wrong" result immediately after indvars runs, but figures out the |
| 2072 | expected result if it is run from scratch on IR resulting from running indvars. |
Chris Lattner | b0daffc | 2011-01-16 06:39:44 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2073 | |
Chandler Carruth | e5ca494 | 2011-01-09 09:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2074 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chandler Carruth | 694d753 | 2011-01-09 11:29:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2075 | |
| 2076 | clang -O3 -fno-exceptions currently compiles this code: |
| 2077 | |
| 2078 | struct S { |
| 2079 | unsigned short m1, m2; |
| 2080 | unsigned char m3, m4; |
| 2081 | }; |
| 2082 | |
| 2083 | void f(int N) { |
| 2084 | std::vector<S> v(N); |
| 2085 | extern void sink(void*); sink(&v); |
| 2086 | } |
| 2087 | |
| 2088 | into poor code for zero-initializing 'v' when N is >0. The problem is that |
| 2089 | S is only 6 bytes, but each element is 8 byte-aligned. We generate a loop and |
| 2090 | 4 stores on each iteration. If the struct were 8 bytes, this gets turned into |
| 2091 | a memset. |
| 2092 | |
Chris Lattner | b0daffc | 2011-01-16 06:39:44 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2093 | In order to handle this we have to: |
| 2094 | A) Teach clang to generate metadata for memsets of structs that have holes in |
| 2095 | them. |
| 2096 | B) Teach clang to use such a memset for zero init of this struct (since it has |
| 2097 | a hole), instead of doing elementwise zeroing. |
| 2098 | |
Chandler Carruth | 694d753 | 2011-01-09 11:29:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2099 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chandler Carruth | 96b1b6c | 2011-01-09 21:00:19 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2100 | |
| 2101 | clang -O3 currently compiles this code: |
| 2102 | |
| 2103 | extern const int magic; |
| 2104 | double f() { return 0.0 * magic; } |
| 2105 | |
| 2106 | into |
| 2107 | |
| 2108 | @magic = external constant i32 |
| 2109 | |
| 2110 | define double @_Z1fv() nounwind readnone { |
| 2111 | entry: |
| 2112 | %tmp = load i32* @magic, align 4, !tbaa !0 |
| 2113 | %conv = sitofp i32 %tmp to double |
| 2114 | %mul = fmul double %conv, 0.000000e+00 |
| 2115 | ret double %mul |
| 2116 | } |
| 2117 | |
Chris Lattner | 00a35d0 | 2011-01-10 00:33:01 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2118 | We should be able to fold away this fmul to 0.0. More generally, fmul(x,0.0) |
| 2119 | can be folded to 0.0 if we can prove that the LHS is not -0.0, not a NaN, and |
| 2120 | not an INF. The CannotBeNegativeZero predicate in value tracking should be |
| 2121 | extended to support general "fpclassify" operations that can return |
| 2122 | yes/no/unknown for each of these predicates. |
| 2123 | |
Chris Lattner | 4a6fb94 | 2011-01-10 21:01:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2124 | In this predicate, we know that uitofp is trivially never NaN or -0.0, and |
Chris Lattner | 00a35d0 | 2011-01-10 00:33:01 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2125 | we know that it isn't +/-Inf if the floating point type has enough exponent bits |
| 2126 | to represent the largest integer value as < inf. |
Chandler Carruth | 96b1b6c | 2011-01-09 21:00:19 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2127 | |
| 2128 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chandler Carruth | fb00e27 | 2011-01-09 22:36:18 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2129 | |
Chris Lattner | 4a6fb94 | 2011-01-10 21:01:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2130 | When optimizing a transformation that can change the sign of 0.0 (such as the |
| 2131 | 0.0*val -> 0.0 transformation above), it might be provable that the sign of the |
| 2132 | expression doesn't matter. For example, by the above rules, we can't transform |
| 2133 | fmul(sitofp(x), 0.0) into 0.0, because x might be -1 and the result of the |
| 2134 | expression is defined to be -0.0. |
| 2135 | |
| 2136 | If we look at the uses of the fmul for example, we might be able to prove that |
| 2137 | all uses don't care about the sign of zero. For example, if we have: |
| 2138 | |
| 2139 | fadd(fmul(sitofp(x), 0.0), 2.0) |
| 2140 | |
| 2141 | Since we know that x+2.0 doesn't care about the sign of any zeros in X, we can |
| 2142 | transform the fmul to 0.0, and then the fadd to 2.0. |
| 2143 | |
| 2144 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 4cd18f9 | 2011-01-13 22:08:15 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2145 | |
| 2146 | We should enhance memcpy/memcpy/memset to allow a metadata node on them |
| 2147 | indicating that some bytes of the transfer are undefined. This is useful for |
Chris Lattner | 4c5456a | 2011-01-13 22:11:56 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2148 | frontends like clang when lowering struct copies, when some elements of the |
Chris Lattner | 4cd18f9 | 2011-01-13 22:08:15 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2149 | struct are undefined. Consider something like this: |
| 2150 | |
| 2151 | struct x { |
| 2152 | char a; |
| 2153 | int b[4]; |
| 2154 | }; |
| 2155 | void foo(struct x*P); |
| 2156 | struct x testfunc() { |
| 2157 | struct x V1, V2; |
| 2158 | foo(&V1); |
| 2159 | V2 = V1; |
| 2160 | |
| 2161 | return V2; |
| 2162 | } |
| 2163 | |
| 2164 | We currently compile this to: |
| 2165 | $ clang t.c -S -o - -O0 -emit-llvm | opt -scalarrepl -S |
| 2166 | |
| 2167 | |
| 2168 | %struct.x = type { i8, [4 x i32] } |
| 2169 | |
| 2170 | define void @testfunc(%struct.x* sret %agg.result) nounwind ssp { |
| 2171 | entry: |
| 2172 | %V1 = alloca %struct.x, align 4 |
| 2173 | call void @foo(%struct.x* %V1) |
| 2174 | %tmp1 = bitcast %struct.x* %V1 to i8* |
| 2175 | %0 = bitcast %struct.x* %V1 to i160* |
| 2176 | %srcval1 = load i160* %0, align 4 |
| 2177 | %tmp2 = bitcast %struct.x* %agg.result to i8* |
| 2178 | %1 = bitcast %struct.x* %agg.result to i160* |
| 2179 | store i160 %srcval1, i160* %1, align 4 |
| 2180 | ret void |
| 2181 | } |
| 2182 | |
| 2183 | This happens because SRoA sees that the temp alloca has is being memcpy'd into |
| 2184 | and out of and it has holes and it has to be conservative. If we knew about the |
| 2185 | holes, then this could be much much better. |
| 2186 | |
| 2187 | Having information about these holes would also improve memcpy (etc) lowering at |
| 2188 | llc time when it gets inlined, because we can use smaller transfers. This also |
| 2189 | avoids partial register stalls in some important cases. |
| 2190 | |
| 2191 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 5653f1f | 2011-02-16 19:16:34 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2192 | |
Chris Lattner | cb40195 | 2011-02-17 01:43:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2193 | We don't fold (icmp (add) (add)) unless the two adds only have a single use. |
| 2194 | There are a lot of cases that we're refusing to fold in (e.g.) 256.bzip2, for |
| 2195 | example: |
| 2196 | |
| 2197 | %indvar.next90 = add i64 %indvar89, 1 ;; Has 2 uses |
| 2198 | %tmp96 = add i64 %tmp95, 1 ;; Has 1 use |
| 2199 | %exitcond97 = icmp eq i64 %indvar.next90, %tmp96 |
| 2200 | |
| 2201 | We don't fold this because we don't want to introduce an overlapped live range |
| 2202 | of the ivar. However if we can make this more aggressive without causing |
| 2203 | performance issues in two ways: |
| 2204 | |
| 2205 | 1. If *either* the LHS or RHS has a single use, we can definitely do the |
| 2206 | transformation. In the overlapping liverange case we're trading one register |
| 2207 | use for one fewer operation, which is a reasonable trade. Before doing this |
| 2208 | we should verify that the llc output actually shrinks for some benchmarks. |
| 2209 | 2. If both ops have multiple uses, we can still fold it if the operations are |
| 2210 | both sinkable to *after* the icmp (e.g. in a subsequent block) which doesn't |
| 2211 | increase register pressure. |
| 2212 | |
| 2213 | There are a ton of icmp's we aren't simplifying because of the reg pressure |
| 2214 | concern. Care is warranted here though because many of these are induction |
| 2215 | variables and other cases that matter a lot to performance, like the above. |
| 2216 | Here's a blob of code that you can drop into the bottom of visitICmp to see some |
| 2217 | missed cases: |
| 2218 | |
| 2219 | { Value *A, *B, *C, *D; |
| 2220 | if (match(Op0, m_Add(m_Value(A), m_Value(B))) && |
| 2221 | match(Op1, m_Add(m_Value(C), m_Value(D))) && |
| 2222 | (A == C || A == D || B == C || B == D)) { |
| 2223 | errs() << "OP0 = " << *Op0 << " U=" << Op0->getNumUses() << "\n"; |
| 2224 | errs() << "OP1 = " << *Op1 << " U=" << Op1->getNumUses() << "\n"; |
| 2225 | errs() << "CMP = " << I << "\n\n"; |
| 2226 | } |
| 2227 | } |
| 2228 | |
| 2229 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 2230 | |
Benjamin Kramer | ef7b8d9 | 2011-03-25 17:32:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2231 | define i1 @test1(i32 %x) nounwind { |
| 2232 | %and = and i32 %x, 3 |
| 2233 | %cmp = icmp ult i32 %and, 2 |
| 2234 | ret i1 %cmp |
| 2235 | } |
Chris Lattner | cb40195 | 2011-02-17 01:43:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2236 | |
Benjamin Kramer | ef7b8d9 | 2011-03-25 17:32:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2237 | Can be folded to (x & 2) == 0. |
| 2238 | |
| 2239 | define i1 @test2(i32 %x) nounwind { |
| 2240 | %and = and i32 %x, 3 |
| 2241 | %cmp = icmp ugt i32 %and, 1 |
| 2242 | ret i1 %cmp |
| 2243 | } |
| 2244 | |
| 2245 | Can be folded to (x & 2) != 0. |
| 2246 | |
| 2247 | SimplifyDemandedBits shrinks the "and" constant to 2 but instcombine misses the |
| 2248 | icmp transform. |
| 2249 | |
| 2250 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | df2ef90 | 2011-04-14 04:21:42 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2251 | |
Chris Lattner | ed0318e | 2011-04-25 18:44:26 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2252 | This code: |
| 2253 | |
| 2254 | typedef struct { |
| 2255 | int f1:1; |
| 2256 | int f2:1; |
| 2257 | int f3:1; |
| 2258 | int f4:29; |
| 2259 | } t1; |
| 2260 | |
| 2261 | typedef struct { |
| 2262 | int f1:1; |
| 2263 | int f2:1; |
| 2264 | int f3:30; |
| 2265 | } t2; |
| 2266 | |
| 2267 | t1 s1; |
| 2268 | t2 s2; |
| 2269 | |
| 2270 | void func1(void) |
| 2271 | { |
| 2272 | s1.f1 = s2.f1; |
| 2273 | s1.f2 = s2.f2; |
| 2274 | } |
| 2275 | |
| 2276 | Compiles into this IR (on x86-64 at least): |
| 2277 | |
| 2278 | %struct.t1 = type { i8, [3 x i8] } |
| 2279 | @s2 = global %struct.t1 zeroinitializer, align 4 |
| 2280 | @s1 = global %struct.t1 zeroinitializer, align 4 |
| 2281 | define void @func1() nounwind ssp noredzone { |
| 2282 | entry: |
| 2283 | %0 = load i32* bitcast (%struct.t1* @s2 to i32*), align 4 |
| 2284 | %bf.val.sext5 = and i32 %0, 1 |
| 2285 | %1 = load i32* bitcast (%struct.t1* @s1 to i32*), align 4 |
| 2286 | %2 = and i32 %1, -4 |
| 2287 | %3 = or i32 %2, %bf.val.sext5 |
| 2288 | %bf.val.sext26 = and i32 %0, 2 |
| 2289 | %4 = or i32 %3, %bf.val.sext26 |
| 2290 | store i32 %4, i32* bitcast (%struct.t1* @s1 to i32*), align 4 |
| 2291 | ret void |
| 2292 | } |
| 2293 | |
| 2294 | The two or/and's should be merged into one each. |
| 2295 | |
| 2296 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 2297 | |
Chris Lattner | b6fcf4c | 2011-05-22 05:45:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2298 | Machine level code hoisting can be useful in some cases. For example, PR9408 |
| 2299 | is about: |
Chris Lattner | ed0318e | 2011-04-25 18:44:26 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2300 | |
Chris Lattner | b6fcf4c | 2011-05-22 05:45:06 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2301 | typedef union { |
| 2302 | void (*f1)(int); |
| 2303 | void (*f2)(long); |
| 2304 | } funcs; |
| 2305 | |
| 2306 | void foo(funcs f, int which) { |
| 2307 | int a = 5; |
| 2308 | if (which) { |
| 2309 | f.f1(a); |
| 2310 | } else { |
| 2311 | f.f2(a); |
| 2312 | } |
| 2313 | } |
| 2314 | |
| 2315 | which we compile to: |
| 2316 | |
| 2317 | foo: # @foo |
| 2318 | # BB#0: # %entry |
| 2319 | pushq %rbp |
| 2320 | movq %rsp, %rbp |
| 2321 | testl %esi, %esi |
| 2322 | movq %rdi, %rax |
| 2323 | je .LBB0_2 |
| 2324 | # BB#1: # %if.then |
| 2325 | movl $5, %edi |
| 2326 | callq *%rax |
| 2327 | popq %rbp |
| 2328 | ret |
| 2329 | .LBB0_2: # %if.else |
| 2330 | movl $5, %edi |
| 2331 | callq *%rax |
| 2332 | popq %rbp |
| 2333 | ret |
| 2334 | |
| 2335 | Note that bb1 and bb2 are the same. This doesn't happen at the IR level |
| 2336 | because one call is passing an i32 and the other is passing an i64. |
| 2337 | |
| 2338 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Chris Lattner | 87943e3 | 2011-05-22 18:28:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2339 | |
| 2340 | I see this sort of pattern in 176.gcc in a few places (e.g. the start of |
| 2341 | store_bit_field). The rem should be replaced with a multiply and subtract: |
| 2342 | |
| 2343 | %3 = sdiv i32 %A, %B |
| 2344 | %4 = srem i32 %A, %B |
| 2345 | |
Chris Lattner | 32232fc | 2011-05-23 20:17:44 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2346 | Similarly for udiv/urem. Note that this shouldn't be done on X86 or ARM, |
| 2347 | which can do this in a single operation (instruction or libcall). It is |
| 2348 | probably best to do this in the code generator. |
Chris Lattner | 87943e3 | 2011-05-22 18:28:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2349 | |
| 2350 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
Benjamin Kramer | 3e328ec | 2011-09-07 22:49:26 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2351 | |
| 2352 | unsigned foo(unsigned x, unsigned y) { return (x & y) == 0 || x == 0; } |
| 2353 | should fold to (x & y) == 0. |
| 2354 | |
| 2355 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| 2356 | |
| 2357 | unsigned foo(unsigned x, unsigned y) { return x > y && x != 0; } |
| 2358 | should fold to x > y. |
| 2359 | |
| 2360 | //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |