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* Add the ability to use GEPs for address sinking in CGPHal Finkel2014-04-121-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The current memory-instruction optimization logic in CGP, which sinks parts of the address computation that can be adsorbed by the addressing mode, does this by explicitly converting the relevant part of the address computation into IR-level integer operations (making use of ptrtoint and inttoptr). For most targets this is currently not a problem, but for targets wishing to make use of IR-level aliasing analysis during CodeGen, the use of ptrtoint/inttoptr is a problem for two reasons: 1. BasicAA becomes less powerful in the face of the ptrtoint/inttoptr 2. In cases where type-punning was used, and BasicAA was used to override TBAA, BasicAA may no longer do so. (this had forced us to disable all use of TBAA in CodeGen; something which we can now enable again) This (use of GEPs instead of ptrtoint/inttoptr) is not currently enabled by default (except for those targets that use AA during CodeGen), and so aside from some PowerPC subtargets and SystemZ, there should be no change in behavior. We may be able to switch completely away from the ptrtoint/inttoptr sinking on all targets, but further testing is required. I've doubled-up on a number of existing tests that are sensitive to the address sinking behavior (including some store-merging tests that are sensitive to the order of the resulting ADD operations at the SDAG level). llvm-svn: 206092
* Enable LSR IV Chains with sufficient heuristics.Andrew Trick2012-01-101-0/+300
These heuristics are sufficient for enabling IV chains by default. Performance analysis has been done for i386, x86_64, and thumbv7. The optimization is rarely important, but can significantly speed up certain cases by eliminating spill code within the loop. Unrolled loops are prime candidates for IV chains. In many cases, the final code could still be improved with more target specific optimization following LSR. The goal of this feature is for LSR to make the best choice of induction variables. Instruction selection may not completely take advantage of this feature yet. As a result, there could be cases of slight code size increase. Code size can be worse on x86 because it doesn't support postincrement addressing. In fact, when chains are formed, you may see redundant address plus stride addition in the addressing mode. GenerateIVChains tries to compensate for the common cases. On ARM, code size increase can be mitigated by using postincrement addressing, but downstream codegen currently misses some opportunities. llvm-svn: 147826
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