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2016-12-15Use PIC relocation model as default for PowerPC64 ELF.Joerg Sonnenberger
Most of the PowerPC64 code generation for the ELF ABI is already PIC. There are four main exceptions: (1) Constant pointer arrays etc. should in writeable sections. (2) The TOC restoration NOP after a call is needed for all global symbols. While GNU ld has a workaround for questionable GCC self-calls, we trigger the checks for calls from COMDAT sections as they cross input sections and are therefore not considered self-calls. The current decision is questionable and suboptimal, but outside the scope of the change. (3) TLS access can not use the initial-exec model. (4) Jump tables should use relative addresses. Note that the current encoding doesn't work for the large code model, but it is more compact than the default for any non-trivial jump table. Improving this is again beyond the scope of this change. At least (1) and (3) are assumptions made in target-independent code and introducing additional hooks is a bit messy. Testing with clang shows that a -fPIC binary is 600KB smaller than the corresponding -fno-pic build. Separate testing from improved jump table encodings would explain only about 100KB or so. The rest is expected to be a result of more aggressive immediate forming for -fno-pic, where the -fPIC binary just uses TOC entries. This change brings the LLVM output in line with the GCC output, other PPC64 compilers like XLC on AIX are known to produce PIC by default as well. The relocation model can still be provided explicitly, i.e. when using MCJIT. One test case for case (1) is included, other test cases with relocation mode sensitive behavior are wired to static for now. They will be reviewed and adjusted separately. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26566 git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@289743 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2016-08-03Adding -verify-machineinstrs option to PowerPC testsEhsan Amiri
Currently we have a number of tests that fail with -verify-machineinstrs. To detect this cases earlier we add the option to the testcases with the exception of tests that will currently fail with this option. PR 27456 keeps track of this failures. No code review, as discussed with Hal Finkel. git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@277624 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2015-01-15[PowerPC] Loosen ELFv1 PPC64 func descriptor loads for indirect callsHal Finkel
Function pointers under PPC64 ELFv1 (which is used on PPC64/Linux on the POWER7, A2 and earlier cores) are really pointers to a function descriptor, a structure with three pointers: the actual pointer to the code to which to jump, the pointer to the TOC needed by the callee, and an environment pointer. We used to chain these loads, and make them opaque to the rest of the optimizer, so that they'd always occur directly before the call. This is not necessary, and in fact, highly suboptimal on embedded cores. Once the function pointer is known, the loads can be performed ahead of time; in fact, they can be hoisted out of loops. Now these function descriptors are almost always generated by the linker, and thus the contents of the descriptors are invariant. As a result, by default, we'll mark the associated loads as invariant (allowing them to be hoisted out of loops). I've added a target feature to turn this off, however, just in case someone needs that option (constructing an on-stack descriptor, casting it to a function pointer, and then calling it cannot be well-defined C/C++ code, but I can imagine some JIT-compilation system doing so). Consider this simple test: $ cat call.c typedef void (*fp)(); void bar(fp x) { for (int i = 0; i < 1600000000; ++i) x(); } $ cat main.c typedef void (*fp)(); void bar(fp x); void foo() {} int main() { bar(foo); } On the PPC A2 (the BG/Q supercomputer), marking the function-descriptor loads as invariant brings the execution time down to ~8 seconds from ~32 seconds with the loads in the loop. The difference on the POWER7 is smaller. Compiling with: gcc -std=c99 -O3 -mcpu=native call.c main.c : ~6 seconds [this is 4.8.2] clang -O3 -mcpu=native call.c main.c : ~5.3 seconds clang -O3 -mcpu=native call.c main.c -mno-invariant-function-descriptors : ~4 seconds (looks like we'd benefit from additional loop unrolling here, as a first guess, because this is faster with the extra loads) The -mno-invariant-function-descriptors will be added to Clang shortly. git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@226207 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2015-01-12[PowerPC] Fix calls to non-function objectsHal Finkel
Looking at r225438 inspired me to see how the PowerPC backend handled the situation (calling a bitcasted TLS global), and it turns out we also produced an error (cannot select ...). What it means to "call" something that is not a function is implementation and platform specific, but in the name of doing something (besides crashing), this makes sure we do what GCC does (treat all such calls as calls through a function pointer -- meaning that the pointer is assumed, as is the convention on PPC, to point to a function descriptor structure holding the actual code address along with the function's TOC pointer and environment pointer). As GCC does, we now do the same for calling regular (non-TLS) non-function globals too. I'm not sure whether this is the most useful way to define the behavior, but at least we won't be alone. git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@225617 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8