1 //===-- X86FixupBWInsts.cpp - Fixup Byte or Word instructions -----------===// 2 // 3 // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure 4 // 5 // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source 6 // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. 7 // 8 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 9 /// \file 10 /// This file defines the pass that looks through the machine instructions 11 /// late in the compilation, and finds byte or word instructions that 12 /// can be profitably replaced with 32 bit instructions that give equivalent 13 /// results for the bits of the results that are used. There are two possible 14 /// reasons to do this. 15 /// 16 /// One reason is to avoid false-dependences on the upper portions 17 /// of the registers. Only instructions that have a destination register 18 /// which is not in any of the source registers can be affected by this. 19 /// Any instruction where one of the source registers is also the destination 20 /// register is unaffected, because it has a true dependence on the source 21 /// register already. So, this consideration primarily affects load 22 /// instructions and register-to-register moves. It would 23 /// seem like cmov(s) would also be affected, but because of the way cmov is 24 /// really implemented by most machines as reading both the destination and 25 /// and source regsters, and then "merging" the two based on a condition, 26 /// it really already should be considered as having a true dependence on the 27 /// destination register as well. 28 /// 29 /// The other reason to do this is for potential code size savings. Word 30 /// operations need an extra override byte compared to their 32 bit 31 /// versions. So this can convert many word operations to their larger 32 /// size, saving a byte in encoding. This could introduce partial register 33 /// dependences where none existed however. As an example take: 34 /// orw ax, $0x1000 35 /// addw ax, $3 36 /// now if this were to get transformed into 37 /// orw ax, $1000 38 /// addl eax, $3 39 /// because the addl encodes shorter than the addw, this would introduce 40 /// a use of a register that was only partially written earlier. On older 41 /// Intel processors this can be quite a performance penalty, so this should 42 /// probably only be done when it can be proven that a new partial dependence 43 /// wouldn't be created, or when your know a newer processor is being 44 /// targeted, or when optimizing for minimum code size. 45 /// 46 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 47 48 #include "X86.h" 49 #include "X86InstrInfo.h" 50 #include "X86Subtarget.h" 51 #include "llvm/ADT/Statistic.h" 52 #include "llvm/CodeGen/LivePhysRegs.h" 53 #include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineFunctionPass.h" 54 #include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineInstrBuilder.h" 55 #include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineLoopInfo.h" 56 #include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineRegisterInfo.h" 57 #include "llvm/CodeGen/Passes.h" 58 #include "llvm/Support/Debug.h" 59 #include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h" 60 #include "llvm/Target/TargetInstrInfo.h" 61 using namespace llvm; 62 63 #define FIXUPBW_DESC "X86 Byte/Word Instruction Fixup" 64 #define FIXUPBW_NAME "x86-fixup-bw-insts" 65 66 #define DEBUG_TYPE FIXUPBW_NAME 67 68 // Option to allow this optimization pass to have fine-grained control. 69 static cl::opt<bool> 70 FixupBWInsts("fixup-byte-word-insts", 71 cl::desc("Change byte and word instructions to larger sizes"), 72 cl::init(true), cl::Hidden); 73 74 namespace { 75 class FixupBWInstPass : public MachineFunctionPass { 76 /// Loop over all of the instructions in the basic block replacing applicable 77 /// byte or word instructions with better alternatives. 78 void processBasicBlock(MachineFunction &MF, MachineBasicBlock &MBB); 79 80 /// This sets the \p SuperDestReg to the 32 bit super reg of the original 81 /// destination register of the MachineInstr passed in. It returns true if 82 /// that super register is dead just prior to \p OrigMI, and false if not. 83 bool getSuperRegDestIfDead(MachineInstr *OrigMI, 84 unsigned &SuperDestReg) const; 85 86 /// Change the MachineInstr \p MI into the equivalent extending load to 32 bit 87 /// register if it is safe to do so. Return the replacement instruction if 88 /// OK, otherwise return nullptr. 89 MachineInstr *tryReplaceLoad(unsigned New32BitOpcode, MachineInstr *MI) const; 90 91 /// Change the MachineInstr \p MI into the equivalent 32-bit copy if it is 92 /// safe to do so. Return the replacement instruction if OK, otherwise return 93 /// nullptr. 94 MachineInstr *tryReplaceCopy(MachineInstr *MI) const; 95 96 // Change the MachineInstr \p MI into an eqivalent 32 bit instruction if 97 // possible. Return the replacement instruction if OK, return nullptr 98 // otherwise. Set WasCandidate to true or false depending on whether the 99 // MI was a candidate for this sort of transformation. 100 MachineInstr *tryReplaceInstr(MachineInstr *MI, MachineBasicBlock &MBB, 101 bool &WasCandidate) const; 102 public: 103 static char ID; 104 105 StringRef getPassName() const override { return FIXUPBW_DESC; } 106 107 FixupBWInstPass() : MachineFunctionPass(ID) { 108 initializeFixupBWInstPassPass(*PassRegistry::getPassRegistry()); 109 } 110 111 void getAnalysisUsage(AnalysisUsage &AU) const override { 112 AU.addRequired<MachineLoopInfo>(); // Machine loop info is used to 113 // guide some heuristics. 114 MachineFunctionPass::getAnalysisUsage(AU); 115 } 116 117 /// Loop over all of the basic blocks, replacing byte and word instructions by 118 /// equivalent 32 bit instructions where performance or code size can be 119 /// improved. 120 bool runOnMachineFunction(MachineFunction &MF) override; 121 122 MachineFunctionProperties getRequiredProperties() const override { 123 return MachineFunctionProperties().set( 124 MachineFunctionProperties::Property::NoVRegs); 125 } 126 127 private: 128 MachineFunction *MF; 129 130 /// Machine instruction info used throughout the class. 131 const X86InstrInfo *TII; 132 133 /// Local member for function's OptForSize attribute. 134 bool OptForSize; 135 136 /// Machine loop info used for guiding some heruistics. 137 MachineLoopInfo *MLI; 138 139 /// Register Liveness information after the current instruction. 140 LivePhysRegs LiveRegs; 141 }; 142 char FixupBWInstPass::ID = 0; 143 } 144 145 INITIALIZE_PASS(FixupBWInstPass, FIXUPBW_NAME, FIXUPBW_DESC, false, false) 146 147 FunctionPass *llvm::createX86FixupBWInsts() { return new FixupBWInstPass(); } 148 149 bool FixupBWInstPass::runOnMachineFunction(MachineFunction &MF) { 150 if (!FixupBWInsts || skipFunction(*MF.getFunction())) 151 return false; 152 153 this->MF = &MF; 154 TII = MF.getSubtarget<X86Subtarget>().getInstrInfo(); 155 OptForSize = MF.getFunction()->optForSize(); 156 MLI = &getAnalysis<MachineLoopInfo>(); 157 LiveRegs.init(TII->getRegisterInfo()); 158 159 DEBUG(dbgs() << "Start X86FixupBWInsts\n";); 160 161 // Process all basic blocks. 162 for (auto &MBB : MF) 163 processBasicBlock(MF, MBB); 164 165 DEBUG(dbgs() << "End X86FixupBWInsts\n";); 166 167 return true; 168 } 169 170 // TODO: This method of analysis can miss some legal cases, because the 171 // super-register could be live into the address expression for a memory 172 // reference for the instruction, and still be killed/last used by the 173 // instruction. However, the existing query interfaces don't seem to 174 // easily allow that to be checked. 175 // 176 // What we'd really like to know is whether after OrigMI, the 177 // only portion of SuperDestReg that is alive is the portion that 178 // was the destination register of OrigMI. 179 bool FixupBWInstPass::getSuperRegDestIfDead(MachineInstr *OrigMI, 180 unsigned &SuperDestReg) const { 181 auto *TRI = &TII->getRegisterInfo(); 182 183 unsigned OrigDestReg = OrigMI->getOperand(0).getReg(); 184 SuperDestReg = getX86SubSuperRegister(OrigDestReg, 32); 185 186 const auto SubRegIdx = TRI->getSubRegIndex(SuperDestReg, OrigDestReg); 187 188 // Make sure that the sub-register that this instruction has as its 189 // destination is the lowest order sub-register of the super-register. 190 // If it isn't, then the register isn't really dead even if the 191 // super-register is considered dead. 192 if (SubRegIdx == X86::sub_8bit_hi) 193 return false; 194 195 if (LiveRegs.contains(SuperDestReg)) 196 return false; 197 198 if (SubRegIdx == X86::sub_8bit) { 199 // In the case of byte registers, we also have to check that the upper 200 // byte register is also dead. That is considered to be independent of 201 // whether the super-register is dead. 202 unsigned UpperByteReg = 203 getX86SubSuperRegister(SuperDestReg, 8, /*High=*/true); 204 205 if (LiveRegs.contains(UpperByteReg)) 206 return false; 207 } 208 209 return true; 210 } 211 212 MachineInstr *FixupBWInstPass::tryReplaceLoad(unsigned New32BitOpcode, 213 MachineInstr *MI) const { 214 unsigned NewDestReg; 215 216 // We are going to try to rewrite this load to a larger zero-extending 217 // load. This is safe if all portions of the 32 bit super-register 218 // of the original destination register, except for the original destination 219 // register are dead. getSuperRegDestIfDead checks that. 220 if (!getSuperRegDestIfDead(MI, NewDestReg)) 221 return nullptr; 222 223 // Safe to change the instruction. 224 MachineInstrBuilder MIB = 225 BuildMI(*MF, MI->getDebugLoc(), TII->get(New32BitOpcode), NewDestReg); 226 227 unsigned NumArgs = MI->getNumOperands(); 228 for (unsigned i = 1; i < NumArgs; ++i) 229 MIB.addOperand(MI->getOperand(i)); 230 231 MIB->setMemRefs(MI->memoperands_begin(), MI->memoperands_end()); 232 233 return MIB; 234 } 235 236 MachineInstr *FixupBWInstPass::tryReplaceCopy(MachineInstr *MI) const { 237 assert(MI->getNumExplicitOperands() == 2); 238 auto &OldDest = MI->getOperand(0); 239 auto &OldSrc = MI->getOperand(1); 240 241 unsigned NewDestReg; 242 if (!getSuperRegDestIfDead(MI, NewDestReg)) 243 return nullptr; 244 245 unsigned NewSrcReg = getX86SubSuperRegister(OldSrc.getReg(), 32); 246 247 // This is only correct if we access the same subregister index: otherwise, 248 // we could try to replace "movb %ah, %al" with "movl %eax, %eax". 249 auto *TRI = &TII->getRegisterInfo(); 250 if (TRI->getSubRegIndex(NewSrcReg, OldSrc.getReg()) != 251 TRI->getSubRegIndex(NewDestReg, OldDest.getReg())) 252 return nullptr; 253 254 // Safe to change the instruction. 255 // Don't set src flags, as we don't know if we're also killing the superreg. 256 // However, the superregister might not be defined; make it explicit that 257 // we don't care about the higher bits by reading it as Undef, and adding 258 // an imp-use on the original subregister. 259 MachineInstrBuilder MIB = 260 BuildMI(*MF, MI->getDebugLoc(), TII->get(X86::MOV32rr), NewDestReg) 261 .addReg(NewSrcReg, RegState::Undef) 262 .addReg(OldSrc.getReg(), RegState::Implicit); 263 264 // Drop imp-defs/uses that would be redundant with the new def/use. 265 for (auto &Op : MI->implicit_operands()) 266 if (Op.getReg() != (Op.isDef() ? NewDestReg : NewSrcReg)) 267 MIB.addOperand(Op); 268 269 return MIB; 270 } 271 272 MachineInstr *FixupBWInstPass::tryReplaceInstr( 273 MachineInstr *MI, MachineBasicBlock &MBB, 274 bool &WasCandidate) const { 275 MachineInstr *NewMI = nullptr; 276 WasCandidate = false; 277 278 // See if this is an instruction of the type we are currently looking for. 279 switch (MI->getOpcode()) { 280 281 case X86::MOV8rm: 282 // Only replace 8 bit loads with the zero extending versions if 283 // in an inner most loop and not optimizing for size. This takes 284 // an extra byte to encode, and provides limited performance upside. 285 if (MachineLoop *ML = MLI->getLoopFor(&MBB)) { 286 if (ML->begin() == ML->end() && !OptForSize) { 287 NewMI = tryReplaceLoad(X86::MOVZX32rm8, MI); 288 WasCandidate = true; 289 } 290 } 291 break; 292 293 case X86::MOV16rm: 294 // Always try to replace 16 bit load with 32 bit zero extending. 295 // Code size is the same, and there is sometimes a perf advantage 296 // from eliminating a false dependence on the upper portion of 297 // the register. 298 NewMI = tryReplaceLoad(X86::MOVZX32rm16, MI); 299 WasCandidate = true; 300 break; 301 302 case X86::MOV8rr: 303 case X86::MOV16rr: 304 // Always try to replace 8/16 bit copies with a 32 bit copy. 305 // Code size is either less (16) or equal (8), and there is sometimes a 306 // perf advantage from eliminating a false dependence on the upper portion 307 // of the register. 308 NewMI = tryReplaceCopy(MI); 309 WasCandidate = true; 310 break; 311 312 default: 313 // nothing to do here. 314 break; 315 } 316 317 return NewMI; 318 } 319 320 void FixupBWInstPass::processBasicBlock(MachineFunction &MF, 321 MachineBasicBlock &MBB) { 322 323 // This algorithm doesn't delete the instructions it is replacing 324 // right away. By leaving the existing instructions in place, the 325 // register liveness information doesn't change, and this makes the 326 // analysis that goes on be better than if the replaced instructions 327 // were immediately removed. 328 // 329 // This algorithm always creates a replacement instruction 330 // and notes that and the original in a data structure, until the 331 // whole BB has been analyzed. This keeps the replacement instructions 332 // from making it seem as if the larger register might be live. 333 SmallVector<std::pair<MachineInstr *, MachineInstr *>, 8> MIReplacements; 334 335 // Start computing liveness for this block. We iterate from the end to be able 336 // to update this for each instruction. 337 LiveRegs.clear(); 338 // We run after PEI, so we need to AddPristinesAndCSRs. 339 LiveRegs.addLiveOuts(MBB); 340 341 bool WasCandidate = false; 342 343 for (auto I = MBB.rbegin(); I != MBB.rend(); ++I) { 344 MachineInstr *MI = &*I; 345 346 MachineInstr *NewMI = tryReplaceInstr(MI, MBB, WasCandidate); 347 348 // Add this to replacements if it was a candidate, even if NewMI is 349 // nullptr. We will revisit that in a bit. 350 if (WasCandidate) { 351 MIReplacements.push_back(std::make_pair(MI, NewMI)); 352 } 353 354 // We're done with this instruction, update liveness for the next one. 355 LiveRegs.stepBackward(*MI); 356 } 357 358 while (!MIReplacements.empty()) { 359 MachineInstr *MI = MIReplacements.back().first; 360 MachineInstr *NewMI = MIReplacements.back().second; 361 MIReplacements.pop_back(); 362 if (NewMI) { 363 MBB.insert(MI, NewMI); 364 MBB.erase(MI); 365 } 366 } 367 } 368