README.txt revision 36b56886974eae4f9c5ebc96befd3e7bfe5de338
1//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
2// Random ideas for the X86 backend.
3//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
4
5This should be one DIV/IDIV instruction, not a libcall:
6
7unsigned test(unsigned long long X, unsigned Y) {
8        return X/Y;
9}
10
11This can be done trivially with a custom legalizer.  What about overflow 
12though?  http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=14224
13
14//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
15
16Improvements to the multiply -> shift/add algorithm:
17http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2004-08/msg01590.html
18
19//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
20
21Improve code like this (occurs fairly frequently, e.g. in LLVM):
22long long foo(int x) { return 1LL << x; }
23
24http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2004-09/msg01109.html
25http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2004-09/msg01128.html
26http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2004-09/msg01136.html
27
28Another useful one would be  ~0ULL >> X and ~0ULL << X.
29
30One better solution for 1LL << x is:
31        xorl    %eax, %eax
32        xorl    %edx, %edx
33        testb   $32, %cl
34        sete    %al
35        setne   %dl
36        sall    %cl, %eax
37        sall    %cl, %edx
38
39But that requires good 8-bit subreg support.
40
41Also, this might be better.  It's an extra shift, but it's one instruction
42shorter, and doesn't stress 8-bit subreg support.
43(From http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2004-09/msg01148.html,
44but without the unnecessary and.)
45        movl %ecx, %eax
46        shrl $5, %eax
47        movl %eax, %edx
48        xorl $1, %edx
49        sall %cl, %eax
50        sall %cl. %edx
51
5264-bit shifts (in general) expand to really bad code.  Instead of using
53cmovs, we should expand to a conditional branch like GCC produces.
54
55//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
56
57Some isel ideas:
58
591. Dynamic programming based approach when compile time is not an
60   issue.
612. Code duplication (addressing mode) during isel.
623. Other ideas from "Register-Sensitive Selection, Duplication, and
63   Sequencing of Instructions".
644. Scheduling for reduced register pressure.  E.g. "Minimum Register 
65   Instruction Sequence Problem: Revisiting Optimal Code Generation for DAGs" 
66   and other related papers.
67   http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/govindarajan01minimum.html
68
69//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
70
71Should we promote i16 to i32 to avoid partial register update stalls?
72
73//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
74
75Leave any_extend as pseudo instruction and hint to register
76allocator. Delay codegen until post register allocation.
77Note. any_extend is now turned into an INSERT_SUBREG. We still need to teach
78the coalescer how to deal with it though.
79
80//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
81
82It appears icc use push for parameter passing. Need to investigate.
83
84//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
85
86This:
87
88void foo(void);
89void bar(int x, int *P) { 
90  x >>= 2;
91  if (x) 
92    foo();
93  *P = x;
94}
95
96compiles into:
97
98	movq	%rsi, %rbx
99	movl	%edi, %r14d
100	sarl	$2, %r14d
101	testl	%r14d, %r14d
102	je	LBB0_2
103
104Instead of doing an explicit test, we can use the flags off the sar.  This
105occurs in a bigger testcase like this, which is pretty common:
106
107#include <vector>
108int test1(std::vector<int> &X) {
109  int Sum = 0;
110  for (long i = 0, e = X.size(); i != e; ++i)
111    X[i] = 0;
112  return Sum;
113}
114
115//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
116
117Only use inc/neg/not instructions on processors where they are faster than
118add/sub/xor.  They are slower on the P4 due to only updating some processor
119flags.
120
121//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
122
123The instruction selector sometimes misses folding a load into a compare.  The
124pattern is written as (cmp reg, (load p)).  Because the compare isn't 
125commutative, it is not matched with the load on both sides.  The dag combiner
126should be made smart enough to canonicalize the load into the RHS of a compare
127when it can invert the result of the compare for free.
128
129//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
130
131In many cases, LLVM generates code like this:
132
133_test:
134        movl 8(%esp), %eax
135        cmpl %eax, 4(%esp)
136        setl %al
137        movzbl %al, %eax
138        ret
139
140on some processors (which ones?), it is more efficient to do this:
141
142_test:
143        movl 8(%esp), %ebx
144        xor  %eax, %eax
145        cmpl %ebx, 4(%esp)
146        setl %al
147        ret
148
149Doing this correctly is tricky though, as the xor clobbers the flags.
150
151//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
152
153We should generate bts/btr/etc instructions on targets where they are cheap or
154when codesize is important.  e.g., for:
155
156void setbit(int *target, int bit) {
157    *target |= (1 << bit);
158}
159void clearbit(int *target, int bit) {
160    *target &= ~(1 << bit);
161}
162
163//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
164
165Instead of the following for memset char*, 1, 10:
166
167	movl $16843009, 4(%edx)
168	movl $16843009, (%edx)
169	movw $257, 8(%edx)
170
171It might be better to generate
172
173	movl $16843009, %eax
174	movl %eax, 4(%edx)
175	movl %eax, (%edx)
176	movw al, 8(%edx)
177	
178when we can spare a register. It reduces code size.
179
180//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
181
182Evaluate what the best way to codegen sdiv X, (2^C) is.  For X/8, we currently
183get this:
184
185define i32 @test1(i32 %X) {
186    %Y = sdiv i32 %X, 8
187    ret i32 %Y
188}
189
190_test1:
191        movl 4(%esp), %eax
192        movl %eax, %ecx
193        sarl $31, %ecx
194        shrl $29, %ecx
195        addl %ecx, %eax
196        sarl $3, %eax
197        ret
198
199GCC knows several different ways to codegen it, one of which is this:
200
201_test1:
202        movl    4(%esp), %eax
203        cmpl    $-1, %eax
204        leal    7(%eax), %ecx
205        cmovle  %ecx, %eax
206        sarl    $3, %eax
207        ret
208
209which is probably slower, but it's interesting at least :)
210
211//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
212
213We are currently lowering large (1MB+) memmove/memcpy to rep/stosl and rep/movsl
214We should leave these as libcalls for everything over a much lower threshold,
215since libc is hand tuned for medium and large mem ops (avoiding RFO for large
216stores, TLB preheating, etc)
217
218//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
219
220Optimize this into something reasonable:
221 x * copysign(1.0, y) * copysign(1.0, z)
222
223//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
224
225Optimize copysign(x, *y) to use an integer load from y.
226
227//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
228
229The following tests perform worse with LSR:
230
231lambda, siod, optimizer-eval, ackermann, hash2, nestedloop, strcat, and Treesor.
232
233//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
234
235Adding to the list of cmp / test poor codegen issues:
236
237int test(__m128 *A, __m128 *B) {
238  if (_mm_comige_ss(*A, *B))
239    return 3;
240  else
241    return 4;
242}
243
244_test:
245	movl 8(%esp), %eax
246	movaps (%eax), %xmm0
247	movl 4(%esp), %eax
248	movaps (%eax), %xmm1
249	comiss %xmm0, %xmm1
250	setae %al
251	movzbl %al, %ecx
252	movl $3, %eax
253	movl $4, %edx
254	cmpl $0, %ecx
255	cmove %edx, %eax
256	ret
257
258Note the setae, movzbl, cmpl, cmove can be replaced with a single cmovae. There
259are a number of issues. 1) We are introducing a setcc between the result of the
260intrisic call and select. 2) The intrinsic is expected to produce a i32 value
261so a any extend (which becomes a zero extend) is added.
262
263We probably need some kind of target DAG combine hook to fix this.
264
265//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
266
267We generate significantly worse code for this than GCC:
268http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21150
269http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/attachment.cgi?id=8701
270
271There is also one case we do worse on PPC.
272
273//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
274
275For this:
276
277int test(int a)
278{
279  return a * 3;
280}
281
282We currently emits
283	imull $3, 4(%esp), %eax
284
285Perhaps this is what we really should generate is? Is imull three or four
286cycles? Note: ICC generates this:
287	movl	4(%esp), %eax
288	leal	(%eax,%eax,2), %eax
289
290The current instruction priority is based on pattern complexity. The former is
291more "complex" because it folds a load so the latter will not be emitted.
292
293Perhaps we should use AddedComplexity to give LEA32r a higher priority? We
294should always try to match LEA first since the LEA matching code does some
295estimate to determine whether the match is profitable.
296
297However, if we care more about code size, then imull is better. It's two bytes
298shorter than movl + leal.
299
300On a Pentium M, both variants have the same characteristics with regard
301to throughput; however, the multiplication has a latency of four cycles, as
302opposed to two cycles for the movl+lea variant.
303
304//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
305
306__builtin_ffs codegen is messy.
307
308int ffs_(unsigned X) { return __builtin_ffs(X); }
309
310llvm produces:
311ffs_:
312        movl    4(%esp), %ecx
313        bsfl    %ecx, %eax
314        movl    $32, %edx
315        cmove   %edx, %eax
316        incl    %eax
317        xorl    %edx, %edx
318        testl   %ecx, %ecx
319        cmove   %edx, %eax
320        ret
321
322vs gcc:
323
324_ffs_:
325        movl    $-1, %edx
326        bsfl    4(%esp), %eax
327        cmove   %edx, %eax
328        addl    $1, %eax
329        ret
330
331Another example of __builtin_ffs (use predsimplify to eliminate a select):
332
333int foo (unsigned long j) {
334  if (j)
335    return __builtin_ffs (j) - 1;
336  else
337    return 0;
338}
339
340//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
341
342It appears gcc place string data with linkonce linkage in
343.section __TEXT,__const_coal,coalesced instead of
344.section __DATA,__const_coal,coalesced.
345Take a look at darwin.h, there are other Darwin assembler directives that we
346do not make use of.
347
348//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
349
350define i32 @foo(i32* %a, i32 %t) {
351entry:
352	br label %cond_true
353
354cond_true:		; preds = %cond_true, %entry
355	%x.0.0 = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %tmp9, %cond_true ]		; <i32> [#uses=3]
356	%t_addr.0.0 = phi i32 [ %t, %entry ], [ %tmp7, %cond_true ]		; <i32> [#uses=1]
357	%tmp2 = getelementptr i32* %a, i32 %x.0.0		; <i32*> [#uses=1]
358	%tmp3 = load i32* %tmp2		; <i32> [#uses=1]
359	%tmp5 = add i32 %t_addr.0.0, %x.0.0		; <i32> [#uses=1]
360	%tmp7 = add i32 %tmp5, %tmp3		; <i32> [#uses=2]
361	%tmp9 = add i32 %x.0.0, 1		; <i32> [#uses=2]
362	%tmp = icmp sgt i32 %tmp9, 39		; <i1> [#uses=1]
363	br i1 %tmp, label %bb12, label %cond_true
364
365bb12:		; preds = %cond_true
366	ret i32 %tmp7
367}
368is pessimized by -loop-reduce and -indvars
369
370//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
371
372u32 to float conversion improvement:
373
374float uint32_2_float( unsigned u ) {
375  float fl = (int) (u & 0xffff);
376  float fh = (int) (u >> 16);
377  fh *= 0x1.0p16f;
378  return fh + fl;
379}
380
38100000000        subl    $0x04,%esp
38200000003        movl    0x08(%esp,1),%eax
38300000007        movl    %eax,%ecx
38400000009        shrl    $0x10,%ecx
3850000000c        cvtsi2ss        %ecx,%xmm0
38600000010        andl    $0x0000ffff,%eax
38700000015        cvtsi2ss        %eax,%xmm1
38800000019        mulss   0x00000078,%xmm0
38900000021        addss   %xmm1,%xmm0
39000000025        movss   %xmm0,(%esp,1)
3910000002a        flds    (%esp,1)
3920000002d        addl    $0x04,%esp
39300000030        ret
394
395//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
396
397When using fastcc abi, align stack slot of argument of type double on 8 byte
398boundary to improve performance.
399
400//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
401
402GCC's ix86_expand_int_movcc function (in i386.c) has a ton of interesting
403simplifications for integer "x cmp y ? a : b".
404
405//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
406
407Consider the expansion of:
408
409define i32 @test3(i32 %X) {
410        %tmp1 = urem i32 %X, 255
411        ret i32 %tmp1
412}
413
414Currently it compiles to:
415
416...
417        movl $2155905153, %ecx
418        movl 8(%esp), %esi
419        movl %esi, %eax
420        mull %ecx
421...
422
423This could be "reassociated" into:
424
425        movl $2155905153, %eax
426        movl 8(%esp), %ecx
427        mull %ecx
428
429to avoid the copy.  In fact, the existing two-address stuff would do this
430except that mul isn't a commutative 2-addr instruction.  I guess this has
431to be done at isel time based on the #uses to mul?
432
433//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
434
435Make sure the instruction which starts a loop does not cross a cacheline
436boundary. This requires knowning the exact length of each machine instruction.
437That is somewhat complicated, but doable. Example 256.bzip2:
438
439In the new trace, the hot loop has an instruction which crosses a cacheline
440boundary.  In addition to potential cache misses, this can't help decoding as I
441imagine there has to be some kind of complicated decoder reset and realignment
442to grab the bytes from the next cacheline.
443
444532  532 0x3cfc movb     (1809(%esp, %esi), %bl   <<<--- spans 2 64 byte lines
445942  942 0x3d03 movl     %dh, (1809(%esp, %esi)
446937  937 0x3d0a incl     %esi
4473    3   0x3d0b cmpb     %bl, %dl
44827   27  0x3d0d jnz      0x000062db <main+11707>
449
450//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
451
452In c99 mode, the preprocessor doesn't like assembly comments like #TRUNCATE.
453
454//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
455
456This could be a single 16-bit load.
457
458int f(char *p) {
459    if ((p[0] == 1) & (p[1] == 2)) return 1;
460    return 0;
461}
462
463//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
464
465We should inline lrintf and probably other libc functions.
466
467//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
468
469Use the FLAGS values from arithmetic instructions more.  For example, compile:
470
471int add_zf(int *x, int y, int a, int b) {
472     if ((*x += y) == 0)
473          return a;
474     else
475          return b;
476}
477
478to:
479       addl    %esi, (%rdi)
480       movl    %edx, %eax
481       cmovne  %ecx, %eax
482       ret
483instead of:
484
485_add_zf:
486        addl (%rdi), %esi
487        movl %esi, (%rdi)
488        testl %esi, %esi
489        cmove %edx, %ecx
490        movl %ecx, %eax
491        ret
492
493As another example, compile function f2 in test/CodeGen/X86/cmp-test.ll
494without a test instruction.
495
496//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
497
498These two functions have identical effects:
499
500unsigned int f(unsigned int i, unsigned int n) {++i; if (i == n) ++i; return i;}
501unsigned int f2(unsigned int i, unsigned int n) {++i; i += i == n; return i;}
502
503We currently compile them to:
504
505_f:
506        movl 4(%esp), %eax
507        movl %eax, %ecx
508        incl %ecx
509        movl 8(%esp), %edx
510        cmpl %edx, %ecx
511        jne LBB1_2      #UnifiedReturnBlock
512LBB1_1: #cond_true
513        addl $2, %eax
514        ret
515LBB1_2: #UnifiedReturnBlock
516        movl %ecx, %eax
517        ret
518_f2:
519        movl 4(%esp), %eax
520        movl %eax, %ecx
521        incl %ecx
522        cmpl 8(%esp), %ecx
523        sete %cl
524        movzbl %cl, %ecx
525        leal 1(%ecx,%eax), %eax
526        ret
527
528both of which are inferior to GCC's:
529
530_f:
531        movl    4(%esp), %edx
532        leal    1(%edx), %eax
533        addl    $2, %edx
534        cmpl    8(%esp), %eax
535        cmove   %edx, %eax
536        ret
537_f2:
538        movl    4(%esp), %eax
539        addl    $1, %eax
540        xorl    %edx, %edx
541        cmpl    8(%esp), %eax
542        sete    %dl
543        addl    %edx, %eax
544        ret
545
546//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
547
548This code:
549
550void test(int X) {
551  if (X) abort();
552}
553
554is currently compiled to:
555
556_test:
557        subl $12, %esp
558        cmpl $0, 16(%esp)
559        jne LBB1_1
560        addl $12, %esp
561        ret
562LBB1_1:
563        call L_abort$stub
564
565It would be better to produce:
566
567_test:
568        subl $12, %esp
569        cmpl $0, 16(%esp)
570        jne L_abort$stub
571        addl $12, %esp
572        ret
573
574This can be applied to any no-return function call that takes no arguments etc.
575Alternatively, the stack save/restore logic could be shrink-wrapped, producing
576something like this:
577
578_test:
579        cmpl $0, 4(%esp)
580        jne LBB1_1
581        ret
582LBB1_1:
583        subl $12, %esp
584        call L_abort$stub
585
586Both are useful in different situations.  Finally, it could be shrink-wrapped
587and tail called, like this:
588
589_test:
590        cmpl $0, 4(%esp)
591        jne LBB1_1
592        ret
593LBB1_1:
594        pop %eax   # realign stack.
595        call L_abort$stub
596
597Though this probably isn't worth it.
598
599//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
600
601Sometimes it is better to codegen subtractions from a constant (e.g. 7-x) with
602a neg instead of a sub instruction.  Consider:
603
604int test(char X) { return 7-X; }
605
606we currently produce:
607_test:
608        movl $7, %eax
609        movsbl 4(%esp), %ecx
610        subl %ecx, %eax
611        ret
612
613We would use one fewer register if codegen'd as:
614
615        movsbl 4(%esp), %eax
616	neg %eax
617        add $7, %eax
618        ret
619
620Note that this isn't beneficial if the load can be folded into the sub.  In
621this case, we want a sub:
622
623int test(int X) { return 7-X; }
624_test:
625        movl $7, %eax
626        subl 4(%esp), %eax
627        ret
628
629//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
630
631Leaf functions that require one 4-byte spill slot have a prolog like this:
632
633_foo:
634        pushl   %esi
635        subl    $4, %esp
636...
637and an epilog like this:
638        addl    $4, %esp
639        popl    %esi
640        ret
641
642It would be smaller, and potentially faster, to push eax on entry and to
643pop into a dummy register instead of using addl/subl of esp.  Just don't pop 
644into any return registers :)
645
646//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
647
648The X86 backend should fold (branch (or (setcc, setcc))) into multiple 
649branches.  We generate really poor code for:
650
651double testf(double a) {
652       return a == 0.0 ? 0.0 : (a > 0.0 ? 1.0 : -1.0);
653}
654
655For example, the entry BB is:
656
657_testf:
658        subl    $20, %esp
659        pxor    %xmm0, %xmm0
660        movsd   24(%esp), %xmm1
661        ucomisd %xmm0, %xmm1
662        setnp   %al
663        sete    %cl
664        testb   %cl, %al
665        jne     LBB1_5  # UnifiedReturnBlock
666LBB1_1: # cond_true
667
668
669it would be better to replace the last four instructions with:
670
671	jp LBB1_1
672	je LBB1_5
673LBB1_1:
674
675We also codegen the inner ?: into a diamond:
676
677       cvtss2sd        LCPI1_0(%rip), %xmm2
678        cvtss2sd        LCPI1_1(%rip), %xmm3
679        ucomisd %xmm1, %xmm0
680        ja      LBB1_3  # cond_true
681LBB1_2: # cond_true
682        movapd  %xmm3, %xmm2
683LBB1_3: # cond_true
684        movapd  %xmm2, %xmm0
685        ret
686
687We should sink the load into xmm3 into the LBB1_2 block.  This should
688be pretty easy, and will nuke all the copies.
689
690//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
691
692This:
693        #include <algorithm>
694        inline std::pair<unsigned, bool> full_add(unsigned a, unsigned b)
695        { return std::make_pair(a + b, a + b < a); }
696        bool no_overflow(unsigned a, unsigned b)
697        { return !full_add(a, b).second; }
698
699Should compile to:
700	addl	%esi, %edi
701	setae	%al
702	movzbl	%al, %eax
703	ret
704
705on x86-64, instead of the rather stupid-looking:
706	addl	%esi, %edi
707	setb	%al
708	xorb	$1, %al
709	movzbl	%al, %eax
710	ret
711
712
713//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
714
715The following code:
716
717bb114.preheader:		; preds = %cond_next94
718	%tmp231232 = sext i16 %tmp62 to i32		; <i32> [#uses=1]
719	%tmp233 = sub i32 32, %tmp231232		; <i32> [#uses=1]
720	%tmp245246 = sext i16 %tmp65 to i32		; <i32> [#uses=1]
721	%tmp252253 = sext i16 %tmp68 to i32		; <i32> [#uses=1]
722	%tmp254 = sub i32 32, %tmp252253		; <i32> [#uses=1]
723	%tmp553554 = bitcast i16* %tmp37 to i8*		; <i8*> [#uses=2]
724	%tmp583584 = sext i16 %tmp98 to i32		; <i32> [#uses=1]
725	%tmp585 = sub i32 32, %tmp583584		; <i32> [#uses=1]
726	%tmp614615 = sext i16 %tmp101 to i32		; <i32> [#uses=1]
727	%tmp621622 = sext i16 %tmp104 to i32		; <i32> [#uses=1]
728	%tmp623 = sub i32 32, %tmp621622		; <i32> [#uses=1]
729	br label %bb114
730
731produces:
732
733LBB3_5:	# bb114.preheader
734	movswl	-68(%ebp), %eax
735	movl	$32, %ecx
736	movl	%ecx, -80(%ebp)
737	subl	%eax, -80(%ebp)
738	movswl	-52(%ebp), %eax
739	movl	%ecx, -84(%ebp)
740	subl	%eax, -84(%ebp)
741	movswl	-70(%ebp), %eax
742	movl	%ecx, -88(%ebp)
743	subl	%eax, -88(%ebp)
744	movswl	-50(%ebp), %eax
745	subl	%eax, %ecx
746	movl	%ecx, -76(%ebp)
747	movswl	-42(%ebp), %eax
748	movl	%eax, -92(%ebp)
749	movswl	-66(%ebp), %eax
750	movl	%eax, -96(%ebp)
751	movw	$0, -98(%ebp)
752
753This appears to be bad because the RA is not folding the store to the stack 
754slot into the movl.  The above instructions could be:
755	movl    $32, -80(%ebp)
756...
757	movl    $32, -84(%ebp)
758...
759This seems like a cross between remat and spill folding.
760
761This has redundant subtractions of %eax from a stack slot. However, %ecx doesn't
762change, so we could simply subtract %eax from %ecx first and then use %ecx (or
763vice-versa).
764
765//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
766
767This code:
768
769	%tmp659 = icmp slt i16 %tmp654, 0		; <i1> [#uses=1]
770	br i1 %tmp659, label %cond_true662, label %cond_next715
771
772produces this:
773
774	testw	%cx, %cx
775	movswl	%cx, %esi
776	jns	LBB4_109	# cond_next715
777
778Shark tells us that using %cx in the testw instruction is sub-optimal. It
779suggests using the 32-bit register (which is what ICC uses).
780
781//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
782
783We compile this:
784
785void compare (long long foo) {
786  if (foo < 4294967297LL)
787    abort();
788}
789
790to:
791
792compare:
793        subl    $4, %esp
794        cmpl    $0, 8(%esp)
795        setne   %al
796        movzbw  %al, %ax
797        cmpl    $1, 12(%esp)
798        setg    %cl
799        movzbw  %cl, %cx
800        cmove   %ax, %cx
801        testb   $1, %cl
802        jne     .LBB1_2 # UnifiedReturnBlock
803.LBB1_1:        # ifthen
804        call    abort
805.LBB1_2:        # UnifiedReturnBlock
806        addl    $4, %esp
807        ret
808
809(also really horrible code on ppc).  This is due to the expand code for 64-bit
810compares.  GCC produces multiple branches, which is much nicer:
811
812compare:
813        subl    $12, %esp
814        movl    20(%esp), %edx
815        movl    16(%esp), %eax
816        decl    %edx
817        jle     .L7
818.L5:
819        addl    $12, %esp
820        ret
821        .p2align 4,,7
822.L7:
823        jl      .L4
824        cmpl    $0, %eax
825        .p2align 4,,8
826        ja      .L5
827.L4:
828        .p2align 4,,9
829        call    abort
830
831//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
832
833Tail call optimization improvements: Tail call optimization currently
834pushes all arguments on the top of the stack (their normal place for
835non-tail call optimized calls) that source from the callers arguments
836or  that source from a virtual register (also possibly sourcing from
837callers arguments).
838This is done to prevent overwriting of parameters (see example
839below) that might be used later.
840
841example:  
842
843int callee(int32, int64); 
844int caller(int32 arg1, int32 arg2) { 
845  int64 local = arg2 * 2; 
846  return callee(arg2, (int64)local); 
847}
848
849[arg1]          [!arg2 no longer valid since we moved local onto it]
850[arg2]      ->  [(int64)
851[RETADDR]        local  ]
852
853Moving arg1 onto the stack slot of callee function would overwrite
854arg2 of the caller.
855
856Possible optimizations:
857
858
859 - Analyse the actual parameters of the callee to see which would
860   overwrite a caller parameter which is used by the callee and only
861   push them onto the top of the stack.
862
863   int callee (int32 arg1, int32 arg2);
864   int caller (int32 arg1, int32 arg2) {
865       return callee(arg1,arg2);
866   }
867
868   Here we don't need to write any variables to the top of the stack
869   since they don't overwrite each other.
870
871   int callee (int32 arg1, int32 arg2);
872   int caller (int32 arg1, int32 arg2) {
873       return callee(arg2,arg1);
874   }
875
876   Here we need to push the arguments because they overwrite each
877   other.
878
879//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
880
881main ()
882{
883  int i = 0;
884  unsigned long int z = 0;
885
886  do {
887    z -= 0x00004000;
888    i++;
889    if (i > 0x00040000)
890      abort ();
891  } while (z > 0);
892  exit (0);
893}
894
895gcc compiles this to:
896
897_main:
898	subl	$28, %esp
899	xorl	%eax, %eax
900	jmp	L2
901L3:
902	cmpl	$262144, %eax
903	je	L10
904L2:
905	addl	$1, %eax
906	cmpl	$262145, %eax
907	jne	L3
908	call	L_abort$stub
909L10:
910	movl	$0, (%esp)
911	call	L_exit$stub
912
913llvm:
914
915_main:
916	subl	$12, %esp
917	movl	$1, %eax
918	movl	$16384, %ecx
919LBB1_1:	# bb
920	cmpl	$262145, %eax
921	jge	LBB1_4	# cond_true
922LBB1_2:	# cond_next
923	incl	%eax
924	addl	$4294950912, %ecx
925	cmpl	$16384, %ecx
926	jne	LBB1_1	# bb
927LBB1_3:	# bb11
928	xorl	%eax, %eax
929	addl	$12, %esp
930	ret
931LBB1_4:	# cond_true
932	call	L_abort$stub
933
9341. LSR should rewrite the first cmp with induction variable %ecx.
9352. DAG combiner should fold
936        leal    1(%eax), %edx
937        cmpl    $262145, %edx
938   =>
939        cmpl    $262144, %eax
940
941//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
942
943define i64 @test(double %X) {
944	%Y = fptosi double %X to i64
945	ret i64 %Y
946}
947
948compiles to:
949
950_test:
951	subl	$20, %esp
952	movsd	24(%esp), %xmm0
953	movsd	%xmm0, 8(%esp)
954	fldl	8(%esp)
955	fisttpll	(%esp)
956	movl	4(%esp), %edx
957	movl	(%esp), %eax
958	addl	$20, %esp
959	#FP_REG_KILL
960	ret
961
962This should just fldl directly from the input stack slot.
963
964//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
965
966This code:
967int foo (int x) { return (x & 65535) | 255; }
968
969Should compile into:
970
971_foo:
972        movzwl  4(%esp), %eax
973        orl     $255, %eax
974        ret
975
976instead of:
977_foo:
978	movl	$65280, %eax
979	andl	4(%esp), %eax
980	orl	$255, %eax
981	ret
982
983//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
984
985We're codegen'ing multiply of long longs inefficiently:
986
987unsigned long long LLM(unsigned long long arg1, unsigned long long arg2) {
988  return arg1 *  arg2;
989}
990
991We compile to (fomit-frame-pointer):
992
993_LLM:
994	pushl	%esi
995	movl	8(%esp), %ecx
996	movl	16(%esp), %esi
997	movl	%esi, %eax
998	mull	%ecx
999	imull	12(%esp), %esi
1000	addl	%edx, %esi
1001	imull	20(%esp), %ecx
1002	movl	%esi, %edx
1003	addl	%ecx, %edx
1004	popl	%esi
1005	ret
1006
1007This looks like a scheduling deficiency and lack of remat of the load from
1008the argument area.  ICC apparently produces:
1009
1010        movl      8(%esp), %ecx
1011        imull     12(%esp), %ecx
1012        movl      16(%esp), %eax
1013        imull     4(%esp), %eax 
1014        addl      %eax, %ecx  
1015        movl      4(%esp), %eax
1016        mull      12(%esp) 
1017        addl      %ecx, %edx
1018        ret
1019
1020Note that it remat'd loads from 4(esp) and 12(esp).  See this GCC PR:
1021http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17236
1022
1023//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1024
1025We can fold a store into "zeroing a reg".  Instead of:
1026
1027xorl    %eax, %eax
1028movl    %eax, 124(%esp)
1029
1030we should get:
1031
1032movl    $0, 124(%esp)
1033
1034if the flags of the xor are dead.
1035
1036Likewise, we isel "x<<1" into "add reg,reg".  If reg is spilled, this should
1037be folded into: shl [mem], 1
1038
1039//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1040
1041In SSE mode, we turn abs and neg into a load from the constant pool plus a xor
1042or and instruction, for example:
1043
1044	xorpd	LCPI1_0, %xmm2
1045
1046However, if xmm2 gets spilled, we end up with really ugly code like this:
1047
1048	movsd	(%esp), %xmm0
1049	xorpd	LCPI1_0, %xmm0
1050	movsd	%xmm0, (%esp)
1051
1052Since we 'know' that this is a 'neg', we can actually "fold" the spill into
1053the neg/abs instruction, turning it into an *integer* operation, like this:
1054
1055	xorl 2147483648, [mem+4]     ## 2147483648 = (1 << 31)
1056
1057you could also use xorb, but xorl is less likely to lead to a partial register
1058stall.  Here is a contrived testcase:
1059
1060double a, b, c;
1061void test(double *P) {
1062  double X = *P;
1063  a = X;
1064  bar();
1065  X = -X;
1066  b = X;
1067  bar();
1068  c = X;
1069}
1070
1071//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1072
1073The generated code on x86 for checking for signed overflow on a multiply the
1074obvious way is much longer than it needs to be.
1075
1076int x(int a, int b) {
1077  long long prod = (long long)a*b;
1078  return  prod > 0x7FFFFFFF || prod < (-0x7FFFFFFF-1);
1079}
1080
1081See PR2053 for more details.
1082
1083//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1084
1085We should investigate using cdq/ctld (effect: edx = sar eax, 31)
1086more aggressively; it should cost the same as a move+shift on any modern
1087processor, but it's a lot shorter. Downside is that it puts more
1088pressure on register allocation because it has fixed operands.
1089
1090Example:
1091int abs(int x) {return x < 0 ? -x : x;}
1092
1093gcc compiles this to the following when using march/mtune=pentium2/3/4/m/etc.:
1094abs:
1095        movl    4(%esp), %eax
1096        cltd
1097        xorl    %edx, %eax
1098        subl    %edx, %eax
1099        ret
1100
1101//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1102
1103Take the following code (from 
1104http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16541):
1105
1106extern unsigned char first_one[65536];
1107int FirstOnet(unsigned long long arg1)
1108{
1109  if (arg1 >> 48)
1110    return (first_one[arg1 >> 48]);
1111  return 0;
1112}
1113
1114
1115The following code is currently generated:
1116FirstOnet:
1117        movl    8(%esp), %eax
1118        cmpl    $65536, %eax
1119        movl    4(%esp), %ecx
1120        jb      .LBB1_2 # UnifiedReturnBlock
1121.LBB1_1:        # ifthen
1122        shrl    $16, %eax
1123        movzbl  first_one(%eax), %eax
1124        ret
1125.LBB1_2:        # UnifiedReturnBlock
1126        xorl    %eax, %eax
1127        ret
1128
1129We could change the "movl 8(%esp), %eax" into "movzwl 10(%esp), %eax"; this
1130lets us change the cmpl into a testl, which is shorter, and eliminate the shift.
1131
1132//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1133
1134We compile this function:
1135
1136define i32 @foo(i32 %a, i32 %b, i32 %c, i8 zeroext  %d) nounwind  {
1137entry:
1138	%tmp2 = icmp eq i8 %d, 0		; <i1> [#uses=1]
1139	br i1 %tmp2, label %bb7, label %bb
1140
1141bb:		; preds = %entry
1142	%tmp6 = add i32 %b, %a		; <i32> [#uses=1]
1143	ret i32 %tmp6
1144
1145bb7:		; preds = %entry
1146	%tmp10 = sub i32 %a, %c		; <i32> [#uses=1]
1147	ret i32 %tmp10
1148}
1149
1150to:
1151
1152foo:                                    # @foo
1153# BB#0:                                 # %entry
1154	movl	4(%esp), %ecx
1155	cmpb	$0, 16(%esp)
1156	je	.LBB0_2
1157# BB#1:                                 # %bb
1158	movl	8(%esp), %eax
1159	addl	%ecx, %eax
1160	ret
1161.LBB0_2:                                # %bb7
1162	movl	12(%esp), %edx
1163	movl	%ecx, %eax
1164	subl	%edx, %eax
1165	ret
1166
1167There's an obviously unnecessary movl in .LBB0_2, and we could eliminate a
1168couple more movls by putting 4(%esp) into %eax instead of %ecx.
1169
1170//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1171
1172See rdar://4653682.
1173
1174From flops:
1175
1176LBB1_15:        # bb310
1177        cvtss2sd        LCPI1_0, %xmm1
1178        addsd   %xmm1, %xmm0
1179        movsd   176(%esp), %xmm2
1180        mulsd   %xmm0, %xmm2
1181        movapd  %xmm2, %xmm3
1182        mulsd   %xmm3, %xmm3
1183        movapd  %xmm3, %xmm4
1184        mulsd   LCPI1_23, %xmm4
1185        addsd   LCPI1_24, %xmm4
1186        mulsd   %xmm3, %xmm4
1187        addsd   LCPI1_25, %xmm4
1188        mulsd   %xmm3, %xmm4
1189        addsd   LCPI1_26, %xmm4
1190        mulsd   %xmm3, %xmm4
1191        addsd   LCPI1_27, %xmm4
1192        mulsd   %xmm3, %xmm4
1193        addsd   LCPI1_28, %xmm4
1194        mulsd   %xmm3, %xmm4
1195        addsd   %xmm1, %xmm4
1196        mulsd   %xmm2, %xmm4
1197        movsd   152(%esp), %xmm1
1198        addsd   %xmm4, %xmm1
1199        movsd   %xmm1, 152(%esp)
1200        incl    %eax
1201        cmpl    %eax, %esi
1202        jge     LBB1_15 # bb310
1203LBB1_16:        # bb358.loopexit
1204        movsd   152(%esp), %xmm0
1205        addsd   %xmm0, %xmm0
1206        addsd   LCPI1_22, %xmm0
1207        movsd   %xmm0, 152(%esp)
1208
1209Rather than spilling the result of the last addsd in the loop, we should have
1210insert a copy to split the interval (one for the duration of the loop, one
1211extending to the fall through). The register pressure in the loop isn't high
1212enough to warrant the spill.
1213
1214Also check why xmm7 is not used at all in the function.
1215
1216//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1217
1218Take the following:
1219
1220target datalayout = "e-p:32:32:32-i1:8:8-i8:8:8-i16:16:16-i32:32:32-i64:32:64-f32:32:32-f64:32:64-v64:64:64-v128:128:128-a0:0:64-f80:128:128-S128"
1221target triple = "i386-apple-darwin8"
1222@in_exit.4870.b = internal global i1 false		; <i1*> [#uses=2]
1223define fastcc void @abort_gzip() noreturn nounwind  {
1224entry:
1225	%tmp.b.i = load i1* @in_exit.4870.b		; <i1> [#uses=1]
1226	br i1 %tmp.b.i, label %bb.i, label %bb4.i
1227bb.i:		; preds = %entry
1228	tail call void @exit( i32 1 ) noreturn nounwind 
1229	unreachable
1230bb4.i:		; preds = %entry
1231	store i1 true, i1* @in_exit.4870.b
1232	tail call void @exit( i32 1 ) noreturn nounwind 
1233	unreachable
1234}
1235declare void @exit(i32) noreturn nounwind 
1236
1237This compiles into:
1238_abort_gzip:                            ## @abort_gzip
1239## BB#0:                                ## %entry
1240	subl	$12, %esp
1241	movb	_in_exit.4870.b, %al
1242	cmpb	$1, %al
1243	jne	LBB0_2
1244
1245We somehow miss folding the movb into the cmpb.
1246
1247//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1248
1249We compile:
1250
1251int test(int x, int y) {
1252  return x-y-1;
1253}
1254
1255into (-m64):
1256
1257_test:
1258	decl	%edi
1259	movl	%edi, %eax
1260	subl	%esi, %eax
1261	ret
1262
1263it would be better to codegen as: x+~y  (notl+addl)
1264
1265//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1266
1267This code:
1268
1269int foo(const char *str,...)
1270{
1271 __builtin_va_list a; int x;
1272 __builtin_va_start(a,str); x = __builtin_va_arg(a,int); __builtin_va_end(a);
1273 return x;
1274}
1275
1276gets compiled into this on x86-64:
1277	subq    $200, %rsp
1278        movaps  %xmm7, 160(%rsp)
1279        movaps  %xmm6, 144(%rsp)
1280        movaps  %xmm5, 128(%rsp)
1281        movaps  %xmm4, 112(%rsp)
1282        movaps  %xmm3, 96(%rsp)
1283        movaps  %xmm2, 80(%rsp)
1284        movaps  %xmm1, 64(%rsp)
1285        movaps  %xmm0, 48(%rsp)
1286        movq    %r9, 40(%rsp)
1287        movq    %r8, 32(%rsp)
1288        movq    %rcx, 24(%rsp)
1289        movq    %rdx, 16(%rsp)
1290        movq    %rsi, 8(%rsp)
1291        leaq    (%rsp), %rax
1292        movq    %rax, 192(%rsp)
1293        leaq    208(%rsp), %rax
1294        movq    %rax, 184(%rsp)
1295        movl    $48, 180(%rsp)
1296        movl    $8, 176(%rsp)
1297        movl    176(%rsp), %eax
1298        cmpl    $47, %eax
1299        jbe     .LBB1_3 # bb
1300.LBB1_1:        # bb3
1301        movq    184(%rsp), %rcx
1302        leaq    8(%rcx), %rax
1303        movq    %rax, 184(%rsp)
1304.LBB1_2:        # bb4
1305        movl    (%rcx), %eax
1306        addq    $200, %rsp
1307        ret
1308.LBB1_3:        # bb
1309        movl    %eax, %ecx
1310        addl    $8, %eax
1311        addq    192(%rsp), %rcx
1312        movl    %eax, 176(%rsp)
1313        jmp     .LBB1_2 # bb4
1314
1315gcc 4.3 generates:
1316	subq    $96, %rsp
1317.LCFI0:
1318        leaq    104(%rsp), %rax
1319        movq    %rsi, -80(%rsp)
1320        movl    $8, -120(%rsp)
1321        movq    %rax, -112(%rsp)
1322        leaq    -88(%rsp), %rax
1323        movq    %rax, -104(%rsp)
1324        movl    $8, %eax
1325        cmpl    $48, %eax
1326        jb      .L6
1327        movq    -112(%rsp), %rdx
1328        movl    (%rdx), %eax
1329        addq    $96, %rsp
1330        ret
1331        .p2align 4,,10
1332        .p2align 3
1333.L6:
1334        mov     %eax, %edx
1335        addq    -104(%rsp), %rdx
1336        addl    $8, %eax
1337        movl    %eax, -120(%rsp)
1338        movl    (%rdx), %eax
1339        addq    $96, %rsp
1340        ret
1341
1342and it gets compiled into this on x86:
1343	pushl   %ebp
1344        movl    %esp, %ebp
1345        subl    $4, %esp
1346        leal    12(%ebp), %eax
1347        movl    %eax, -4(%ebp)
1348        leal    16(%ebp), %eax
1349        movl    %eax, -4(%ebp)
1350        movl    12(%ebp), %eax
1351        addl    $4, %esp
1352        popl    %ebp
1353        ret
1354
1355gcc 4.3 generates:
1356	pushl   %ebp
1357        movl    %esp, %ebp
1358        movl    12(%ebp), %eax
1359        popl    %ebp
1360        ret
1361
1362//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1363
1364Teach tblgen not to check bitconvert source type in some cases. This allows us
1365to consolidate the following patterns in X86InstrMMX.td:
1366
1367def : Pat<(v2i32 (bitconvert (i64 (vector_extract (v2i64 VR128:$src),
1368                                                  (iPTR 0))))),
1369          (v2i32 (MMX_MOVDQ2Qrr VR128:$src))>;
1370def : Pat<(v4i16 (bitconvert (i64 (vector_extract (v2i64 VR128:$src),
1371                                                  (iPTR 0))))),
1372          (v4i16 (MMX_MOVDQ2Qrr VR128:$src))>;
1373def : Pat<(v8i8 (bitconvert (i64 (vector_extract (v2i64 VR128:$src),
1374                                                  (iPTR 0))))),
1375          (v8i8 (MMX_MOVDQ2Qrr VR128:$src))>;
1376
1377There are other cases in various td files.
1378
1379//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1380
1381Take something like the following on x86-32:
1382unsigned a(unsigned long long x, unsigned y) {return x % y;}
1383
1384We currently generate a libcall, but we really shouldn't: the expansion is
1385shorter and likely faster than the libcall.  The expected code is something
1386like the following:
1387
1388	movl	12(%ebp), %eax
1389	movl	16(%ebp), %ecx
1390	xorl	%edx, %edx
1391	divl	%ecx
1392	movl	8(%ebp), %eax
1393	divl	%ecx
1394	movl	%edx, %eax
1395	ret
1396
1397A similar code sequence works for division.
1398
1399//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1400
1401These should compile to the same code, but the later codegen's to useless
1402instructions on X86. This may be a trivial dag combine (GCC PR7061):
1403
1404struct s1 { unsigned char a, b; };
1405unsigned long f1(struct s1 x) {
1406    return x.a + x.b;
1407}
1408struct s2 { unsigned a: 8, b: 8; };
1409unsigned long f2(struct s2 x) {
1410    return x.a + x.b;
1411}
1412
1413//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1414
1415We currently compile this:
1416
1417define i32 @func1(i32 %v1, i32 %v2) nounwind {
1418entry:
1419  %t = call {i32, i1} @llvm.sadd.with.overflow.i32(i32 %v1, i32 %v2)
1420  %sum = extractvalue {i32, i1} %t, 0
1421  %obit = extractvalue {i32, i1} %t, 1
1422  br i1 %obit, label %overflow, label %normal
1423normal:
1424  ret i32 %sum
1425overflow:
1426  call void @llvm.trap()
1427  unreachable
1428}
1429declare {i32, i1} @llvm.sadd.with.overflow.i32(i32, i32)
1430declare void @llvm.trap()
1431
1432to:
1433
1434_func1:
1435	movl	4(%esp), %eax
1436	addl	8(%esp), %eax
1437	jo	LBB1_2	## overflow
1438LBB1_1:	## normal
1439	ret
1440LBB1_2:	## overflow
1441	ud2
1442
1443it would be nice to produce "into" someday.
1444
1445//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1446
1447Test instructions can be eliminated by using EFLAGS values from arithmetic
1448instructions. This is currently not done for mul, and, or, xor, neg, shl,
1449sra, srl, shld, shrd, atomic ops, and others. It is also currently not done
1450for read-modify-write instructions. It is also current not done if the
1451OF or CF flags are needed.
1452
1453The shift operators have the complication that when the shift count is
1454zero, EFLAGS is not set, so they can only subsume a test instruction if
1455the shift count is known to be non-zero. Also, using the EFLAGS value
1456from a shift is apparently very slow on some x86 implementations.
1457
1458In read-modify-write instructions, the root node in the isel match is
1459the store, and isel has no way for the use of the EFLAGS result of the
1460arithmetic to be remapped to the new node.
1461
1462Add and subtract instructions set OF on signed overflow and CF on unsiged
1463overflow, while test instructions always clear OF and CF. In order to
1464replace a test with an add or subtract in a situation where OF or CF is
1465needed, codegen must be able to prove that the operation cannot see
1466signed or unsigned overflow, respectively.
1467
1468//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1469
1470memcpy/memmove do not lower to SSE copies when possible.  A silly example is:
1471define <16 x float> @foo(<16 x float> %A) nounwind {
1472	%tmp = alloca <16 x float>, align 16
1473	%tmp2 = alloca <16 x float>, align 16
1474	store <16 x float> %A, <16 x float>* %tmp
1475	%s = bitcast <16 x float>* %tmp to i8*
1476	%s2 = bitcast <16 x float>* %tmp2 to i8*
1477	call void @llvm.memcpy.i64(i8* %s, i8* %s2, i64 64, i32 16)
1478	%R = load <16 x float>* %tmp2
1479	ret <16 x float> %R
1480}
1481
1482declare void @llvm.memcpy.i64(i8* nocapture, i8* nocapture, i64, i32) nounwind
1483
1484which compiles to:
1485
1486_foo:
1487	subl	$140, %esp
1488	movaps	%xmm3, 112(%esp)
1489	movaps	%xmm2, 96(%esp)
1490	movaps	%xmm1, 80(%esp)
1491	movaps	%xmm0, 64(%esp)
1492	movl	60(%esp), %eax
1493	movl	%eax, 124(%esp)
1494	movl	56(%esp), %eax
1495	movl	%eax, 120(%esp)
1496	movl	52(%esp), %eax
1497        <many many more 32-bit copies>
1498      	movaps	(%esp), %xmm0
1499	movaps	16(%esp), %xmm1
1500	movaps	32(%esp), %xmm2
1501	movaps	48(%esp), %xmm3
1502	addl	$140, %esp
1503	ret
1504
1505On Nehalem, it may even be cheaper to just use movups when unaligned than to
1506fall back to lower-granularity chunks.
1507
1508//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1509
1510Implement processor-specific optimizations for parity with GCC on these
1511processors.  GCC does two optimizations:
1512
15131. ix86_pad_returns inserts a noop before ret instructions if immediately
1514   preceded by a conditional branch or is the target of a jump.
15152. ix86_avoid_jump_misspredicts inserts noops in cases where a 16-byte block of
1516   code contains more than 3 branches.
1517   
1518The first one is done for all AMDs, Core2, and "Generic"
1519The second one is done for: Atom, Pentium Pro, all AMDs, Pentium 4, Nocona,
1520  Core 2, and "Generic"
1521
1522//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1523Testcase:
1524int x(int a) { return (a&0xf0)>>4; }
1525
1526Current output:
1527	movl	4(%esp), %eax
1528	shrl	$4, %eax
1529	andl	$15, %eax
1530	ret
1531
1532Ideal output:
1533	movzbl	4(%esp), %eax
1534	shrl	$4, %eax
1535	ret
1536
1537//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1538
1539Re-implement atomic builtins __sync_add_and_fetch() and __sync_sub_and_fetch
1540properly.
1541
1542When the return value is not used (i.e. only care about the value in the
1543memory), x86 does not have to use add to implement these. Instead, it can use
1544add, sub, inc, dec instructions with the "lock" prefix.
1545
1546This is currently implemented using a bit of instruction selection trick. The
1547issue is the target independent pattern produces one output and a chain and we
1548want to map it into one that just output a chain. The current trick is to select
1549it into a MERGE_VALUES with the first definition being an implicit_def. The
1550proper solution is to add new ISD opcodes for the no-output variant. DAG
1551combiner can then transform the node before it gets to target node selection.
1552
1553Problem #2 is we are adding a whole bunch of x86 atomic instructions when in
1554fact these instructions are identical to the non-lock versions. We need a way to
1555add target specific information to target nodes and have this information
1556carried over to machine instructions. Asm printer (or JIT) can use this
1557information to add the "lock" prefix.
1558
1559//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1560
1561struct B {
1562  unsigned char y0 : 1;
1563};
1564
1565int bar(struct B* a) { return a->y0; }
1566
1567define i32 @bar(%struct.B* nocapture %a) nounwind readonly optsize {
1568  %1 = getelementptr inbounds %struct.B* %a, i64 0, i32 0
1569  %2 = load i8* %1, align 1
1570  %3 = and i8 %2, 1
1571  %4 = zext i8 %3 to i32
1572  ret i32 %4
1573}
1574
1575bar:                                    # @bar
1576# BB#0:
1577        movb    (%rdi), %al
1578        andb    $1, %al
1579        movzbl  %al, %eax
1580        ret
1581
1582Missed optimization: should be movl+andl.
1583
1584//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1585
1586The x86_64 abi says:
1587
1588Booleans, when stored in a memory object, are stored as single byte objects the
1589value of which is always 0 (false) or 1 (true).
1590
1591We are not using this fact:
1592
1593int bar(_Bool *a) { return *a; }
1594
1595define i32 @bar(i8* nocapture %a) nounwind readonly optsize {
1596  %1 = load i8* %a, align 1, !tbaa !0
1597  %tmp = and i8 %1, 1
1598  %2 = zext i8 %tmp to i32
1599  ret i32 %2
1600}
1601
1602bar:
1603        movb    (%rdi), %al
1604        andb    $1, %al
1605        movzbl  %al, %eax
1606        ret
1607
1608GCC produces
1609
1610bar:
1611        movzbl  (%rdi), %eax
1612        ret
1613
1614//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1615
1616Consider the following two functions compiled with clang:
1617_Bool foo(int *x) { return !(*x & 4); }
1618unsigned bar(int *x) { return !(*x & 4); }
1619
1620foo:
1621	movl	4(%esp), %eax
1622	testb	$4, (%eax)
1623	sete	%al
1624	movzbl	%al, %eax
1625	ret
1626
1627bar:
1628	movl	4(%esp), %eax
1629	movl	(%eax), %eax
1630	shrl	$2, %eax
1631	andl	$1, %eax
1632	xorl	$1, %eax
1633	ret
1634
1635The second function generates more code even though the two functions are
1636are functionally identical.
1637
1638//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1639
1640Take the following C code:
1641int f(int a, int b) { return (unsigned char)a == (unsigned char)b; }
1642
1643We generate the following IR with clang:
1644define i32 @f(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone {
1645entry:
1646  %tmp = xor i32 %b, %a                           ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1647  %tmp6 = and i32 %tmp, 255                       ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1648  %cmp = icmp eq i32 %tmp6, 0                     ; <i1> [#uses=1]
1649  %conv5 = zext i1 %cmp to i32                    ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1650  ret i32 %conv5
1651}
1652
1653And the following x86 code:
1654	xorl	%esi, %edi
1655	testb	$-1, %dil
1656	sete	%al
1657	movzbl	%al, %eax
1658	ret
1659
1660A cmpb instead of the xorl+testb would be one instruction shorter.
1661
1662//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1663
1664Given the following C code:
1665int f(int a, int b) { return (signed char)a == (signed char)b; }
1666
1667We generate the following IR with clang:
1668define i32 @f(i32 %a, i32 %b) nounwind readnone {
1669entry:
1670  %sext = shl i32 %a, 24                          ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1671  %conv1 = ashr i32 %sext, 24                     ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1672  %sext6 = shl i32 %b, 24                         ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1673  %conv4 = ashr i32 %sext6, 24                    ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1674  %cmp = icmp eq i32 %conv1, %conv4               ; <i1> [#uses=1]
1675  %conv5 = zext i1 %cmp to i32                    ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1676  ret i32 %conv5
1677}
1678
1679And the following x86 code:
1680	movsbl	%sil, %eax
1681	movsbl	%dil, %ecx
1682	cmpl	%eax, %ecx
1683	sete	%al
1684	movzbl	%al, %eax
1685	ret
1686
1687
1688It should be possible to eliminate the sign extensions.
1689
1690//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1691
1692LLVM misses a load+store narrowing opportunity in this code:
1693
1694%struct.bf = type { i64, i16, i16, i32 }
1695
1696@bfi = external global %struct.bf*                ; <%struct.bf**> [#uses=2]
1697
1698define void @t1() nounwind ssp {
1699entry:
1700  %0 = load %struct.bf** @bfi, align 8            ; <%struct.bf*> [#uses=1]
1701  %1 = getelementptr %struct.bf* %0, i64 0, i32 1 ; <i16*> [#uses=1]
1702  %2 = bitcast i16* %1 to i32*                    ; <i32*> [#uses=2]
1703  %3 = load i32* %2, align 1                      ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1704  %4 = and i32 %3, -65537                         ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1705  store i32 %4, i32* %2, align 1
1706  %5 = load %struct.bf** @bfi, align 8            ; <%struct.bf*> [#uses=1]
1707  %6 = getelementptr %struct.bf* %5, i64 0, i32 1 ; <i16*> [#uses=1]
1708  %7 = bitcast i16* %6 to i32*                    ; <i32*> [#uses=2]
1709  %8 = load i32* %7, align 1                      ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1710  %9 = and i32 %8, -131073                        ; <i32> [#uses=1]
1711  store i32 %9, i32* %7, align 1
1712  ret void
1713}
1714
1715LLVM currently emits this:
1716
1717  movq  bfi(%rip), %rax
1718  andl  $-65537, 8(%rax)
1719  movq  bfi(%rip), %rax
1720  andl  $-131073, 8(%rax)
1721  ret
1722
1723It could narrow the loads and stores to emit this:
1724
1725  movq  bfi(%rip), %rax
1726  andb  $-2, 10(%rax)
1727  movq  bfi(%rip), %rax
1728  andb  $-3, 10(%rax)
1729  ret
1730
1731The trouble is that there is a TokenFactor between the store and the
1732load, making it non-trivial to determine if there's anything between
1733the load and the store which would prohibit narrowing.
1734
1735//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1736
1737This code:
1738void foo(unsigned x) {
1739  if (x == 0) bar();
1740  else if (x == 1) qux();
1741}
1742
1743currently compiles into:
1744_foo:
1745	movl	4(%esp), %eax
1746	cmpl	$1, %eax
1747	je	LBB0_3
1748	testl	%eax, %eax
1749	jne	LBB0_4
1750
1751the testl could be removed:
1752_foo:
1753	movl	4(%esp), %eax
1754	cmpl	$1, %eax
1755	je	LBB0_3
1756	jb	LBB0_4
1757
17580 is the only unsigned number < 1.
1759
1760//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1761
1762This code:
1763
1764%0 = type { i32, i1 }
1765
1766define i32 @add32carry(i32 %sum, i32 %x) nounwind readnone ssp {
1767entry:
1768  %uadd = tail call %0 @llvm.uadd.with.overflow.i32(i32 %sum, i32 %x)
1769  %cmp = extractvalue %0 %uadd, 1
1770  %inc = zext i1 %cmp to i32
1771  %add = add i32 %x, %sum
1772  %z.0 = add i32 %add, %inc
1773  ret i32 %z.0
1774}
1775
1776declare %0 @llvm.uadd.with.overflow.i32(i32, i32) nounwind readnone
1777
1778compiles to:
1779
1780_add32carry:                            ## @add32carry
1781	addl	%esi, %edi
1782	sbbl	%ecx, %ecx
1783	movl	%edi, %eax
1784	subl	%ecx, %eax
1785	ret
1786
1787But it could be:
1788
1789_add32carry:
1790	leal	(%rsi,%rdi), %eax
1791	cmpl	%esi, %eax
1792	adcl	$0, %eax
1793	ret
1794
1795//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1796
1797The hot loop of 256.bzip2 contains code that looks a bit like this:
1798
1799int foo(char *P, char *Q, int x, int y) {
1800  if (P[0] != Q[0])
1801     return P[0] < Q[0];
1802  if (P[1] != Q[1])
1803     return P[1] < Q[1];
1804  if (P[2] != Q[2])
1805     return P[2] < Q[2];
1806   return P[3] < Q[3];
1807}
1808
1809In the real code, we get a lot more wrong than this.  However, even in this
1810code we generate:
1811
1812_foo:                                   ## @foo
1813## BB#0:                                ## %entry
1814	movb	(%rsi), %al
1815	movb	(%rdi), %cl
1816	cmpb	%al, %cl
1817	je	LBB0_2
1818LBB0_1:                                 ## %if.then
1819	cmpb	%al, %cl
1820	jmp	LBB0_5
1821LBB0_2:                                 ## %if.end
1822	movb	1(%rsi), %al
1823	movb	1(%rdi), %cl
1824	cmpb	%al, %cl
1825	jne	LBB0_1
1826## BB#3:                                ## %if.end38
1827	movb	2(%rsi), %al
1828	movb	2(%rdi), %cl
1829	cmpb	%al, %cl
1830	jne	LBB0_1
1831## BB#4:                                ## %if.end60
1832	movb	3(%rdi), %al
1833	cmpb	3(%rsi), %al
1834LBB0_5:                                 ## %if.end60
1835	setl	%al
1836	movzbl	%al, %eax
1837	ret
1838
1839Note that we generate jumps to LBB0_1 which does a redundant compare.  The
1840redundant compare also forces the register values to be live, which prevents
1841folding one of the loads into the compare.  In contrast, GCC 4.2 produces:
1842
1843_foo:
1844	movzbl	(%rsi), %eax
1845	cmpb	%al, (%rdi)
1846	jne	L10
1847L12:
1848	movzbl	1(%rsi), %eax
1849	cmpb	%al, 1(%rdi)
1850	jne	L10
1851	movzbl	2(%rsi), %eax
1852	cmpb	%al, 2(%rdi)
1853	jne	L10
1854	movzbl	3(%rdi), %eax
1855	cmpb	3(%rsi), %al
1856L10:
1857	setl	%al
1858	movzbl	%al, %eax
1859	ret
1860
1861which is "perfect".
1862
1863//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1864
1865For the branch in the following code:
1866int a();
1867int b(int x, int y) {
1868  if (x & (1<<(y&7)))
1869    return a();
1870  return y;
1871}
1872
1873We currently generate:
1874	movb	%sil, %al
1875	andb	$7, %al
1876	movzbl	%al, %eax
1877	btl	%eax, %edi
1878	jae	.LBB0_2
1879
1880movl+andl would be shorter than the movb+andb+movzbl sequence.
1881
1882//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1883
1884For the following:
1885struct u1 {
1886    float x, y;
1887};
1888float foo(struct u1 u) {
1889    return u.x + u.y;
1890}
1891
1892We currently generate:
1893	movdqa	%xmm0, %xmm1
1894	pshufd	$1, %xmm0, %xmm0        # xmm0 = xmm0[1,0,0,0]
1895	addss	%xmm1, %xmm0
1896	ret
1897
1898We could save an instruction here by commuting the addss.
1899
1900//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1901
1902This (from PR9661):
1903
1904float clamp_float(float a) {
1905        if (a > 1.0f)
1906                return 1.0f;
1907        else if (a < 0.0f)
1908                return 0.0f;
1909        else
1910                return a;
1911}
1912
1913Could compile to:
1914
1915clamp_float:                            # @clamp_float
1916        movss   .LCPI0_0(%rip), %xmm1
1917        minss   %xmm1, %xmm0
1918        pxor    %xmm1, %xmm1
1919        maxss   %xmm1, %xmm0
1920        ret
1921
1922with -ffast-math.
1923
1924//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1925
1926This function (from PR9803):
1927
1928int clamp2(int a) {
1929        if (a > 5)
1930                a = 5;
1931        if (a < 0) 
1932                return 0;
1933        return a;
1934}
1935
1936Compiles to:
1937
1938_clamp2:                                ## @clamp2
1939        pushq   %rbp
1940        movq    %rsp, %rbp
1941        cmpl    $5, %edi
1942        movl    $5, %ecx
1943        cmovlel %edi, %ecx
1944        testl   %ecx, %ecx
1945        movl    $0, %eax
1946        cmovnsl %ecx, %eax
1947        popq    %rbp
1948        ret
1949
1950The move of 0 could be scheduled above the test to make it is xor reg,reg.
1951
1952//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1953
1954GCC PR48986.  We currently compile this:
1955
1956void bar(void);
1957void yyy(int* p) {
1958    if (__sync_fetch_and_add(p, -1) == 1)
1959      bar();
1960}
1961
1962into:
1963	movl	$-1, %eax
1964	lock
1965	xaddl	%eax, (%rdi)
1966	cmpl	$1, %eax
1967	je	LBB0_2
1968
1969Instead we could generate:
1970
1971	lock
1972	dec %rdi
1973	je LBB0_2
1974
1975The trick is to match "fetch_and_add(X, -C) == C".
1976
1977//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1978
1979unsigned t(unsigned a, unsigned b) {
1980  return a <= b ? 5 : -5;
1981}
1982
1983We generate:
1984	movl	$5, %ecx
1985	cmpl	%esi, %edi
1986	movl	$-5, %eax
1987	cmovbel	%ecx, %eax
1988
1989GCC:
1990	cmpl	%edi, %esi
1991	sbbl	%eax, %eax
1992	andl	$-10, %eax
1993	addl	$5, %eax
1994
1995//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
1996