Commit Graph

17 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Erik Eckstein
26038055c2 StackPromotion: don’t move an alloc_ref above it’s operands.
fixes a SILVerifier crash: rdar://problem/29276015
2016-11-15 16:50:36 -08:00
Michael Gottesman
20dd563efb [semantic-arc] Update tests for qualified/unqualified ownership and SILGen emission of copy_value, destroy_value. 2016-10-29 20:11:09 -07:00
practicalswift
f44686d825 [gardening] Fix trailing whitespace in *.cfg.in, *.html, *.mm and *.sil files 2016-10-29 14:06:43 +02:00
Erik Eckstein
266a5f90bd stdlib: Use builtin tail-allocated arrays instead of ManagedBuffer to allocate contiguous array buffers.
This reduces the amount of SIL generated for array operations significantly.
The generated code should be mostly the same (modulo different inlining decisions).
2016-09-16 11:02:19 -07:00
Dmitri Gribenko
fbb3cf35a5 Revert "New SIL instructions to support tail-allocated arrays in SIL." 2016-09-15 00:25:25 -07:00
Erik Eckstein
1201d96cb2 stdlib: Use builtin tail-allocated arrays instead of ManagedBuffer to allocate contiguous array buffers.
This reduces the amount of SIL generated for array operations significantly.
The generated code should be mostly the same (modulo different inlining decisions).
2016-09-14 14:54:18 -07:00
Dmitri Gribenko
d175b3b66d Migrate FileCheck to %FileCheck in tests 2016-08-10 23:52:02 -07:00
Andrew Trick
c47687da2c Add an isStrict flag to SIL pointer_to_address. (#3529)
Strict aliasing only applies to memory operations that use strict
addresses. The optimizer needs to be aware of this flag. Uses of raw
addresses should not have their address substituted with a strict
address.

Also add Builtin.LoadRaw which will be used by raw pointer loads.
2016-07-15 15:04:02 -05:00
Erik Eckstein
16e600a6a1 StackPromotion: fix a bug which could place the deallocation inside a loop. 2016-04-29 08:55:13 -07:00
Erik Eckstein
7348e48727 Don't stack promote allocations in no-return blocks.
Such allocations may missing their final release, which confuses stack-promotion.

Fixes rdar://problem/25842757.
2016-04-21 12:08:58 -07:00
Erik Eckstein
1eab8aa955 Re-instate "StackPromotion: Ignore unreachable blocks in post-dominator tree."
With a bug fix which should ensure that it doesn't violate the stack nesting.

Original commit: 3d050f7b43
2016-04-08 10:20:47 -07:00
Jordan Rose
52b961de61 Revert "Fix post-dominator tree in stack promotion"
This broke the test suite under optimizations with a SIL verifier error: "stack dealloc does
not match most recent stack alloc".

This reverts commit 7a2ca23bc2, reversing
changes made to 4c55e8d7a7.
2016-04-06 16:02:20 -07:00
Erik Eckstein
3d050f7b43 StackPromotion: Ignore unreachable blocks in post-dominator tree.
Unreachable blocks prevented stack promotion in some cases.
Now we use our own post-dominator tree which ignores unreachable blocks instead of the standard post-dominator tree provided by the PostDominanceAnalysis.
Unreachable blocks (better: unreachable sub-graphs) are of no interrest because we don't have to insert the dealloc instructions in unreachable blocks anyway.
2016-04-06 11:11:13 -07:00
Arnold Schwaighofer
b5f018a4b1 Mark Array.withUnsafeMutableBuffer as not escaping the array storage.
This is safe because the closure is not allowed to capture the array according
to the documentation of 'withUnsafeMutableBuffer' and the current implementation
makes sure that any such capture would observe an empty array by swapping self
with an empty array.

Users will get "almost guaranteed" stack promotion for small arrays by writing
something like:

  func testStackAllocation(p: Proto) {
    var a = [p, p, p]
    a.withUnsafeMutableBufferPointer {
      let array = $0
      work(array)
    }
  }

It is "almost guaranteed" because we need to statically be able to tell the size
required for the array (no unspecialized generics) and the total buffer size
must not exceed 1K.
2016-03-08 19:37:47 -08:00
John McCall
e249fd680e Destructure result types in SIL function types.
Similarly to how we've always handled parameter types, we
now recursively expand tuples in result types and separately
determine a result convention for each result.

The most important code-generation change here is that
indirect results are now returned separately from each
other and from any direct results.  It is generally far
better, when receiving an indirect result, to receive it
as an independent result; the caller is much more likely
to be able to directly receive the result in the address
they want to initialize, rather than having to receive it
in temporary memory and then copy parts of it into the
target.

The most important conceptual change here that clients and
producers of SIL must be aware of is the new distinction
between a SILFunctionType's *parameters* and its *argument
list*.  The former is just the formal parameters, derived
purely from the parameter types of the original function;
indirect results are no longer in this list.  The latter
includes the indirect result arguments; as always, all
the indirect results strictly precede the parameters.
Apply instructions and entry block arguments follow the
argument list, not the parameter list.

A relatively minor change is that there can now be multiple
direct results, each with its own result convention.
This is a minor change because I've chosen to leave
return instructions as taking a single operand and
apply instructions as producing a single result; when
the type describes multiple results, they are implicitly
bound up in a tuple.  It might make sense to split these
up and allow e.g. return instructions to take a list
of operands; however, it's not clear what to do on the
caller side, and this would be a major change that can
be separated out from this already over-large patch.

Unsurprisingly, the most invasive changes here are in
SILGen; this requires substantial reworking of both call
emission and reabstraction.  It also proved important
to switch several SILGen operations over to work with
RValue instead of ManagedValue, since otherwise they
would be forced to spuriously "implode" buffers.
2016-02-18 01:26:28 -08:00
Erik Eckstein
6ff2f09796 [SIL] Let alloc_stack return a single value.
Having a separate address and container value returned from alloc_stack is not really needed in SIL.
Even if they differ we have both addresses available during IRGen, because a dealloc_stack is always dominated by the corresponding alloc_stack in the same function.

Although this commit quite large, most changes are trivial. The largest non-trivial change is in IRGenSIL.

This commit is a NFC regarding the generated code. Even the generated SIL is the same (except removed #0, #1 and @local_storage).
2016-01-06 17:35:27 -08:00
Andrew Trick
bd35b4789c Move test/SILOptimizer files to reflect lib/SILOptimizer. 2015-12-11 15:53:22 -08:00