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[V3] Algorithmic optimization in match and simplify

Message ID 5614D5F7.2000806@arm.com
State New
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Andre Vieira (lists) Oct. 7, 2015, 8:21 a.m. UTC
On 25/09/15 12:42, Richard Biener wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 1:30 PM, Andre Vieira
> <Andre.SimoesDiasVieira@arm.com> wrote:
>> On 17/09/15 10:46, Richard Biener wrote:
>>>
>>> On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 1:11 PM, Andre Vieira
>>> <Andre.SimoesDiasVieira@arm.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 01/09/15 15:01, Richard Biener wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 3:40 PM, Andre Vieira
>>>>> <Andre.SimoesDiasVieira@arm.com> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Hi Marc,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 28/08/15 19:07, Marc Glisse wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> (not a review, I haven't even read the whole patch)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Fri, 28 Aug 2015, Andre Vieira wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> 2015-08-03  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>      * match.pd: Added new patterns:
>>>>>>>>        ((X {&,<<,>>} C0) {|,^} C1) {^,|} C2)
>>>>>>>>        (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>}
>>>>>>>> C1)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> +(for op0 (rshift rshift lshift lshift bit_and bit_and)
>>>>>>> + op1 (bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor)
>>>>>>> + op2 (bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> You can nest for-loops, it seems clearer as:
>>>>>>> (for op0 (rshift lshift bit_and)
>>>>>>>       (for op1 (bit_ior bit_xor)
>>>>>>>            op2 (bit_xor bit_ior)
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Will do, thank you for pointing it out.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> +(simplify
>>>>>>> + (op2:c
>>>>>>> +  (op1:c
>>>>>>> +   (op0 @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2) INTEGER_CST@3)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I suspect you will want more :s (single_use) and less :c
>>>>>>> (canonicalization
>>>>>>> should put constants in second position).
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> I can't find the definition of :s (single_use).
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Sorry for that - didn't get along updating it yet :/  It restricts
>>>>> matching to
>>>>> sub-expressions that have a single-use.  So
>>>>>
>>>>> +  a &= 0xd123;
>>>>> +  unsigned short tem = a ^ 0x6040;
>>>>> +  a = tem | 0xc031; /* Simplify _not_ to ((a & 0xd123) | 0xe071).  */
>>>>> ... use of tem ...
>>>>>
>>>>> we shouldn't do the simplifcation here because the expression
>>>>> (a & 0x123) ^ 0x6040 is kept live by 'tem'.
>>>>>
>>>>>> GCC internals do point out
>>>>>> that canonicalization does put constants in the second position, didnt
>>>>>> see
>>>>>> that first. Thank you for pointing it out.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> +       C1 = wi::bit_and_not (C1,C2);
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Space after ','.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> Will do.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Having wide_int_storage in many places is surprising, I can't find
>>>>>>> similar
>>>>>>> code anywhere else in gcc.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I tried looking for examples of something similar, I think I ended up
>>>>>> using
>>>>>> wide_int because I was able to convert easily to and from it and it has
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> "mask" and "wide_int_to_tree" functions. I welcome any suggestions on
>>>>>> what I
>>>>>> should be using here for integer constant transformations and
>>>>>> comparisons.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Using wide-ints is fine, but you shouldn't need 'wide_int_storage'
>>>>> constructors - those
>>>>> are indeed odd.  Is it just for the initializers of wide-ints?
>>>>>
>>>>> +    wide_int zero_mask = wi::zero (prec);
>>>>> +    wide_int C0 = wide_int_storage (@1);
>>>>> +    wide_int C1 = wide_int_storage (@2);
>>>>> +    wide_int C2 = wide_int_storage (@3);
>>>>> ...
>>>>> +       zero_mask = wide_int_storage (wi::mask (C0.to_uhwi (), false,
>>>>> prec));
>>>>>
>>>>> tree_to_uhwi (@1) should do the trick as well
>>>>>
>>>>> +       C1 = wi::bit_and_not (C1,C2);
>>>>> +       cst_emit = wi::bit_or (C1, C2);
>>>>>
>>>>> the ops should be replacable with @2 and @3, the store to C1 obviously
>>>>> not
>>>>> (but you can use a tree temporary and use wide_int_to_tree here to avoid
>>>>> the back-and-forth for the case where C1 is not assigned to).
>>>>>
>>>>> Note that transforms only doing association are prone to endless
>>>>> recursion
>>>>> in case some other pattern does the reverse op...
>>>>>
>>>>> Richard.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>> BR,
>>>>>> Andre
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Thank you for all the comments, see reworked version:
>>>>
>>>> Two new algorithmic optimisations:
>>>>     1.((X op0 C0) op1 C1) op2 C2)
>>>>       with op0 = {&, >>, <<}, op1 = {|,^}, op2 = {|,^} and op1 != op2
>>>>       zero_mask has 1's for all bits that are sure to be 0 in (X op0 C0)
>>>>       and 0's otherwise.
>>>>       if (op1 == '^') C1 &= ~C2 (Only changed if actually emitted)
>>>>       if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X op0 C0) op2 (C1 op2 C2)
>>>>       if ((C2 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X op0 C0) op1 (C1 op2 C2)
>>>>     2. (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>} C1)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> This patch does two algorithmic optimisations that target patterns like:
>>>> (((x << 24) | 0x00FFFFFF) ^ 0xFF000000) and ((x ^ 0x40000002) >> 1) |
>>>> 0x80000000.
>>>>
>>>> The transformation uses the knowledge of which bits are zero after
>>>> operations like (X {&,<<,(unsigned)>>}) to combine constants, reducing
>>>> run-time operations.
>>>> The two examples above would be transformed into (X << 24) ^ 0xFFFFFFFF
>>>> and
>>>> (X >> 1) ^ 0xa0000001 respectively.
>>>>
>>>> The second transformation enables more applications of the first. Also
>>>> some
>>>> targets may benefit from delaying shift operations. I am aware that such
>>>> an
>>>> optimization, in combination with one or more optimizations that cause
>>>> the
>>>> reverse transformation, may lead to an infinite loop. Though such
>>>> behavior
>>>> has not been detected during regression testing and bootstrapping on
>>>> aarch64.
>>>
>>>
>>> +/* (X bit_op C0) rshift C1 -> (X rshift C0) bit_op (C0 rshift C1) */
>>> +(for bit_op (bit_ior bit_xor bit_and)
>>> +(simplify
>>> + (rshift (bit_op:s @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2)
>>> + (bit_op
>>> +  (rshift @0 @2)
>>> +  { wide_int_to_tree (type, wi::rshift (@1, @2, TYPE_SIGN (type))); })))
>>> +
>>> +/* (X bit_op C0) lshift C1 -> (X lshift C0) bit_op (C0 lshift C1) */
>>> +(for bit_op (bit_ior bit_xor bit_and)
>>> +(simplify
>>> + (lshift (bit_op:s @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2)
>>> + (bit_op
>>> +  (lshift @0 @2)
>>> +  { wide_int_to_tree (type, wi::lshift (@1, @2)); })))
>>
>>
>> Will do, good to see that my second transformation still picks up the shift
>> @1 @2 as a constant. I'm assuming there is some constant folding going on
>> between simplify transformations?
>
> Yes.
>
>>>
>>> this may be one case where not using wide-ints to be able to combine the
>>> patterns makes sense.  Thus,
>>>
>>> (for shift (lshift rshift)
>>>    (simplify
>>>     (shift ...)
>>>     (bit_op
>>>      (shift @0 @2)
>>>      (shift @1 @2))))
>>>
>>> note that I'm worried we'd take on "invalid" ubsan here when the above
>>> applies to
>>>
>>> int foo (int i)
>>> {
>>>     return (i & 0x7fffffff) >> 3;
>>> }
>>> int main () { return foo (0x80000007); }
>>>
>>> and i is negative.  That's because right-shift of negative values
>>> invokes undefined
>>> behavior.  IIRC in the middle-end we will not be taking advantage of
>>> that but the
>>> simplifications apply to GENERIC as well and thus may hit before ubsan
>>> instrumentation triggers(?)  It would be nice if you could double-check
>>> that.
>>
>>
>> I was looking into this and I understand your worries, though, I found out
>> that for the particular case of shifts and bit_and there already is a
>> simplify transformation that does the same, regardless of the sign.
>>
>> /* Fold (X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)
>>     (X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1).  */
>> (for shift (lshift rshift)
>>   (simplify
>>    (shift (convert?:s (bit_and:s @0 INTEGER_CST@2)) INTEGER_CST@1)
>>    (if (tree_nop_conversion_p (type, TREE_TYPE (@0)))
>>     (with { tree mask = int_const_binop (shift, fold_convert (type, @2), @1);
>> }
>>      (bit_and (shift (convert @0) @1) { mask; })))))
>
> I see ... also an opportunity to merge this pattern with yours.
>
>> Now, I don't quite understand what you mean by ubsan instrumentation, will
>> GCC introduce guards into code where it detects potential undefined
>> behavior?
>
> Yes.
>
>> Also, it might be worth to note that right shift of negative
>> values is denoted as "implementation defined" by the C standard. GCC however
>> doesn't include it in its list of implementation defined behavior so I guess
>> that is why you refer to it as undefined?
>
> Not sure, I thought it was undefined.  If its implementation defined
> then GCC needs
> to document its behavior.
>
>> Should we perhaps disable transformations where we can not guarantee that
>> the right shift produced is not one of negative values? I.e. prohibit this
>> transformation for:
>> 1) signed types and op1 == bit_xor
>> 2) signed types and op1 == bit_and and C1 has sign bit set.
>>
>> Also would it be useful in cases where you have signed shift and bit_and,
>> and C1 is not negative, to do the transformation but replace the signed
>> shift by an unsigned shift. This to make sure we don't introduce
>> undefined/implementation defined behavior were there was none.
>>
>> This does however change the current behavior!
>
> Yeah, so unless somebody else chimes in let's consider this as followup only.
>
>>>
>>> + (if (!(op0 == RSHIFT_EXPR && !TYPE_UNSIGNED (type)) && wi::fits_uhwi_p
>>> (@1))
>>>
>>> you only need fits_uhwi_p (@1) in the op0 != BIT_AND_EXPR case it
>>> seems, so better
>>> move it down to those cases.
>>
>>
>> So I used to, but I had the problem that I didn't know how to make it "fail"
>> the matching if this was not the case. For instance if op0 is a lshift for
>> which the constant doesn't fit uhwi, then it would fall through and never
>> set the zero mask, potentially leading to a wrong transformation. Now I'm
>> not sure this can happen, since that would mean that either constant @2 or
>> @3 need to be all 1's and that might already be caught by some other
>> transformation, but its wrong to rely on such behavior IMO. So for now I
>> have changed it to:
>>
>> (simplify
>>   (op2
>>    (op1:s
>>     (op0@4 @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2) INTEGER_CST@3)
>>   (if (!(op0 == RSHIFT_EXPR && !TYPE_UNSIGNED (type)) &&
>>        (op0 == BIT_AND_EXPR || wi::fits_uhwi_p (@1)))
>>
>>
>> It would be cool to have a FAIL expression, usable in the with clauses, to
>> make the pattern match fail a bit like the one in the machine description
>> language.
>
> I'll think about it.  Currently you'd need to add a  'bool fail' in the with
> and initialize it, adding a (if (!fail) ...) after it.
>
>>>
>>> +   (if (wi::eq_p (wi::bit_and (C1, zero_mask_not), wi::zero (prec)))
>>>
>>> I think you can write
>>>
>>>      (if (wi::bit_and (...) == 0)
>>>
>>> or at least wi:eq_p (wi::bit_and (...), 0).
>>>
>>
>> wi::bit_and (...) == 0 seems to be doing the trick.
>>
>>> I wonder if we shouldn't improve the pattern by handling (X op0 C0)
>>> transparently
>>> via using get_nonzero_bits (yeah, that's not exactly zero_mask but its
>>> inverse AFAIK).
>>> We'd wrap get_nonzero_bits in a helper that can handle GENERIC and your
>>> &, >>, << cases (hmm, such function must already exist somewhere...).  So
>>> you'd
>>> reduce the pattern to
>>>
>>> + (for op1 (bit_ior bit_xor)
>>> +      op2 (bit_xor bit_ior)
>>> +(simplify
>>> + (op2
>>> +  (op1:s @0 INTEGER_CST@2) INTEGER_CST@3))
>>>      (with
>>>       {
>>>         wide_int zero_mask_not = get_nonzero_bits (@0);
>>> ...
>>>       }
>>>
>>> This would make use of value-range information determined by VRP for
>>> example.
>>
>>
>> I'll go look for such a function.
>>
>>>
>>> note that with your pattern you'd want to capture (op0:s @0 INTEGER_CST@1)
>>> like via (op0@4 @0 INTEGER_CST@1) so you can re-use it in the replacement
>>> like so:
>>>
>>> +   (if (wi::eq_p (wi::bit_and (C1, zero_mask_not), wi::zero (prec)))
>>> +    (op2 @4 { wide_int_to_tree (type, cst_emit); })
>>> +    (if (wi::eq_p (wi::bit_and (@3, zero_mask_not), wi::zero (prec)))
>>> +     (op1 @4 { wide_int_to_tree (type, cst_emit); }))))))))
>>>
>>> the expression doesn't need a :s then obviously.
>>
>>
>> Yeah makes sense.
>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks and sorry for the delay in reviewing this.
>>> Richard.
>>>
>>
>> Thank you for all the comments!
>
> No problem!
>
>>>
>>>> gcc/ChangeLog:
>>>>
>>>> 2015-08-03  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>>>
>>>>     * match.pd: Added new patterns:
>>>>       ((X {&,<<,>>} C0) {|,^} C1) {^,|} C2)
>>>>       (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>} C1)
>>>>
>>>> gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
>>>>
>>>> 2015-08-03  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>>>               Hale Wang  <hale.wang@arm.com>
>>>>
>>>>     * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New test.
>>>
>>>
>>
>
Thanks again for the comments Richard!

A new algorithmic optimisation:

((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
With X being a tree where value_range has reasoned certain bits to 
always be zero throughout its computed value range, we will call this 
the zero_mask,
and with inner_op = {|,^}, outer_op = {|,^} and inner_op != outer_op.
if (inner_op == '^') C0 &= ~C1;
if ((C0 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X outer_op (C0 outer_op C1)
if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X inner_op (C0 outer_op C1)

And extended '(X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)' and
'(X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)' to also accept the bitwise 
or and xor operators:
'(X {&,^,|} C2) << C1 into (X << C1) {&,^,|} (C2 << C1)' and
'(X {&,^,|} C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)'.

The second transformation enables more applications of the first. Also 
some targets may benefit from delaying shift operations. I am aware that 
such an optimization, in combination with one or more optimizations that 
cause the reverse transformation, may lead to an infinite loop. Though 
such behavior has not been detected during regression testing and 
bootstrapping on aarch64.

gcc/ChangeLog:

2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>

* match.pd: Added a new pattern
((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
and expanded existing one
(X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>} C1)

gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:

2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
Hale Wang <hale.wang@arm.com>

* gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New test.

Comments

Richard Biener Oct. 8, 2015, 12:29 p.m. UTC | #1
On Wed, Oct 7, 2015 at 10:21 AM, Andre Vieira
<Andre.SimoesDiasVieira@arm.com> wrote:
> On 25/09/15 12:42, Richard Biener wrote:
>>
>> On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 1:30 PM, Andre Vieira
>> <Andre.SimoesDiasVieira@arm.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> On 17/09/15 10:46, Richard Biener wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 1:11 PM, Andre Vieira
>>>> <Andre.SimoesDiasVieira@arm.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 01/09/15 15:01, Richard Biener wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 1, 2015 at 3:40 PM, Andre Vieira
>>>>>> <Andre.SimoesDiasVieira@arm.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hi Marc,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 28/08/15 19:07, Marc Glisse wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> (not a review, I haven't even read the whole patch)
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Fri, 28 Aug 2015, Andre Vieira wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> 2015-08-03  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>      * match.pd: Added new patterns:
>>>>>>>>>        ((X {&,<<,>>} C0) {|,^} C1) {^,|} C2)
>>>>>>>>>        (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0
>>>>>>>>> {<<,>>}
>>>>>>>>> C1)
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> +(for op0 (rshift rshift lshift lshift bit_and bit_and)
>>>>>>>> + op1 (bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor)
>>>>>>>> + op2 (bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior bit_xor bit_ior)
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> You can nest for-loops, it seems clearer as:
>>>>>>>> (for op0 (rshift lshift bit_and)
>>>>>>>>       (for op1 (bit_ior bit_xor)
>>>>>>>>            op2 (bit_xor bit_ior)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Will do, thank you for pointing it out.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> +(simplify
>>>>>>>> + (op2:c
>>>>>>>> +  (op1:c
>>>>>>>> +   (op0 @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2) INTEGER_CST@3)
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> I suspect you will want more :s (single_use) and less :c
>>>>>>>> (canonicalization
>>>>>>>> should put constants in second position).
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I can't find the definition of :s (single_use).
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sorry for that - didn't get along updating it yet :/  It restricts
>>>>>> matching to
>>>>>> sub-expressions that have a single-use.  So
>>>>>>
>>>>>> +  a &= 0xd123;
>>>>>> +  unsigned short tem = a ^ 0x6040;
>>>>>> +  a = tem | 0xc031; /* Simplify _not_ to ((a & 0xd123) | 0xe071).  */
>>>>>> ... use of tem ...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> we shouldn't do the simplifcation here because the expression
>>>>>> (a & 0x123) ^ 0x6040 is kept live by 'tem'.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> GCC internals do point out
>>>>>>> that canonicalization does put constants in the second position,
>>>>>>> didnt
>>>>>>> see
>>>>>>> that first. Thank you for pointing it out.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> +       C1 = wi::bit_and_not (C1,C2);
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Space after ','.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Will do.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Having wide_int_storage in many places is surprising, I can't find
>>>>>>>> similar
>>>>>>>> code anywhere else in gcc.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I tried looking for examples of something similar, I think I ended up
>>>>>>> using
>>>>>>> wide_int because I was able to convert easily to and from it and it
>>>>>>> has
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> "mask" and "wide_int_to_tree" functions. I welcome any suggestions on
>>>>>>> what I
>>>>>>> should be using here for integer constant transformations and
>>>>>>> comparisons.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Using wide-ints is fine, but you shouldn't need 'wide_int_storage'
>>>>>> constructors - those
>>>>>> are indeed odd.  Is it just for the initializers of wide-ints?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> +    wide_int zero_mask = wi::zero (prec);
>>>>>> +    wide_int C0 = wide_int_storage (@1);
>>>>>> +    wide_int C1 = wide_int_storage (@2);
>>>>>> +    wide_int C2 = wide_int_storage (@3);
>>>>>> ...
>>>>>> +       zero_mask = wide_int_storage (wi::mask (C0.to_uhwi (), false,
>>>>>> prec));
>>>>>>
>>>>>> tree_to_uhwi (@1) should do the trick as well
>>>>>>
>>>>>> +       C1 = wi::bit_and_not (C1,C2);
>>>>>> +       cst_emit = wi::bit_or (C1, C2);
>>>>>>
>>>>>> the ops should be replacable with @2 and @3, the store to C1 obviously
>>>>>> not
>>>>>> (but you can use a tree temporary and use wide_int_to_tree here to
>>>>>> avoid
>>>>>> the back-and-forth for the case where C1 is not assigned to).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Note that transforms only doing association are prone to endless
>>>>>> recursion
>>>>>> in case some other pattern does the reverse op...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Richard.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> BR,
>>>>>>> Andre
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you for all the comments, see reworked version:
>>>>>
>>>>> Two new algorithmic optimisations:
>>>>>     1.((X op0 C0) op1 C1) op2 C2)
>>>>>       with op0 = {&, >>, <<}, op1 = {|,^}, op2 = {|,^} and op1 != op2
>>>>>       zero_mask has 1's for all bits that are sure to be 0 in (X op0
>>>>> C0)
>>>>>       and 0's otherwise.
>>>>>       if (op1 == '^') C1 &= ~C2 (Only changed if actually emitted)
>>>>>       if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X op0 C0) op2 (C1 op2 C2)
>>>>>       if ((C2 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X op0 C0) op1 (C1 op2 C2)
>>>>>     2. (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>}
>>>>> C1)
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> This patch does two algorithmic optimisations that target patterns
>>>>> like:
>>>>> (((x << 24) | 0x00FFFFFF) ^ 0xFF000000) and ((x ^ 0x40000002) >> 1) |
>>>>> 0x80000000.
>>>>>
>>>>> The transformation uses the knowledge of which bits are zero after
>>>>> operations like (X {&,<<,(unsigned)>>}) to combine constants, reducing
>>>>> run-time operations.
>>>>> The two examples above would be transformed into (X << 24) ^ 0xFFFFFFFF
>>>>> and
>>>>> (X >> 1) ^ 0xa0000001 respectively.
>>>>>
>>>>> The second transformation enables more applications of the first. Also
>>>>> some
>>>>> targets may benefit from delaying shift operations. I am aware that
>>>>> such
>>>>> an
>>>>> optimization, in combination with one or more optimizations that cause
>>>>> the
>>>>> reverse transformation, may lead to an infinite loop. Though such
>>>>> behavior
>>>>> has not been detected during regression testing and bootstrapping on
>>>>> aarch64.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> +/* (X bit_op C0) rshift C1 -> (X rshift C0) bit_op (C0 rshift C1) */
>>>> +(for bit_op (bit_ior bit_xor bit_and)
>>>> +(simplify
>>>> + (rshift (bit_op:s @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2)
>>>> + (bit_op
>>>> +  (rshift @0 @2)
>>>> +  { wide_int_to_tree (type, wi::rshift (@1, @2, TYPE_SIGN (type)));
>>>> })))
>>>> +
>>>> +/* (X bit_op C0) lshift C1 -> (X lshift C0) bit_op (C0 lshift C1) */
>>>> +(for bit_op (bit_ior bit_xor bit_and)
>>>> +(simplify
>>>> + (lshift (bit_op:s @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2)
>>>> + (bit_op
>>>> +  (lshift @0 @2)
>>>> +  { wide_int_to_tree (type, wi::lshift (@1, @2)); })))
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Will do, good to see that my second transformation still picks up the
>>> shift
>>> @1 @2 as a constant. I'm assuming there is some constant folding going on
>>> between simplify transformations?
>>
>>
>> Yes.
>>
>>>>
>>>> this may be one case where not using wide-ints to be able to combine the
>>>> patterns makes sense.  Thus,
>>>>
>>>> (for shift (lshift rshift)
>>>>    (simplify
>>>>     (shift ...)
>>>>     (bit_op
>>>>      (shift @0 @2)
>>>>      (shift @1 @2))))
>>>>
>>>> note that I'm worried we'd take on "invalid" ubsan here when the above
>>>> applies to
>>>>
>>>> int foo (int i)
>>>> {
>>>>     return (i & 0x7fffffff) >> 3;
>>>> }
>>>> int main () { return foo (0x80000007); }
>>>>
>>>> and i is negative.  That's because right-shift of negative values
>>>> invokes undefined
>>>> behavior.  IIRC in the middle-end we will not be taking advantage of
>>>> that but the
>>>> simplifications apply to GENERIC as well and thus may hit before ubsan
>>>> instrumentation triggers(?)  It would be nice if you could double-check
>>>> that.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I was looking into this and I understand your worries, though, I found
>>> out
>>> that for the particular case of shifts and bit_and there already is a
>>> simplify transformation that does the same, regardless of the sign.
>>>
>>> /* Fold (X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)
>>>     (X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1).  */
>>> (for shift (lshift rshift)
>>>   (simplify
>>>    (shift (convert?:s (bit_and:s @0 INTEGER_CST@2)) INTEGER_CST@1)
>>>    (if (tree_nop_conversion_p (type, TREE_TYPE (@0)))
>>>     (with { tree mask = int_const_binop (shift, fold_convert (type, @2),
>>> @1);
>>> }
>>>      (bit_and (shift (convert @0) @1) { mask; })))))
>>
>>
>> I see ... also an opportunity to merge this pattern with yours.
>>
>>> Now, I don't quite understand what you mean by ubsan instrumentation,
>>> will
>>> GCC introduce guards into code where it detects potential undefined
>>> behavior?
>>
>>
>> Yes.
>>
>>> Also, it might be worth to note that right shift of negative
>>> values is denoted as "implementation defined" by the C standard. GCC
>>> however
>>> doesn't include it in its list of implementation defined behavior so I
>>> guess
>>> that is why you refer to it as undefined?
>>
>>
>> Not sure, I thought it was undefined.  If its implementation defined
>> then GCC needs
>> to document its behavior.
>>
>>> Should we perhaps disable transformations where we can not guarantee that
>>> the right shift produced is not one of negative values? I.e. prohibit
>>> this
>>> transformation for:
>>> 1) signed types and op1 == bit_xor
>>> 2) signed types and op1 == bit_and and C1 has sign bit set.
>>>
>>> Also would it be useful in cases where you have signed shift and bit_and,
>>> and C1 is not negative, to do the transformation but replace the signed
>>> shift by an unsigned shift. This to make sure we don't introduce
>>> undefined/implementation defined behavior were there was none.
>>>
>>> This does however change the current behavior!
>>
>>
>> Yeah, so unless somebody else chimes in let's consider this as followup
>> only.
>>
>>>>
>>>> + (if (!(op0 == RSHIFT_EXPR && !TYPE_UNSIGNED (type)) && wi::fits_uhwi_p
>>>> (@1))
>>>>
>>>> you only need fits_uhwi_p (@1) in the op0 != BIT_AND_EXPR case it
>>>> seems, so better
>>>> move it down to those cases.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> So I used to, but I had the problem that I didn't know how to make it
>>> "fail"
>>> the matching if this was not the case. For instance if op0 is a lshift
>>> for
>>> which the constant doesn't fit uhwi, then it would fall through and never
>>> set the zero mask, potentially leading to a wrong transformation. Now I'm
>>> not sure this can happen, since that would mean that either constant @2
>>> or
>>> @3 need to be all 1's and that might already be caught by some other
>>> transformation, but its wrong to rely on such behavior IMO. So for now I
>>> have changed it to:
>>>
>>> (simplify
>>>   (op2
>>>    (op1:s
>>>     (op0@4 @0 INTEGER_CST@1) INTEGER_CST@2) INTEGER_CST@3)
>>>   (if (!(op0 == RSHIFT_EXPR && !TYPE_UNSIGNED (type)) &&
>>>        (op0 == BIT_AND_EXPR || wi::fits_uhwi_p (@1)))
>>>
>>>
>>> It would be cool to have a FAIL expression, usable in the with clauses,
>>> to
>>> make the pattern match fail a bit like the one in the machine description
>>> language.
>>
>>
>> I'll think about it.  Currently you'd need to add a  'bool fail' in the
>> with
>> and initialize it, adding a (if (!fail) ...) after it.
>>
>>>>
>>>> +   (if (wi::eq_p (wi::bit_and (C1, zero_mask_not), wi::zero (prec)))
>>>>
>>>> I think you can write
>>>>
>>>>      (if (wi::bit_and (...) == 0)
>>>>
>>>> or at least wi:eq_p (wi::bit_and (...), 0).
>>>>
>>>
>>> wi::bit_and (...) == 0 seems to be doing the trick.
>>>
>>>> I wonder if we shouldn't improve the pattern by handling (X op0 C0)
>>>> transparently
>>>> via using get_nonzero_bits (yeah, that's not exactly zero_mask but its
>>>> inverse AFAIK).
>>>> We'd wrap get_nonzero_bits in a helper that can handle GENERIC and your
>>>> &, >>, << cases (hmm, such function must already exist somewhere...).
>>>> So
>>>> you'd
>>>> reduce the pattern to
>>>>
>>>> + (for op1 (bit_ior bit_xor)
>>>> +      op2 (bit_xor bit_ior)
>>>> +(simplify
>>>> + (op2
>>>> +  (op1:s @0 INTEGER_CST@2) INTEGER_CST@3))
>>>>      (with
>>>>       {
>>>>         wide_int zero_mask_not = get_nonzero_bits (@0);
>>>> ...
>>>>       }
>>>>
>>>> This would make use of value-range information determined by VRP for
>>>> example.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I'll go look for such a function.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> note that with your pattern you'd want to capture (op0:s @0
>>>> INTEGER_CST@1)
>>>> like via (op0@4 @0 INTEGER_CST@1) so you can re-use it in the
>>>> replacement
>>>> like so:
>>>>
>>>> +   (if (wi::eq_p (wi::bit_and (C1, zero_mask_not), wi::zero (prec)))
>>>> +    (op2 @4 { wide_int_to_tree (type, cst_emit); })
>>>> +    (if (wi::eq_p (wi::bit_and (@3, zero_mask_not), wi::zero (prec)))
>>>> +     (op1 @4 { wide_int_to_tree (type, cst_emit); }))))))))
>>>>
>>>> the expression doesn't need a :s then obviously.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Yeah makes sense.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Thanks and sorry for the delay in reviewing this.
>>>> Richard.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Thank you for all the comments!
>>
>>
>> No problem!
>>
>>>>
>>>>> gcc/ChangeLog:
>>>>>
>>>>> 2015-08-03  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>>>>
>>>>>     * match.pd: Added new patterns:
>>>>>       ((X {&,<<,>>} C0) {|,^} C1) {^,|} C2)
>>>>>       (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>}
>>>>> C1)
>>>>>
>>>>> gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
>>>>>
>>>>> 2015-08-03  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>>>>               Hale Wang  <hale.wang@arm.com>
>>>>>
>>>>>     * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New test.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
> Thanks again for the comments Richard!
>
> A new algorithmic optimisation:
>
> ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
> With X being a tree where value_range has reasoned certain bits to always be
> zero throughout its computed value range, we will call this the zero_mask,
> and with inner_op = {|,^}, outer_op = {|,^} and inner_op != outer_op.
> if (inner_op == '^') C0 &= ~C1;
> if ((C0 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X outer_op (C0 outer_op C1)
> if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X inner_op (C0 outer_op C1)
>
> And extended '(X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)' and
> '(X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)' to also accept the bitwise or
> and xor operators:
> '(X {&,^,|} C2) << C1 into (X << C1) {&,^,|} (C2 << C1)' and
> '(X {&,^,|} C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)'.
>
> The second transformation enables more applications of the first. Also some
> targets may benefit from delaying shift operations. I am aware that such an
> optimization, in combination with one or more optimizations that cause the
> reverse transformation, may lead to an infinite loop. Though such behavior
> has not been detected during regression testing and bootstrapping on
> aarch64.
>
> gcc/ChangeLog:
>
> 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>
> * match.pd: Added a new pattern
> ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
> and expanded existing one
> (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>} C1)
>
> gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
>
> 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>
> Hale Wang <hale.wang@arm.com>
>
> * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New test.

Ok.

Thanks,
Richard.
James Greenhalgh Oct. 9, 2015, 4:11 p.m. UTC | #2
On Thu, Oct 08, 2015 at 01:29:34PM +0100, Richard Biener wrote:
> > Thanks again for the comments Richard!
> >
> > A new algorithmic optimisation:
> >
> > ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
> > With X being a tree where value_range has reasoned certain bits to always be
> > zero throughout its computed value range, we will call this the zero_mask,
> > and with inner_op = {|,^}, outer_op = {|,^} and inner_op != outer_op.
> > if (inner_op == '^') C0 &= ~C1;
> > if ((C0 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X outer_op (C0 outer_op C1)
> > if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X inner_op (C0 outer_op C1)
> >
> > And extended '(X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)' and
> > '(X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)' to also accept the bitwise or
> > and xor operators:
> > '(X {&,^,|} C2) << C1 into (X << C1) {&,^,|} (C2 << C1)' and
> > '(X {&,^,|} C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)'.
> >
> > The second transformation enables more applications of the first. Also some
> > targets may benefit from delaying shift operations. I am aware that such an
> > optimization, in combination with one or more optimizations that cause the
> > reverse transformation, may lead to an infinite loop. Though such behavior
> > has not been detected during regression testing and bootstrapping on
> > aarch64.
> >
> > gcc/ChangeLog:
> >
> > 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
> >
> > * match.pd: Added a new pattern
> > ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
> > and expanded existing one
> > (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>} C1)
> >
> > gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
> >
> > 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
> >
> > Hale Wang <hale.wang@arm.com>
> >
> > * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New test.
> 
> Ok.
> 
> Thanks,
> Richard.
> 

As Andre does not have commit rights, I've committed this on his behalf as
revision 228661. Please watch for any fallout over the weekend.

Andre, please check your ChangeLog format in future. In the end I
committed this:

gcc/ChangeLog

2015-10-09  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>

	* match.pd: ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1) New pattern.
	((X & C2) << C1): Expand to...
	(X {&,^,|} C2 << C1): ...This.
	((X & C2) >> C1): Expand to...
	(X {&,^,|} C2 >> C1): ...This.

gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog

2015-10-09  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
	    Hale Wang  <hale.wang@arm.com>

	* gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New.

Thanks,
James
Christophe Lyon Oct. 15, 2015, 1:50 p.m. UTC | #3
On 9 October 2015 at 18:11, James Greenhalgh <james.greenhalgh@arm.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 08, 2015 at 01:29:34PM +0100, Richard Biener wrote:
>> > Thanks again for the comments Richard!
>> >
>> > A new algorithmic optimisation:
>> >
>> > ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
>> > With X being a tree where value_range has reasoned certain bits to always be
>> > zero throughout its computed value range, we will call this the zero_mask,
>> > and with inner_op = {|,^}, outer_op = {|,^} and inner_op != outer_op.
>> > if (inner_op == '^') C0 &= ~C1;
>> > if ((C0 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X outer_op (C0 outer_op C1)
>> > if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X inner_op (C0 outer_op C1)
>> >
>> > And extended '(X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)' and
>> > '(X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)' to also accept the bitwise or
>> > and xor operators:
>> > '(X {&,^,|} C2) << C1 into (X << C1) {&,^,|} (C2 << C1)' and
>> > '(X {&,^,|} C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)'.
>> >
>> > The second transformation enables more applications of the first. Also some
>> > targets may benefit from delaying shift operations. I am aware that such an
>> > optimization, in combination with one or more optimizations that cause the
>> > reverse transformation, may lead to an infinite loop. Though such behavior
>> > has not been detected during regression testing and bootstrapping on
>> > aarch64.
>> >
>> > gcc/ChangeLog:
>> >
>> > 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>> >
>> > * match.pd: Added a new pattern
>> > ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
>> > and expanded existing one
>> > (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>} C1)
>> >
>> > gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
>> >
>> > 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>> >
>> > Hale Wang <hale.wang@arm.com>
>> >
>> > * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New test.
>>
>> Ok.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Richard.
>>
>
> As Andre does not have commit rights, I've committed this on his behalf as
> revision 228661. Please watch for any fallout over the weekend.
>

Since this commit I'm seeing:
FAIL: gcc.target/arm/xor-and.c scan-assembler orr
on most arm targets.

See: http://people.linaro.org/~christophe.lyon/cross-validation/gcc/trunk/228661/report-build-info.html

Since that's already a few days old, I suspect you are already aware of that?

Christophe.


> Andre, please check your ChangeLog format in future. In the end I
> committed this:
>
> gcc/ChangeLog
>
> 2015-10-09  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>
>         * match.pd: ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1) New pattern.
>         ((X & C2) << C1): Expand to...
>         (X {&,^,|} C2 << C1): ...This.
>         ((X & C2) >> C1): Expand to...
>         (X {&,^,|} C2 >> C1): ...This.
>
> gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog
>
> 2015-10-09  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>             Hale Wang  <hale.wang@arm.com>
>
>         * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New.
>
> Thanks,
> James
>
Richard Biener Oct. 19, 2015, 11:44 a.m. UTC | #4
On Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 3:50 PM, Christophe Lyon
<christophe.lyon@linaro.org> wrote:
> On 9 October 2015 at 18:11, James Greenhalgh <james.greenhalgh@arm.com> wrote:
>> On Thu, Oct 08, 2015 at 01:29:34PM +0100, Richard Biener wrote:
>>> > Thanks again for the comments Richard!
>>> >
>>> > A new algorithmic optimisation:
>>> >
>>> > ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
>>> > With X being a tree where value_range has reasoned certain bits to always be
>>> > zero throughout its computed value range, we will call this the zero_mask,
>>> > and with inner_op = {|,^}, outer_op = {|,^} and inner_op != outer_op.
>>> > if (inner_op == '^') C0 &= ~C1;
>>> > if ((C0 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X outer_op (C0 outer_op C1)
>>> > if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X inner_op (C0 outer_op C1)
>>> >
>>> > And extended '(X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)' and
>>> > '(X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)' to also accept the bitwise or
>>> > and xor operators:
>>> > '(X {&,^,|} C2) << C1 into (X << C1) {&,^,|} (C2 << C1)' and
>>> > '(X {&,^,|} C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1)'.
>>> >
>>> > The second transformation enables more applications of the first. Also some
>>> > targets may benefit from delaying shift operations. I am aware that such an
>>> > optimization, in combination with one or more optimizations that cause the
>>> > reverse transformation, may lead to an infinite loop. Though such behavior
>>> > has not been detected during regression testing and bootstrapping on
>>> > aarch64.
>>> >
>>> > gcc/ChangeLog:
>>> >
>>> > 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>> >
>>> > * match.pd: Added a new pattern
>>> > ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
>>> > and expanded existing one
>>> > (X {|,^,&} C0) {<<,>>} C1 -> (X {<<,>>} C1) {|,^,&} (C0 {<<,>>} C1)
>>> >
>>> > gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
>>> >
>>> > 2015-10-05 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>> >
>>> > Hale Wang <hale.wang@arm.com>
>>> >
>>> > * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New test.
>>>
>>> Ok.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Richard.
>>>
>>
>> As Andre does not have commit rights, I've committed this on his behalf as
>> revision 228661. Please watch for any fallout over the weekend.
>>
>
> Since this commit I'm seeing:
> FAIL: gcc.target/arm/xor-and.c scan-assembler orr
> on most arm targets.
>
> See: http://people.linaro.org/~christophe.lyon/cross-validation/gcc/trunk/228661/report-build-info.html
>
> Since that's already a few days old, I suspect you are already aware of that?

Please file a bugreport.

Thanks,
Richard.

> Christophe.
>
>
>> Andre, please check your ChangeLog format in future. In the end I
>> committed this:
>>
>> gcc/ChangeLog
>>
>> 2015-10-09  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>
>>         * match.pd: ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1) New pattern.
>>         ((X & C2) << C1): Expand to...
>>         (X {&,^,|} C2 << C1): ...This.
>>         ((X & C2) >> C1): Expand to...
>>         (X {&,^,|} C2 >> C1): ...This.
>>
>> gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog
>>
>> 2015-10-09  Andre Vieira  <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com>
>>             Hale Wang  <hale.wang@arm.com>
>>
>>         * gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c: New.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> James
>>
diff mbox

Patch

From 551f8af905ad0879747f75b5eb8f86f1d1636961 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Andre Simoes Dias Vieira <andsim01@arm.com>
Date: Wed, 30 Sep 2015 13:21:29 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] algorithmic optimization v3

---
 gcc/match.pd                                | 60 +++++++++++++++++++++---
 gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c | 71 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 2 files changed, 124 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
 create mode 100644 gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c

diff --git a/gcc/match.pd b/gcc/match.pd
index bd5c267f1f86093be10eab8c40cfbf94b71c6545..820c42901fad09b77e2f81f06b4e23d7abaa4079 100644
--- a/gcc/match.pd
+++ b/gcc/match.pd
@@ -710,6 +710,51 @@  along with GCC; see the file COPYING3.  If not see
       && tree_nop_conversion_p (type, TREE_TYPE (@1)))
   (convert (bit_and (bit_not @1) @0))))
 
+
+
+/* ((X inner_op C0) outer_op C1)
+   With X being a tree where value_range has reasoned certain bits to always be
+   zero throughout its computed value range,
+   inner_op = {|,^}, outer_op = {|,^} and inner_op != outer_op
+   where zero_mask has 1's for all bits that are sure to be 0 in
+   and 0's otherwise.
+   if (inner_op == '^') C0 &= ~C1;
+   if ((C0 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X outer_op (C0 outer_op C1)
+   if ((C1 & ~zero_mask) == 0) then emit (X inner_op (C0 outer_op C1)
+*/
+(for inner_op (bit_ior bit_xor)
+     outer_op (bit_xor bit_ior)
+(simplify
+ (outer_op
+  (inner_op:s @2 INTEGER_CST@0) INTEGER_CST@1)
+ (with
+  {
+    bool fail = false;
+    wide_int zero_mask_not;
+    wide_int C0;
+    wide_int cst_emit;
+
+    if (TREE_CODE (@2) == SSA_NAME)
+      zero_mask_not = get_nonzero_bits (@2);
+    else
+      fail = true;
+
+    if (inner_op == BIT_XOR_EXPR)
+      {
+	C0 = wi::bit_and_not (@0, @1);
+	cst_emit = wi::bit_or (C0, @1);
+      }
+    else
+      {
+	C0 = @0;
+	cst_emit = wi::bit_xor (@0, @1);
+      }
+  }
+  (if (!fail && wi::bit_and (C0, zero_mask_not) == 0)
+   (outer_op @2 { wide_int_to_tree (type, cst_emit); })
+   (if (!fail && wi::bit_and (@1, zero_mask_not) == 0)
+    (inner_op @2 { wide_int_to_tree (type, cst_emit); }))))))
+
 /* Associate (p +p off1) +p off2 as (p +p (off1 + off2)).  */
 (simplify
   (pointer_plus (pointer_plus:s @0 @1) @3)
@@ -1103,14 +1148,15 @@  along with GCC; see the file COPYING3.  If not see
 	     (bit_and (convert (shift:shift_type (convert @3) @1)) { newmaskt; })
 	     (bit_and @4 { newmaskt; })))))))))))))
 
-/* Fold (X & C2) << C1 into (X << C1) & (C2 << C1)
-   (X & C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1).  */
+/* Fold (X {&,^,|} C2) << C1 into (X << C1) {&,^,|} (C2 << C1)
+   (X {&,^,|} C2) >> C1 into (X >> C1) & (C2 >> C1).  */
 (for shift (lshift rshift)
- (simplify
-  (shift (convert?:s (bit_and:s @0 INTEGER_CST@2)) INTEGER_CST@1)
-  (if (tree_nop_conversion_p (type, TREE_TYPE (@0)))
-   (with { tree mask = int_const_binop (shift, fold_convert (type, @2), @1); }
-    (bit_and (shift (convert @0) @1) { mask; })))))
+ (for bit_op (bit_and bit_xor bit_ior)
+  (simplify
+   (shift (convert?:s (bit_op:s @0 INTEGER_CST@2)) INTEGER_CST@1)
+   (if (tree_nop_conversion_p (type, TREE_TYPE (@0)))
+    (with { tree mask = int_const_binop (shift, fold_convert (type, @2), @1); }
+     (bit_op (shift (convert @0) @1) { mask; }))))))
 
 
 /* Simplifications of conversions.  */
diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..bb4f8afd7aafbacf4805e6cd95e5beb3edaecf16
--- /dev/null
+++ b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/tree-ssa/forwprop-33.c
@@ -0,0 +1,71 @@ 
+/* { dg-do compile } */
+/* { dg-options "-O2 -fdump-tree-forwprop3" } */
+
+unsigned short
+test1 (unsigned short a)
+{
+  a ^= 0x4002;
+  a >>= 1;
+  a |= 0x8000; /* Simplify to ((a >> 1) ^ 0xa001).  */
+  return a;
+}
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\^ 40961" "forwprop3" } } */
+
+unsigned short
+test2 (unsigned short a)
+{
+  a |= 0x4002;
+  a <<= 1;
+  a ^= 0x0001; /* Simplify to ((a << 1) | 0x8005).  */
+  return a;
+}
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\| 32773" "forwprop3" } } */
+
+unsigned short
+test3 (unsigned short a)
+{
+  a &= 0xd123;
+  a ^= 0x6040;
+  a |= 0xc031; /* Simplify to ((a & 0xd123) | 0xe071).  */
+  return a;
+}
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\| 57457" "forwprop3" } } */
+
+unsigned short
+test4 (unsigned short a)
+{
+  a ^= 0x8002;
+  a >>= 1;
+  a |= 0x8000;
+  return a;
+}
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\^ 49153" "forwprop3" } } */
+
+unsigned short
+test5 (unsigned short a)
+{
+  a ^= 0x8002;
+  a >>= 1;
+  a |= 0x8001; /* Only move shift inward: (((a >> 1) ^ 0x4001) | 0x8001).  */
+  return a;
+}
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\^ 16385" "forwprop3" } } */
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\| 32769" "forwprop3" } } */
+
+short
+test6 (short a)
+{
+  a &= 0x7fff;
+  a >>= 2;
+  return a;
+}
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\& 8191" "forwprop3" } } */
+
+short
+test7 (short a)
+{
+  a &= 0x8fff;
+  a >>= 2;
+  return a;
+}
+/* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump "\\& -7169" "forwprop3" } } */
-- 
1.9.1