Message ID | b95d81c3-0519-44db-7c82-fc38b8b94d31@arm.com |
---|---|
State | New |
Headers | show |
Series | PR target/86487: fix the way 'uses_hard_regs_p' handles paradoxical subregs | expand |
On 1/7/19 7:42 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: > Hi, > > This patch fixes the way 'uses_hard_regs_p' handles paradoxical subregs. > The function is supposed to detect whether a register access of 'x' > overlaps with 'set'. For SUBREGs it should check whether any of the > full multi-register overlaps with 'set'. The former behavior used to > grab the widest mode of the inner/outer registers of a SUBREG and the > inner register, and check all registers from the inner-register onwards > for the given width. For normal SUBREGS this gives you the full > register, for paradoxical SUBREGS however it may give you the wrong set > of registers if the index is not the first of the multi-register set. > > The original error reported in PR target/86487 can no longer be > reproduced with the given test, this was due to an unrelated code-gen > change, regardless I believe this should still be fixed as it is simply > wrong behavior by uses_hard_regs_p which may be triggered by a different > test-case or by future changes to the compiler. Also it is useful to > point out that this isn't actually a 'target' issue as this code could > potentially hit any other target using paradoxical SUBREGS. Should I > change the Bugzilla ticket to reflect this is actually a target agnostic > issue in RTL? > > There is a gotcha here, I don't know what would happen if you hit the > cases of get_hard_regno where it would return -1, quoting the comment > above that function "If X is not a register or a subreg of a register, > return -1." though I think if we are hitting this then things must have > gone wrong before? > > Bootstrapped on aarch64, arm and x86, no regressions. > > Is this OK for trunk? > > > gcc/ChangeLog: > 2019-01-07 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> > > > PR target/86487 > * lra-constraints.c(uses_hard_regs_p): Fix handling of > paradoxical SUBREGS. But doesn't wider_subreg_mode give us the wider of the two modes here and we use that wider mode when we call overlaps_hard_reg_set_p which should ultimately check all the registers in the paradoxical. I must be missing something here?!? jeff
On 07/01/2019 22:50, Jeff Law wrote: > On 1/7/19 7:42 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >> Hi, >> >> This patch fixes the way 'uses_hard_regs_p' handles paradoxical subregs. >> The function is supposed to detect whether a register access of 'x' >> overlaps with 'set'. For SUBREGs it should check whether any of the >> full multi-register overlaps with 'set'. The former behavior used to >> grab the widest mode of the inner/outer registers of a SUBREG and the >> inner register, and check all registers from the inner-register onwards >> for the given width. For normal SUBREGS this gives you the full >> register, for paradoxical SUBREGS however it may give you the wrong set >> of registers if the index is not the first of the multi-register set. >> >> The original error reported in PR target/86487 can no longer be >> reproduced with the given test, this was due to an unrelated code-gen >> change, regardless I believe this should still be fixed as it is simply >> wrong behavior by uses_hard_regs_p which may be triggered by a different >> test-case or by future changes to the compiler. Also it is useful to >> point out that this isn't actually a 'target' issue as this code could >> potentially hit any other target using paradoxical SUBREGS. Should I >> change the Bugzilla ticket to reflect this is actually a target agnostic >> issue in RTL? >> >> There is a gotcha here, I don't know what would happen if you hit the >> cases of get_hard_regno where it would return -1, quoting the comment >> above that function "If X is not a register or a subreg of a register, >> return -1." though I think if we are hitting this then things must have >> gone wrong before? >> >> Bootstrapped on aarch64, arm and x86, no regressions. >> >> Is this OK for trunk? >> >> >> gcc/ChangeLog: >> 2019-01-07 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> >> >> >> PR target/86487 >> * lra-constraints.c(uses_hard_regs_p): Fix handling of >> paradoxical SUBREGS. > But doesn't wider_subreg_mode give us the wider of the two modes here > and we use that wider mode when we call overlaps_hard_reg_set_p which > should ultimately check all the registers in the paradoxical. > > I must be missing something here?!? > > jeff > Hi Jeff, It does give us the wider of the two modes, but we also then grab the "subreg" of the paradoxical subreg. If you look at the first example case of the bugzilla ticket, for an older gcc (say gcc-8) and the options provided (using big-endian), it will generate the following subreg: (subreg:DI (reg:SI 122) 0) This paradoxical subreg represents a register pair r0-r1, where because of big-endian and subgreg index 0, r1 is the value we care about and r0 the one we say "it can be whatever" by using this paradoxical subreg. When 'uses_hard_regs_p' sees this as a subreg, it sets 'mode' to the wider, i.e. DImode, but it also sets 'x' to the subreg i.e. 'reg:SI 122', for which get_hard_regno correctly returns 'r1'. But if you now pass 'overlaps_hard_reg_set_p' DImode and 'r1', it will check whether 'set' contains either 'r1-r2', and not 'r1'r0'. To reproduce this again I now applied this patch to GCC 8 and found an issue with it. 'REG_P (x)' returns false if x is a 'SUBREG'. So I will need to change the later check to also include 'SUBREG_P (x)', I guess I was testing with a too new version of gcc that didn't lead to the bogus register allocation... Which really encourages me to add some sort of testcase, but I'd very much like to come up with a less flaky one, we basically need to force the generation of a paradoxical subreg 'x', where 'get_hard_regno (SUBREG_REG (x)) != get_hard_regno (x)'. This will cause 'uses_hard_regs_p' to give you a wrong answer. Suggestions welcome!! Cheers, Andre
On 1/8/19 8:21 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: > > > On 07/01/2019 22:50, Jeff Law wrote: >> On 1/7/19 7:42 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> This patch fixes the way 'uses_hard_regs_p' handles paradoxical subregs. >>> The function is supposed to detect whether a register access of 'x' >>> overlaps with 'set'. For SUBREGs it should check whether any of the >>> full multi-register overlaps with 'set'. The former behavior used to >>> grab the widest mode of the inner/outer registers of a SUBREG and the >>> inner register, and check all registers from the inner-register onwards >>> for the given width. For normal SUBREGS this gives you the full >>> register, for paradoxical SUBREGS however it may give you the wrong set >>> of registers if the index is not the first of the multi-register set. >>> >>> The original error reported in PR target/86487 can no longer be >>> reproduced with the given test, this was due to an unrelated code-gen >>> change, regardless I believe this should still be fixed as it is simply >>> wrong behavior by uses_hard_regs_p which may be triggered by a different >>> test-case or by future changes to the compiler. Also it is useful to >>> point out that this isn't actually a 'target' issue as this code could >>> potentially hit any other target using paradoxical SUBREGS. Should I >>> change the Bugzilla ticket to reflect this is actually a target agnostic >>> issue in RTL? >>> >>> There is a gotcha here, I don't know what would happen if you hit the >>> cases of get_hard_regno where it would return -1, quoting the comment >>> above that function "If X is not a register or a subreg of a register, >>> return -1." though I think if we are hitting this then things must have >>> gone wrong before? >>> >>> Bootstrapped on aarch64, arm and x86, no regressions. >>> >>> Is this OK for trunk? >>> >>> >>> gcc/ChangeLog: >>> 2019-01-07 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> >>> >>> >>> PR target/86487 >>> * lra-constraints.c(uses_hard_regs_p): Fix handling of >>> paradoxical SUBREGS. >> But doesn't wider_subreg_mode give us the wider of the two modes here >> and we use that wider mode when we call overlaps_hard_reg_set_p which >> should ultimately check all the registers in the paradoxical. >> >> I must be missing something here?!? >> >> jeff >> > > Hi Jeff, > > It does give us the wider of the two modes, but we also then grab the > "subreg" of the paradoxical subreg. If you look at the first example > case of the bugzilla ticket, for an older gcc (say gcc-8) and the > options provided (using big-endian), it will generate the following subreg: > (subreg:DI (reg:SI 122) 0) > > This paradoxical subreg represents a register pair r0-r1, where because > of big-endian and subgreg index 0, r1 is the value we care about and r0 > the one we say "it can be whatever" by using this paradoxical subreg. > > When 'uses_hard_regs_p' sees this as a subreg, it sets 'mode' to the > wider, i.e. DImode, but it also sets 'x' to the subreg i.e. 'reg:SI > 122', for which get_hard_regno correctly returns 'r1'. But if you now > pass 'overlaps_hard_reg_set_p' DImode and 'r1', it will check whether > 'set' contains either 'r1-r2', and not 'r1'r0'. > > To reproduce this again I now applied this patch to GCC 8 and found an > issue with it. 'REG_P (x)' returns false if x is a 'SUBREG'. So I will > need to change the later check to also include 'SUBREG_P (x)', I guess I > was testing with a too new version of gcc that didn't lead to the bogus > register allocation... > > Which really encourages me to add some sort of testcase, but I'd very > much like to come up with a less flaky one, we basically need to force > the generation of a paradoxical subreg 'x', where 'get_hard_regno > (SUBREG_REG (x)) != get_hard_regno (x)'. This will cause > 'uses_hard_regs_p' to give you a wrong answer. BTW, you might look at 87305 which is another problem with big endian pseudos and paradoxical subregs that Vlad just fixed. jeff
On 11/01/2019 22:54, Jeff Law wrote: > On 1/8/19 8:21 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >> >> >> On 07/01/2019 22:50, Jeff Law wrote: >>> On 1/7/19 7:42 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> This patch fixes the way 'uses_hard_regs_p' handles paradoxical subregs. >>>> The function is supposed to detect whether a register access of 'x' >>>> overlaps with 'set'. For SUBREGs it should check whether any of the >>>> full multi-register overlaps with 'set'. The former behavior used to >>>> grab the widest mode of the inner/outer registers of a SUBREG and the >>>> inner register, and check all registers from the inner-register onwards >>>> for the given width. For normal SUBREGS this gives you the full >>>> register, for paradoxical SUBREGS however it may give you the wrong set >>>> of registers if the index is not the first of the multi-register set. >>>> >>>> The original error reported in PR target/86487 can no longer be >>>> reproduced with the given test, this was due to an unrelated code-gen >>>> change, regardless I believe this should still be fixed as it is simply >>>> wrong behavior by uses_hard_regs_p which may be triggered by a different >>>> test-case or by future changes to the compiler. Also it is useful to >>>> point out that this isn't actually a 'target' issue as this code could >>>> potentially hit any other target using paradoxical SUBREGS. Should I >>>> change the Bugzilla ticket to reflect this is actually a target agnostic >>>> issue in RTL? >>>> >>>> There is a gotcha here, I don't know what would happen if you hit the >>>> cases of get_hard_regno where it would return -1, quoting the comment >>>> above that function "If X is not a register or a subreg of a register, >>>> return -1." though I think if we are hitting this then things must have >>>> gone wrong before? >>>> >>>> Bootstrapped on aarch64, arm and x86, no regressions. >>>> >>>> Is this OK for trunk? >>>> >>>> >>>> gcc/ChangeLog: >>>> 2019-01-07 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> >>>> >>>> >>>> PR target/86487 >>>> * lra-constraints.c(uses_hard_regs_p): Fix handling of >>>> paradoxical SUBREGS. >>> But doesn't wider_subreg_mode give us the wider of the two modes here >>> and we use that wider mode when we call overlaps_hard_reg_set_p which >>> should ultimately check all the registers in the paradoxical. >>> >>> I must be missing something here?!? >>> >>> jeff >>> >> >> Hi Jeff, >> >> It does give us the wider of the two modes, but we also then grab the >> "subreg" of the paradoxical subreg. If you look at the first example >> case of the bugzilla ticket, for an older gcc (say gcc-8) and the >> options provided (using big-endian), it will generate the following subreg: >> (subreg:DI (reg:SI 122) 0) >> >> This paradoxical subreg represents a register pair r0-r1, where because >> of big-endian and subgreg index 0, r1 is the value we care about and r0 >> the one we say "it can be whatever" by using this paradoxical subreg. >> >> When 'uses_hard_regs_p' sees this as a subreg, it sets 'mode' to the >> wider, i.e. DImode, but it also sets 'x' to the subreg i.e. 'reg:SI >> 122', for which get_hard_regno correctly returns 'r1'. But if you now >> pass 'overlaps_hard_reg_set_p' DImode and 'r1', it will check whether >> 'set' contains either 'r1-r2', and not 'r1'r0'. >> >> To reproduce this again I now applied this patch to GCC 8 and found an >> issue with it. 'REG_P (x)' returns false if x is a 'SUBREG'. So I will >> need to change the later check to also include 'SUBREG_P (x)', I guess I >> was testing with a too new version of gcc that didn't lead to the bogus >> register allocation... >> >> Which really encourages me to add some sort of testcase, but I'd very >> much like to come up with a less flaky one, we basically need to force >> the generation of a paradoxical subreg 'x', where 'get_hard_regno >> (SUBREG_REG (x)) != get_hard_regno (x)'. This will cause >> 'uses_hard_regs_p' to give you a wrong answer. > BTW, you might look at 87305 which is another problem with big endian > pseudos and paradoxical subregs that Vlad just fixed. > > jeff > Hi Jeff, Thank you, I had a look but I don't think it is the same issue and even though I can no longer reproduce this particular issue on trunk I do believe the latent fault is still there and I would like to fix it. As I mentioned in the earlier emails I forgot to make sure 'SUBREG_P (x)' was also handled where we previously only accepted 'REG_P (x)' as we would always strip away the parent subreg. I have also added the testcase that triggered this issue on arm in previous GCC versions. This does not trigger it on trunk any more due to other codegen changes. Bootstrapped on aarch64, arm and x86, no regressions. Is this OK for trunk? gcc/ChangeLog: 2019-02-01 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> PR target/86487 * lra-constraints.c(uses_hard_regs_p): Fix handling of paradoxical SUBREGS. gcc/testsuiteChangeLog: 2019-02-01 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> PR target/86487 * gcc.target/arm/pr86487.c: New. diff --git a/gcc/lra-constraints.c b/gcc/lra-constraints.c index c061093ed699620afe2dfda60d58066d6967523a..736b084acc552b75ff4d369b6584bc9ab422e21b 100644 --- a/gcc/lra-constraints.c +++ b/gcc/lra-constraints.c @@ -1761,11 +1761,21 @@ uses_hard_regs_p (rtx x, HARD_REG_SET set) return false; code = GET_CODE (x); mode = GET_MODE (x); + if (code == SUBREG) { + /* For all SUBREGs we want to check whether the full multi-register + overlaps the set. For normal SUBREGs this means 'get_hard_regno' of + the inner register, for paradoxical SUBREGs this means the + 'get_hard_regno' of the full SUBREG and for complete SUBREGs either is + fine. Use the wider mode for all cases. */ + rtx subreg = SUBREG_REG (x); mode = wider_subreg_mode (x); - x = SUBREG_REG (x); - code = GET_CODE (x); + if (mode == GET_MODE (subreg)) + { + x = subreg; + code = GET_CODE (x); + } } if (REG_P (x))
PING. Since Jeff is away can another maintainer have a look at this please? Cheers, Andre On 01/02/2019 14:31, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: > > > On 11/01/2019 22:54, Jeff Law wrote: >> On 1/8/19 8:21 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >>> >>> >>> On 07/01/2019 22:50, Jeff Law wrote: >>>> On 1/7/19 7:42 AM, Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >>>>> Hi, >>>>> >>>>> This patch fixes the way 'uses_hard_regs_p' handles paradoxical >>>>> subregs. >>>>> The function is supposed to detect whether a register access of 'x' >>>>> overlaps with 'set'. For SUBREGs it should check whether any of the >>>>> full multi-register overlaps with 'set'. The former behavior used to >>>>> grab the widest mode of the inner/outer registers of a SUBREG and the >>>>> inner register, and check all registers from the inner-register >>>>> onwards >>>>> for the given width. For normal SUBREGS this gives you the full >>>>> register, for paradoxical SUBREGS however it may give you the wrong >>>>> set >>>>> of registers if the index is not the first of the multi-register set. >>>>> >>>>> The original error reported in PR target/86487 can no longer be >>>>> reproduced with the given test, this was due to an unrelated code-gen >>>>> change, regardless I believe this should still be fixed as it is >>>>> simply >>>>> wrong behavior by uses_hard_regs_p which may be triggered by a >>>>> different >>>>> test-case or by future changes to the compiler. Also it is useful to >>>>> point out that this isn't actually a 'target' issue as this code could >>>>> potentially hit any other target using paradoxical SUBREGS. Should I >>>>> change the Bugzilla ticket to reflect this is actually a target >>>>> agnostic >>>>> issue in RTL? >>>>> >>>>> There is a gotcha here, I don't know what would happen if you hit the >>>>> cases of get_hard_regno where it would return -1, quoting the comment >>>>> above that function "If X is not a register or a subreg of a register, >>>>> return -1." though I think if we are hitting this then things must >>>>> have >>>>> gone wrong before? >>>>> >>>>> Bootstrapped on aarch64, arm and x86, no regressions. >>>>> >>>>> Is this OK for trunk? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> gcc/ChangeLog: >>>>> 2019-01-07 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> PR target/86487 >>>>> * lra-constraints.c(uses_hard_regs_p): Fix handling of >>>>> paradoxical SUBREGS. >>>> But doesn't wider_subreg_mode give us the wider of the two modes here >>>> and we use that wider mode when we call overlaps_hard_reg_set_p which >>>> should ultimately check all the registers in the paradoxical. >>>> >>>> I must be missing something here?!? >>>> >>>> jeff >>>> >>> >>> Hi Jeff, >>> >>> It does give us the wider of the two modes, but we also then grab the >>> "subreg" of the paradoxical subreg. If you look at the first example >>> case of the bugzilla ticket, for an older gcc (say gcc-8) and the >>> options provided (using big-endian), it will generate the following >>> subreg: >>> (subreg:DI (reg:SI 122) 0) >>> >>> This paradoxical subreg represents a register pair r0-r1, where because >>> of big-endian and subgreg index 0, r1 is the value we care about and r0 >>> the one we say "it can be whatever" by using this paradoxical subreg. >>> >>> When 'uses_hard_regs_p' sees this as a subreg, it sets 'mode' to the >>> wider, i.e. DImode, but it also sets 'x' to the subreg i.e. 'reg:SI >>> 122', for which get_hard_regno correctly returns 'r1'. But if you now >>> pass 'overlaps_hard_reg_set_p' DImode and 'r1', it will check whether >>> 'set' contains either 'r1-r2', and not 'r1'r0'. >>> >>> To reproduce this again I now applied this patch to GCC 8 and found an >>> issue with it. 'REG_P (x)' returns false if x is a 'SUBREG'. So I will >>> need to change the later check to also include 'SUBREG_P (x)', I guess I >>> was testing with a too new version of gcc that didn't lead to the bogus >>> register allocation... >>> >>> Which really encourages me to add some sort of testcase, but I'd very >>> much like to come up with a less flaky one, we basically need to force >>> the generation of a paradoxical subreg 'x', where 'get_hard_regno >>> (SUBREG_REG (x)) != get_hard_regno (x)'. This will cause >>> 'uses_hard_regs_p' to give you a wrong answer. >> BTW, you might look at 87305 which is another problem with big endian >> pseudos and paradoxical subregs that Vlad just fixed. >> >> jeff >> > > Hi Jeff, > > Thank you, I had a look but I don't think it is the same issue and even > though I can no longer reproduce this particular issue on trunk I do > believe the latent fault is still there and I would like to fix it. > > > As I mentioned in the earlier emails I forgot to make sure 'SUBREG_P > (x)' was also handled where we previously only accepted 'REG_P (x)' as > we would always strip away the parent subreg. I have also added the > testcase that triggered this issue on arm in previous GCC versions. This > does not trigger it on trunk any more due to other codegen changes. > > > Bootstrapped on aarch64, arm and x86, no regressions. > > Is this OK for trunk? > > > gcc/ChangeLog: > 2019-02-01 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> > > > PR target/86487 > * lra-constraints.c(uses_hard_regs_p): Fix handling of > paradoxical SUBREGS. > > gcc/testsuiteChangeLog: > 2019-02-01 Andre Vieira <andre.simoesdiasvieira@arm.com> > > > PR target/86487 > * gcc.target/arm/pr86487.c: New.
On 2019-02-13 5:54 a.m., Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: > PING. > > Since Jeff is away can another maintainer have a look at this please? > > I see the following patch diff --git a/gcc/lra-constraints.c b/gcc/lra-constraints.c index c061093ed699620afe2dfda60d58066d6967523a..736b084acc552b75ff4d369b6584bc9ab422e21b 100644 --- a/gcc/lra-constraints.c +++ b/gcc/lra-constraints.c @@ -1761,11 +1761,21 @@ uses_hard_regs_p (rtx x, HARD_REG_SET set) return false; code = GET_CODE (x); mode = GET_MODE (x); + if (code == SUBREG) { + /* For all SUBREGs we want to check whether the full multi-register + overlaps the set. For normal SUBREGs this means 'get_hard_regno' of + the inner register, for paradoxical SUBREGs this means the + 'get_hard_regno' of the full SUBREG and for complete SUBREGs either is + fine. Use the wider mode for all cases. */ + rtx subreg = SUBREG_REG (x); mode = wider_subreg_mode (x); - x = SUBREG_REG (x); - code = GET_CODE (x); + if (mode == GET_MODE (subreg)) + { + x = subreg; + code = GET_CODE (x); + } } if (REG_P (x)) In your case, x will be SUBREG and be processed recursively only as a register of subreg. I think you need to change the last line on if (REG_P (x) || code == SUBREG) then the subreg will processed by get_hard_regno as subreg.
Hi Vlad, On 13/02/2019 16:46, Vladimir Makarov wrote: > > On 2019-02-13 5:54 a.m., Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >> PING. >> >> Since Jeff is away can another maintainer have a look at this please? >> >> > I see the following patch Yeah I uploaded the wrong patch... sorry. See attached, including a testcase, currently only fails on GCC-8 and previous though. > > diff --git a/gcc/lra-constraints.c b/gcc/lra-constraints.c > index > c061093ed699620afe2dfda60d58066d6967523a..736b084acc552b75ff4d369b6584bc9ab422e21b > 100644 > --- a/gcc/lra-constraints.c > +++ b/gcc/lra-constraints.c > @@ -1761,11 +1761,21 @@ uses_hard_regs_p (rtx x, HARD_REG_SET set) > return false; > code = GET_CODE (x); > mode = GET_MODE (x); > + > if (code == SUBREG) > { > + /* For all SUBREGs we want to check whether the full multi-register > + overlaps the set. For normal SUBREGs this means 'get_hard_regno' of > + the inner register, for paradoxical SUBREGs this means the > + 'get_hard_regno' of the full SUBREG and for complete SUBREGs > either is > + fine. Use the wider mode for all cases. */ > + rtx subreg = SUBREG_REG (x); > mode = wider_subreg_mode (x); > - x = SUBREG_REG (x); > - code = GET_CODE (x); > + if (mode == GET_MODE (subreg)) > + { > + x = subreg; > + code = GET_CODE (x); > + } > } > > if (REG_P (x)) > > In your case, x will be SUBREG and be processed recursively only as a > register of subreg. > > I think you need to change the last line on > > if (REG_P (x) || code == SUBREG) > > then the subreg will processed by get_hard_regno as subreg. > diff --git a/gcc/lra-constraints.c b/gcc/lra-constraints.c index 0ef13439b5055dd2c5d5049d7f62f6b3b1ddfe2a..3af41b6eed2dc113c3158e1bde1c65a896d8feb5 100644 --- a/gcc/lra-constraints.c +++ b/gcc/lra-constraints.c @@ -1761,14 +1761,24 @@ uses_hard_regs_p (rtx x, HARD_REG_SET set) return false; code = GET_CODE (x); mode = GET_MODE (x); + if (code == SUBREG) { + /* For all SUBREGs we want to check whether the full multi-register + overlaps the set. For normal SUBREGs this means 'get_hard_regno' of + the inner register, for paradoxical SUBREGs this means the + 'get_hard_regno' of the full SUBREG and for complete SUBREGs either is + fine. Use the wider mode for all cases. */ + rtx subreg = SUBREG_REG (x); mode = wider_subreg_mode (x); - x = SUBREG_REG (x); - code = GET_CODE (x); + if (mode == GET_MODE (subreg)) + { + x = subreg; + code = GET_CODE (x); + } } - if (REG_P (x)) + if (REG_P (x) || SUBREG_P (x)) { x_hard_regno = get_hard_regno (x, true); return (x_hard_regno >= 0 diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/gcc.target/arm/pr86487.c b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.target/arm/pr86487.c new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..1c1db7852d91a82a1d2b6eaa4f3d4c6dbef107f5 --- /dev/null +++ b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.target/arm/pr86487.c @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +/* { dg-skip-if "" { *-*-* } { "-march=armv[0-6]*" "-mthumb" } { "" } } */ +/* { dg-require-effective-target arm_neon_hw } */ +/* { dg-options "-O1 -mbig-endian" } */ +/* { dg-add-options arm_neon } */ +int a, b, c, d; +long long fn1(long long p2) { return p2 == 0 ? -1 : -1 % p2; } +void fn2(long long p1, short p2, long p3) { + b = fn1((d || 6) & a); + c = b | p3; +}
On 2019-02-15 6:35 a.m., Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: > Hi Vlad, > > On 13/02/2019 16:46, Vladimir Makarov wrote: >> >> On 2019-02-13 5:54 a.m., Andre Vieira (lists) wrote: >>> PING. >>> >>> Since Jeff is away can another maintainer have a look at this please? >>> >>> >> I see the following patch > > Yeah I uploaded the wrong patch... sorry. See attached, including a > testcase, currently only fails on GCC-8 and previous though. >> It happens. The new version is ok to commit. Thank you for working on the patch.
diff --git a/gcc/lra-constraints.c b/gcc/lra-constraints.c index c061093ed699620afe2dfda60d58066d6967523a..736b084acc552b75ff4d369b6584bc9ab422e21b 100644 --- a/gcc/lra-constraints.c +++ b/gcc/lra-constraints.c @@ -1761,11 +1761,21 @@ uses_hard_regs_p (rtx x, HARD_REG_SET set) return false; code = GET_CODE (x); mode = GET_MODE (x); + if (code == SUBREG) { + /* For all SUBREGs we want to check whether the full multi-register + overlaps the set. For normal SUBREGs this means 'get_hard_regno' of + the inner register, for paradoxical SUBREGs this means the + 'get_hard_regno' of the full SUBREG and for complete SUBREGs either is + fine. Use the wider mode for all cases. */ + rtx subreg = SUBREG_REG (x); mode = wider_subreg_mode (x); - x = SUBREG_REG (x); - code = GET_CODE (x); + if (mode == GET_MODE (subreg)) + { + x = subreg; + code = GET_CODE (x); + } } if (REG_P (x))