On Tue, 8 Nov 2016, Prathamesh Kulkarni wrote: > On 8 November 2016 at 13:23, Richard Biener <rguent...@suse.de> wrote: > > On Mon, 7 Nov 2016, Prathamesh Kulkarni wrote: > > > >> On 7 November 2016 at 23:06, Prathamesh Kulkarni > >> <prathamesh.kulka...@linaro.org> wrote: > >> > On 7 November 2016 at 15:43, Richard Biener <rguent...@suse.de> wrote: > >> >> On Fri, 4 Nov 2016, Prathamesh Kulkarni wrote: > >> >> > >> >>> On 4 November 2016 at 13:41, Richard Biener <rguent...@suse.de> wrote: > >> >>> > On Thu, 3 Nov 2016, Marc Glisse wrote: > >> >>> > > >> >>> >> On Thu, 3 Nov 2016, Richard Biener wrote: > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> > > > > The transform would also work for vectors > >> >>> >> > > > > (element_precision for > >> >>> >> > > > > the test but also a value-matching zero which should ensure > >> >>> >> > > > > the > >> >>> >> > > > > same number of elements). > >> >>> >> > > > Um sorry, I didn't get how to check vectors to be of equal > >> >>> >> > > > length by a > >> >>> >> > > > matching zero. > >> >>> >> > > > Could you please elaborate on that ? > >> >>> >> > > > >> >>> >> > > He may have meant something like: > >> >>> >> > > > >> >>> >> > > (op (cmp @0 integer_zerop@2) (cmp @1 @2)) > >> >>> >> > > >> >>> >> > I meant with one being @@2 to allow signed vs. Unsigned @0/@1 > >> >>> >> > which was the > >> >>> >> > point of the pattern. > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> Oups, that's what I had written first, and then I somehow managed > >> >>> >> to confuse > >> >>> >> myself enough to remove it so as to remove the call to types_match > >> >>> >> :-( > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> > > So the last operand is checked with operand_equal_p instead of > >> >>> >> > > integer_zerop. But the fact that we could compute bit_ior on the > >> >>> >> > > comparison results should already imply that the number of > >> >>> >> > > elements is the > >> >>> >> > > same. > >> >>> >> > > >> >>> >> > Though for equality compares we also allow scalar results IIRC. > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> Oh, right, I keep forgetting that :-( And I have no idea how to > >> >>> >> generate one > >> >>> >> for a testcase, at least until the GIMPLE FE lands... > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> > > On platforms that have IOR on floats (at least x86 with SSE, > >> >>> >> > > maybe some > >> >>> >> > > vector mode on s390?), it would be cool to do the same for > >> >>> >> > > floats (most > >> >>> >> > > likely at the RTL level). > >> >>> >> > > >> >>> >> > On GIMPLE view-converts could come to the rescue here as well. > >> >>> >> > Or we cab > >> >>> >> > just allow bit-and/or on floats as much as we allow them on > >> >>> >> > pointers. > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> Would that generate sensible code on targets that do not have logic > >> >>> >> insns for > >> >>> >> floats? Actually, even on x86_64 that generates inefficient code, > >> >>> >> so there > >> >>> >> would be some work (for instance grep finds no gen_iordf3, only > >> >>> >> gen_iorv2df3). > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> I am also a bit wary of doing those obfuscating optimizations too > >> >>> >> early... > >> >>> >> a==0 is something that other optimizations might use. long > >> >>> >> c=(long&)a|(long&)b; (double&)c==0; less so... > >> >>> >> > >> >>> >> (and I am assuming that signaling NaNs don't make the whole > >> >>> >> transformation > >> >>> >> impossible, which might be wrong) > >> >>> > > >> >>> > Yeah. I also think it's not so much important - I just wanted to > >> >>> > mention > >> >>> > vectors... > >> >>> > > >> >>> > Btw, I still think we need a more sensible infrastructure for passes > >> >>> > to gather, analyze and modify complex conditions. (I'm always > >> >>> > pointing > >> >>> > to tree-affine.c as an, albeit not very good, example for handling > >> >>> > a similar problem) > >> >>> Thanks for mentioning the value-matching capture @@, I wasn't aware of > >> >>> this match.pd feature. > >> >>> The current patch keeps it restricted to only bitwise operators on > >> >>> integers. > >> >>> Bootstrap+test running on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu. > >> >>> OK to commit if passes ? > >> >> > >> >> +/* PR35691: Transform > >> >> + (x == 0 & y == 0) -> (x | typeof(x)(y)) == 0. > >> >> + (x != 0 | y != 0) -> (x | typeof(x)(y)) != 0. */ > >> >> + > >> >> > >> >> Please omit the vertical space > >> >> > >> >> +(for bitop (bit_and bit_ior) > >> >> + cmp (eq ne) > >> >> + (simplify > >> >> + (bitop (cmp @0 integer_zerop) (cmp @1 integer_zerop)) > >> >> > >> >> if you capture the first integer_zerop as @2 then you can re-use it... > >> >> > >> >> + (if (INTEGRAL_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (@0)) > >> >> + && INTEGRAL_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (@1)) > >> >> + && TYPE_PRECISION (TREE_TYPE (@0)) == TYPE_PRECISION (TREE_TYPE > >> >> (@1))) > >> >> + (cmp (bit_ior @0 (convert @1)) { build_zero_cst (TREE_TYPE (@0)); > >> >> > >> >> ... here inplace of the { build_zero_cst ... }. > >> >> > >> >> Ok with that changes. > >> > Thanks, committed the attached version as r241915. > >> ugh, the svn commit message has: > >> > >> testsuite/ > >> * gcc.dg/pr35691-1.c: New test-case. > >> * gcc.dg/pr35691-4.c: Likewise. > >> > >> pr35691-4.c was a typo, should be pr35691-2.c :/ > >> However testsuite/ChangeLog correctly has entry for pr35691-2.c > >> Is it possible to edit the commit message for r241915 ? > >> Sorry about this. > > > > No, just leave it as-is. > Hi, > Chritstophe reported to me that the commit caused test-cases > pr35691-1.c and pr35691-2.c (which were added by the commit) > to FAIL for cortex-a5: > http://people.linaro.org/~christophe.lyon/cross-validation/gcc/trunk/241915/arm-none-linux-gnueabihf/diff-gcc-rh60-arm-none-linux-gnueabihf-arm-cortex-a5-vfpv3-d16-fp16.txt > > It seems truth_andif_expr is not simplified to bit_and_expr on > cortex-a5 as for x86_64 (and other arm variants). > The differences in dumps start from 004t.gimple for pr35691-1.c: > > x86_64 gimple dump: > foo (int z0, unsigned int z1) > { > int D.1800; > int t0; > int t1; > int t2; > > _1 = z0 == 0; > t0 = (int) _1; > _2 = z1 == 0; > t1 = (int) _2; > _3 = t0 != 0; > _4 = t1 != 0; > _5 = _3 & _4; > t2 = (int) _5; > D.1800 = t2; > return D.1800; > } > > cortex-a5 gimple dump: > foo (int z0, unsigned int z1) > { > int iftmp.0; > int D.4176; > int t0; > int t1; > int t2; > > _1 = z0 == 0; > t0 = (int) _1; > _2 = z1 == 0; > t1 = (int) _2; > if (t0 != 0) goto <D.4174>; else goto <D.4172>; > <D.4174>: > if (t1 != 0) goto <D.4175>; else goto <D.4172>; > <D.4175>: > iftmp.0 = 1; > goto <D.4173>; > <D.4172>: > iftmp.0 = 0; > <D.4173>: > t2 = iftmp.0; > D.4176 = t2; > return D.4176; > } > > Since the pattern expects truth_andif_expr to be converted to bit_and_expr, > it fails to match for cortex-a5. > This seems to happen only for cortex-a5 (the other variants a9, a15, > a57 are OK). > > Is my assumption that truth_andif_expr would be always converted to > bit_and_expr > for above case incorrect ?
Yes, it depends on LOGICAL_OP_SHORT_CIRCUIT. Richard. > Thanks, > Prathamesh > > > > Richard. > > > >> Regards, > >> Prathamesh > >> > > >> >> > >> >> Richard. > >> > >> > > > > -- > > Richard Biener <rguent...@suse.de> > > SUSE LINUX GmbH, GF: Felix Imendoerffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB > > 21284 (AG Nuernberg) > > -- Richard Biener <rguent...@suse.de> SUSE LINUX GmbH, GF: Felix Imendoerffer, Jane Smithard, Graham Norton, HRB 21284 (AG Nuernberg)