> -----Original Message----- > From: Richard Sandiford <richard.sandif...@arm.com> > Sent: Friday, September 30, 2022 9:29 AM > To: Tamar Christina <tamar.christ...@arm.com> > Cc: Richard Biener <rguent...@suse.de>; Tamar Christina via Gcc-patches > <gcc-patches@gcc.gnu.org>; nd <n...@arm.com>; Jeff Law > <jeffreya...@gmail.com> > Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/2]middle-end: RFC: On expansion of conditional > branches, give hint if argument is a truth type to backend > > Tamar Christina <tamar.christ...@arm.com> writes: > >> -----Original Message----- > >> From: Gcc-patches <gcc-patches- > >> bounces+tamar.christina=arm....@gcc.gnu.org> On Behalf Of Richard > >> Biener via Gcc-patches > >> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 12:09 PM > >> To: Tamar Christina via Gcc-patches <gcc-patches@gcc.gnu.org> > >> Cc: Richard Sandiford <richard.sandif...@arm.com>; nd <n...@arm.com> > >> Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/2]middle-end: RFC: On expansion of conditional > >> branches, give hint if argument is a truth type to backend > >> > >> > >> > >> > Am 29.09.2022 um 12:23 schrieb Tamar Christina via Gcc-patches > >> > <gcc- > >> patc...@gcc.gnu.org>: > >> > > >> > > >> >> > >> >> -----Original Message----- > >> >> From: Richard Biener <rguent...@suse.de> > >> >> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2022 10:41 AM > >> >> To: Richard Sandiford <richard.sandif...@arm.com> > >> >> Cc: Jeff Law <jeffreya...@gmail.com>; Tamar Christina > >> >> <tamar.christ...@arm.com>; gcc-patches@gcc.gnu.org; nd > >> <n...@arm.com> > >> >> Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/2]middle-end: RFC: On expansion of > >> >> conditional branches, give hint if argument is a truth type to > >> >> backend > >> >> > >> >>> On Thu, 29 Sep 2022, Richard Sandiford wrote: > >> >>> > >> >>> Jeff Law <jeffreya...@gmail.com> writes: > >> >>>> On 9/28/22 09:04, Richard Sandiford wrote: > >> >>>>> Tamar Christina <tamar.christ...@arm.com> writes: > >> >>>>>>> Maybe the target could use (subreg:SI (reg:BI ...)) as argument. > >> Heh. > >> >>>>>> But then I'd still need to change the expansion code. I > >> >>>>>> suppose this could prevent the issue with changes to code on > other targets. > >> >>>>>> > >> >>>>>>>>> We have undocumented addcc, negcc, etc. patterns, should > we > >> >>>>>>>>> have aandcc > >> >>>>>> pattern for this indicating support for andcc + jump as > >> >>>>>> opposedto > >> >> cmpcc + jump? > >> >>>>>>>> This could work yeah. I didn't know these existed. > >> >>>>>>> Ah, so they are conditional add, not add setting CC, so andcc > >> >>>>>>> wouldn't be appropriate. > >> >>>>>>> So I'm not sure how we'd handle such situation - maybe > >> >>>>>>> looking at REG_DECL and recognizing a _Bool PARM_DECL is OK? > >> >>>>>> I have a slight suspicion that Richard Sandiford would likely > >> >>>>>> reject this though.. > >> >>>>> Good guess :-P We shouldn't rely on something like that for > >> >> correctness. > >> >>>>> > >> >>>>> Would it help if we promoted the test-and-branch instructions > >> >>>>> to optabs, alongside cbranch? The jump expanders could then > >> >>>>> target it > >> >> directly. > >> >>>>> > >> >>>>> IMO that'd be a reasonable thing to do if it does help. It's a > >> >>>>> relatively common operation, especially on CISCy targets. > >> >>>> > >> >>>> But don't we represent these single bit tests using zero_extract > >> >>>> as the condition of the branch? I guess if we can generate them > >> >>>> directly rather than waiting for combine to deduce that we're > >> >>>> dealing with a single bit test and constructing the zero_extract > >> >>>> form would be an improvement and might help aarch at the same > time. > >> >>> > >> >>> Do you mean that the promote_mode stuff should use ext(z)v rather > >> >>> than zero_extend to promote a bool, where available? If so, I > >> >>> agree that might help. But it sounds like it would have downsides > too. > >> >>> Currently a bool memory can be zero-extended on the fly using a > >> >>> load, but if we used the zero_extract form instead, we'd have to > >> >>> extract the bit after the load. And (as an alternative) choosing > >> >>> different behaviour based on whether expand sees a REG or a MEM > >> >>> sounds like it could still cause problems, since REGs could be > >> >>> replaced by MEMs (or vice versa) later in the RTL passes. > >> >>> > >> >>> ISTM that the original patch was inserting an extra operation in > >> >>> the branch expansion in order to target a specific instruction. > >> >>> Targeting the instruction in expand seems good, but IMO we should > >> >>> do it directly, based on knowledge of whether the instruction > >> >>> actually > >> exists. > >> >> > >> >> Yes, I think a compare-and-branch pattern is the best fit here. > >> >> Note on GIMPLE we'd rely on the fact this is a BOOLEAN_TYPE (so > >> >> even 8 bit precision bools only have 1 and 0 as meaningful values). > >> >> So the 'compare-' bit in compare-and-branch would be interpreting > >> >> a BOOLEAN_TYPE, not so much a general compare. > >> > > >> > Oh, I was thinking of adding a constant argument representing the > >> > precision that is relevant for the compare in order to make this a > >> > bit more > >> general/future proof. > >> > > >> > Are you thinking I should instead just make the optab implicitly > >> > only work for 1-bit precision comparisons? > >> > >> What’s the optab you propose (cite also the documentation part)? > > > > tbranchmode5 > > Conditional branch instruction combined with a bit test instruction. > Operand 0 is a comparison operator. > > Operand 1 and Operand 2 are the first and second operands of the > comparison, respectively. > > Operand 3 is the number of low-order bits that are relevant for the > comparison. > > Operand 4 is the code_label to jump to. > > For the TB instructions (and for other similar instructions that I've seen on > other architectures) it would be more useful to have a single-bit test, with > operand 4 specifying the bit position. Arguably it might then be better to > have separate eq and ne optabs, to avoid the awkward doubling of the > operands (operand 1 contains operands 2 and 3). > > I guess a more general way of achieving the same thing would be to make > operand 4 in the optab above a mask rather than a bit count. But that might > be overly general, if there are no known architectures that have such an > instruction.
One of the reasons I wanted a range rather than a single bit is that I can the use this to generate cbz/cbnz early on as well. This would mean we could use my earlier patch that tried to drop the QI/HI promotions without needing the any_extend additional pass if we wanted to. We'd also no longer need to rely on seeing a paradoxical subreg for a tst. Tamar. > > Thanks, > Richard > > > Specifically this representation would allow us to emit all our > > different conditional branching instructions without needing to rely > > on combine. We have some cases that happen during optimization that > > sometimes prevent the optimal sequence from being generated. This > would also solve that as we would expand to what we want to start with. > > > > Tamar. > > > >> > >> > > >> > Thanks, > >> > Tamar > >> > > >> >> > >> >> Richard.