Commit Graph

37 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Afonso Bordado
60e4a00413 riscv64: Initial SIMD Vector Implementation (#6240)
* riscv64: Remove unused code

* riscv64: Add vector types

* riscv64: Initial Vector ABI Load/Stores

* riscv64: Vector Loads/Stores

* riscv64: Fix `vsetvli` encoding error

* riscv64: Add SIMD `iadd` runtests

* riscv64: Rename `VecSew`

The SEW name is correct, but only for VType. We also use this type
in loads/stores as the Efective Element Width, so the name isn't
quite correct in that case.

* ci: Add V extension to RISC-V QEMU

* riscv64: Misc Cleanups

* riscv64: Check V extension in `load`/`store` for SIMD

* riscv64: Fix `sumop` doc comment

* cranelift: Fix comment typo

* riscv64: Add convert for VType and VecElementWidth

* riscv64: Remove VecElementWidth converter
2023-04-20 21:54:43 +00:00
Karl Meakin
b9a58148cf ISLE: split algebraic.isle into several files (#6140)
* ISLE: split algebraic.isle into several files

* delete `algebraic.clif`

* Add `README.md`

* Remove old `algebraic.clif` tests

---------

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jsharp@fastly.com>
2023-04-11 21:39:18 +00:00
Karl Meakin
c8c224ead6 ISLE: move icmp rewrites to separate file. (#6120)
* ISLE: move `icmp` rewrites to separate file.

Move `icmp`-related rewrite rules from `algebraic.isle` to `icmp.isle`.
Also move `icmp`-related tests from `algebraic.clif` to `icmp.clif`.

* Put parameterized and unparameterized `icmp` tests in separate files

* Undo refactoring of (ir)reflexivity rewrites

* Fix `icmp-parameterised.clif`

* Undo formatting/comment changes
2023-03-31 17:40:31 +00:00
Jamey Sharp
044b57f334 cranelift-isle: Rewrite error reporting (#5318)
There were several issues with ISLE's existing error reporting
implementation.

- When using Miette for more readable error reports, it would panic if
  errors were reported from multiple files in the same run.
- Miette is pretty heavy-weight for what we're doing, with a lot of
  dependencies.
- The `Error::Errors` enum variant led to normalization steps in many
  places, to avoid using that variant to represent a single error.

This commit:
- replaces Miette with codespan-reporting
- gets rid of a bunch of cargo-vet exemptions
- replaces the `Error::Errors` variant with a new `Errors` type
- removes source info from `Error` variants so they're easy to construct
- adds source info only when formatting `Errors`
- formats `Errors` with a custom `Debug` impl
- shares common code between ISLE's callers, islec and cranelift-codegen
- includes a source snippet even with fancy-errors disabled

I tried to make this a series of smaller commits but I couldn't find any
good split points; everything was too entangled with everything else.
2022-11-23 14:20:48 -08:00
Chris Fallin
2be12a5167 egraph-based midend: draw the rest of the owl (productionized). (#4953)
* egraph-based midend: draw the rest of the owl.

* Rename `egg` submodule of cranelift-codegen to `egraph`.

* Apply some feedback from @jsharp during code walkthrough.

* Remove recursion from find_best_node by doing a single pass.

Rather than recursively computing the lowest-cost node for a given
eclass and memoizing the answer at each eclass node, we can do a single
forward pass; because every eclass node refers only to earlier nodes,
this is sufficient. The behavior may slightly differ from the earlier
behavior because we cannot short-circuit costs to zero once a node is
elaborated; but in practice this should not matter.

* Make elaboration non-recursive.

Use an explicit stack instead (with `ElabStackEntry` entries,
alongside a result stack).

* Make elaboration traversal of the domtree non-recursive/stack-safe.

* Work analysis logic in Cranelift-side egraph glue into a general analysis framework in cranelift-egraph.

* Apply static recursion limit to rule application.

* Fix aarch64 wrt dynamic-vector support -- broken rebase.

* Topo-sort cranelift-egraph before cranelift-codegen in publish script, like the comment instructs me to!

* Fix multi-result call testcase.

* Include `cranelift-egraph` in `PUBLISHED_CRATES`.

* Fix atomic_rmw: not really a load.

* Remove now-unnecessary PartialOrd/Ord derivations.

* Address some code-review comments.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* No overlap in mid-end rules, because we are defining a multi-constructor.

* rustfmt

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Remove redundant `mut`.

* Add comment noting what rules can do.

* Review feedback.

* Clarify comment wording.

* Update `has_memory_fence_semantics`.

* Apply @jameysharp's improved loop-level computation.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fix suggestion commit.

* Fix off-by-one in new loop-nest analysis.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Use `Default`, not `std::default::Default`, as per @fitzgen

Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>

* Apply @fitzgen's comment elaboration to a doc-comment.

Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>

* Add stat for hitting the rewrite-depth limit.

* Some code motion in split prelude to make the diff a little clearer wrt `main`.

* Take @jameysharp's suggested `try_into()` usage for blockparam indices.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion to avoid double-match on load op.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fix suggestion (add import).

* Review feedback.

* Fix stack_load handling.

* Remove redundant can_store case.

* Take @jameysharp's suggested improvement to FuncEGraph::build() logic

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Tweaks to FuncEGraph::build() on top of suggestion.

* Take @jameysharp's suggested clarified condition

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Clean up after suggestion (unused variable).

* Fix loop analysis.

* loop level asserts

* Revert constant-space loop analysis -- edge cases were incorrect, so let's go with the simple thing for now.

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion re: result_tys

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fix up after suggestion

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion to use fold rather than reduce

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fixup after suggestion

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion to remove elaborate_eclass_use's return value.

* Clarifying comment in terminator insts.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>
Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>
2022-10-11 18:15:53 -07:00
yuyang-ok
cdecc858b4 add riscv64 backend for cranelift. (#4271)
Add a RISC-V 64 (`riscv64`, RV64GC) backend.

Co-authored-by: yuyang <756445638@qq.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Fallin <chris@cfallin.org>
Co-authored-by: Afonso Bordado <afonsobordado@az8.co>
2022-09-27 17:30:31 -07:00
Sam Parker
9c43749dfe [RFC] Dynamic Vector Support (#4200)
Introduce a new concept in the IR that allows a producer to create
dynamic vector types. An IR function can now contain global value(s)
that represent a dynamic scaling factor, for a given fixed-width
vector type. A dynamic type is then created by 'multiplying' the
corresponding global value with a fixed-width type. These new types
can be used just like the existing types and the type system has a
set of hard-coded dynamic types, such as I32X4XN, which the user
defined types map onto. The dynamic types are also used explicitly
to create dynamic stack slots, which have no set size like their
existing counterparts. New IR instructions are added to access these
new stack entities.

Currently, during codegen, the dynamic scaling factor has to be
lowered to a constant so the dynamic slots do eventually have a
compile-time known size, as do spill slots.

The current lowering for aarch64 just targets Neon, using a dynamic
scale of 1.

Copyright (c) 2022, Arm Limited.
2022-07-07 12:54:39 -07:00
bjorn3
c4eab2beb6 Avoid spurious build script runs (#4150)
* Don't attempt to track the generated clif.isle in cargo

This causes the build script to rerun every time for me.

* Put build script debug messages on stderr instead of stdout

This keeps stdout reserved for cargo build script directives
2022-05-12 11:49:20 -07:00
Chris Fallin
5d671952ee Cranelift: do not check in generated ISLE code; regenerate on every compile. (#4143)
This PR fixes #4066: it modifies the Cranelift `build.rs` workflow to
invoke the ISLE DSL compiler on every compilation, rather than only
when the user specifies a special "rebuild ISLE" feature.

The main benefit of this change is that it vastly simplifies the mental
model required of developers, and removes a bunch of failure modes
we have tried to work around in other ways. There is now just one
"source of truth", the ISLE source itself, in the repository, and so there
is no need to understand a special "rebuild" step and how to handle
merge errors. There is no special process needed to develop the compiler
when modifying the DSL. And there is no "noise" in the git history produced
by constantly-regenerated files.

The two main downsides we discussed in #4066 are:
- Compile time could increase, by adding more to the "meta" step before the main build;
- It becomes less obvious where the source definitions are (everything becomes
  more "magic"), which makes exploration and debugging harder.

This PR addresses each of these concerns:

1. To maintain reasonable compile time, it includes work to cut down the
   dependencies of the `cranelift-isle` crate to *nothing* (only the Rust stdlib),
   in the default build. It does this by putting the error-reporting bits
   (`miette` crate) under an optional feature, and the logging (`log` crate) under
   a feature-controlled macro, and manually writing an `Error` impl rather than
   using `thiserror`. This completely avoids proc macros and the `syn` build slowness.

   The user can still get nice errors out of `miette`: this is enabled by specifying
   a Cargo feature `--features isle-errors`.

2. To allow the user to optionally inspect the generated source, which nominally
   lives in a hard-to-find path inside `target/` now, this PR adds a feature `isle-in-source-tree`
   that, as implied by the name, moves the target for ISLE generated source into
   the source tree, at `cranelift/codegen/isle_generated_source/`. It seems reasonable
   to do this when an explicit feature (opt-in) is specified because this is how ISLE regeneration
   currently works as well. To prevent surprises, if the feature is *not* specified, the
   build fails if this directory exists.
2022-05-11 22:25:24 -07:00
Chris Fallin
2af8d1e93c Cranelift/ISLE: re-apply prio-trie fix, this time with fixed fix. (#4117)
* ISLE compiler: fix priority-trie interval bug. (#4093)

This PR fixes a bug in the ISLE compiler related to rule priorities.

An important note first: the bug did not affect the correctness of the
Cranelift backends, either in theory (because the rules should be
correct applied in any order, even contrary to the stated priorities)
or in practice (because the generated code actually does not change at
all with the DSL compiler fix, only with a separate minimized bug
example).

The issue was a simple swap of `min` for `max` (see first
commit). This is the minimal fix, I think, to get a correct
priority-trie with the minimized bug example in this commit.

However, while debugging this, I started to convince myself that the
complexity of merging multiple priority ranges using the sort of
hybrid interval tree / string-matching trie data structure was
unneeded. The original design was built with the assumption we might
have a bunch of different priority levels, and would need the
efficiency of merging where possible. But in practice we haven't used
priorities this way: the vast majority of lowering rules exist at the
default (priority 0), and just a few overrides are explicitly at prio
1, 2 or (rarely) 3.

So, it turns out to be a lot simpler to label trie edges with (prio,
symbol) rather than (prio-range, symbol), and delete the whole mess of
interval-splitting logic on insertion. It's easier (IMHO) to convince
oneself that the resulting insertion algorithm is correct.

I was worried that this might impact the size of the generated Rust
code or its runtime, but In fact, to my initial surprise (but it makes
sense given the above "rarely used" factor), the generated code with
this compiler fix is *exactly the same*. I rebuilt with `--features
rebuild-isle,all-arch` but... there were no diffs to commit! This is
to me the simplest evidence that we didn't really need that
complexity.

* Fix earlier commit from #4093: properly sort trie.

This commit fixes an in-hindsight-obvious bug in #4093: the trie's edges
must be sorted recursively, not just at the top level.

With this fix, the generated code differs only in one cosmetic way (a
let-binding moves) but otherwise is the same.

This includes @fitzgen's fix to the CI (from the revert in #4102) that
deletes manifests to actually check that the checked-in source is
consistent with the checked-in compiler. The force-rebuild step is now
in a shell script for convenience: anyone hacking on the ISLE compiler
itself can use this script to more easily rebuild everything.

* Add note to build.rs to remind to update force-rebuild-isle.sh
2022-05-09 16:36:48 -07:00
Nick Fitzgerald
795b0aaf9a cranelift: Add newtype wrappers for x64 register classes
This primary motivation of this large commit (apologies for its size!) is to
introduce `Gpr` and `Xmm` newtypes over `Reg`. This should help catch
difficult-to-diagnose register class mixup bugs in x64 lowerings.

But having a newtype for `Gpr` and `Xmm` themselves isn't enough to catch all of
our operand-with-wrong-register-class bugs, because about 50% of operands on x64
aren't just a register, but a register or memory address or even an
immediate! So we have `{Gpr,Xmm}Mem[Imm]` newtypes as well.

Unfortunately, `GprMem` et al can't be `enum`s and are therefore a little bit
noisier to work with from ISLE. They need to maintain the invariant that their
registers really are of the claimed register class, so they need to encapsulate
the inner data. If they exposed the underlying `enum` variants, then anyone
could just change register classes or construct a `GprMem` that holds an XMM
register, defeating the whole point of these newtypes. So when working with
these newtypes from ISLE, we rely on external constructors like `(gpr_to_gpr_mem
my_gpr)` instead of `(GprMem.Gpr my_gpr)`.

A bit of extra lines of code are included to add support for register mapping
for all of these newtypes as well. Ultimately this is all a bit wordier than I'd
hoped it would be when I first started authoring this commit, but I think it is
all worth it nonetheless!

In the process of adding these newtypes, I didn't want to have to update both
the ISLE `extern` type definition of `MInst` and the Rust definition, so I move
the definition fully into ISLE, similar as aarch64.

Finally, this process isn't complete. I've introduced the newtypes here, and
I've made most XMM-using instructions switch from `Reg` to `Xmm`, as well as
register class-converting instructions, but I haven't moved all of the GPR-using
instructions over to the newtypes yet. I figured this commit was big enough as
it was, and I can continue the adoption of these newtypes in follow up commits.

Part of #3685.
2022-02-03 14:08:08 -08:00
Ulrich Weigand
a94e72b5b7 s390x: Add ISLE support
This adds ISLE support for the s390x back-end and moves lowering
of most instructions to ISLE.  The only instructions still remaining
are calls, returns, traps, and branches, most of which will need
additional support in common code.

Generated code is not intended to be (significantly) different
than before; any additional optimizations now made easier to
implement due to the ISLE layer can be added in follow-on patches.

There were a few differences in some filetests, but those are all
just simple register allocation changes (and all to the better!).
2022-01-21 19:30:56 +01:00
Chris Fallin
5233175b06 Use SipHasher rather than SHA-512 for ISLE manifest.
Fixes #3609. It turns out that `sha2` is a nontrivial dependency for
Cranelift in many contexts, partly because it pulls in a number of other
crates as well.

One option is to remove the hash check under certain circumstances, as
implemented in #3616. However, this is undesirable for other reasons:
having different dependency options in Wasmtime in particular for
crates.io vs. local builds is not really possible, and so either we
still have the higher build cost in Wasmtime, or we turn off the checks
by default, which goes against the original intent of ensuring developer
safety (no mysterious stale-source bugs).

This PR uses `SipHash` instead, which is built into the standard
library. `SipHash` is deprecated, but it's fixed and deterministic
(across runs and across Rust versions), which is what we need, unlike
the suggested replacement `std::collections::hash_map::DefaultHasher`.
The result is only 64 bits, and is not cryptographically secure, but we
never needed that; we just need a simple check to indicate when we
forget a `rebuild-isle`.
2021-12-17 12:11:05 -08:00
Nick Fitzgerald
6af8d2a292 Rename the isle crate to cranelift-isle
The `isle` crate name is already taken on crates.io :(
2021-12-07 14:56:26 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1141169ff8 aarch64: Initial work to transition backend to ISLE (#3541)
* aarch64: Initial work to transition backend to ISLE

This commit is what is hoped to be the initial commit towards migrating
the aarch64 backend to ISLE. There's seemingly a lot of changes here but
it's intended to largely be code motion. The current thinking is to
closely follow the x64 backend for how all this is handled and
organized.

Major changes in this PR are:

* The `Inst` enum is now defined in ISLE. This avoids having to define
  it in two places (once in Rust and once in ISLE). I've preserved all
  the comments in the ISLE and otherwise this isn't actually a
  functional change from the Rust perspective, it's still the same enum
  according to Rust.

* Lots of little enums and things were moved to ISLE as well. As with
  `Inst` their definitions didn't change, only where they're defined.
  This will give future ISLE PRs access to all these operations.

* Initial code for lowering `iconst`, `null`, and `bconst` are
  implemented. Ironically none of this is actually used right now
  because constant lowering is handled in `put_input_in_regs` which
  specially handles constants. Nonetheless I wanted to get at least
  something simple working which shows off how to special case various
  things that are specific to AArch64. In a future PR I plan to hook up
  const-lowering in ISLE to this path so even though
  `iconst`-the-clif-instruction is never lowered this should use the
  const lowering defined in ISLE rather than elsewhere in the backend
  (eventually leading to the deletion of the non-ISLE lowering).

* The `IsleContext` skeleton is created and set up for future additions.

* Some code for ISLE that's shared across all backends now lives in
  `isle_prelude_methods!()` and is deduplicated between the AArch64
  backend and the x64 backend.

* Register mapping is tweaked to do the same thing for AArch64 that it
  does for x64. Namely mapping virtual registers is supported instead of
  just virtual to machine registers.

My main goal with this PR was to get AArch64 into a place where new
instructions can be added with relative ease. Additionally I'm hoping to
figure out as part of this change how much to share for ISLE between
AArch64 and x64 (and other backends).

* Don't use priorities with rules

* Update .gitattributes with concise syntax

* Deduplicate some type definitions

* Rebuild ISLE

* Move isa::isle to machinst::isle
2021-11-18 10:38:16 -06:00
Nick Fitzgerald
d2d0a0f36b Remove Peepmatic!!!
Peepmatic was an early attempt at a DSL for peephole optimizations, with the
idea that maybe sometime in the future we could user it for instruction
selection as well. It didn't really pan out, however:

* Peepmatic wasn't quite flexible enough, and adding new operators or snippets
  of code implemented externally in Rust was a bit of a pain.

* The performance was never competitive with the hand-written peephole
  optimizers. It was *very* size efficient, but that came at the cost of
  run-time efficiency. Everything was table-based and interpreted, rather than
  generating any Rust code.

Ultimately, because of these reasons, we never turned Peepmatic on by default.

These days, we just landed the ISLE domain-specific language, and it is better
suited than Peepmatic for all the things that Peepmatic was originally designed
to do. It is more flexible and easy to integrate with external Rust code. It is
has better time efficiency, meeting or even beating hand-written code. I think a
small part of the reason why ISLE excels in these things is because its design
was informed by Peepmatic's failures. I still plan on continuing Peepmatic's
mission to make Cranelift's peephole optimizer passes generated from DSL rewrite
rules, but using ISLE instead of Peepmatic.

Thank you Peepmatic, rest in peace!
2021-11-17 13:04:17 -08:00
Chris Fallin
1697e32afa Let's try canonicalizing file paths in the manifest too... 2021-11-16 15:22:43 -08:00
Chris Fallin
bc56ab743c ISLE build-script check logic: Canonicalize All The Things!
writeln!() to a string on Windows to generate the expected manifest
needs newline-character canonicalization, too.
2021-11-16 15:11:56 -08:00
Chris Fallin
6a4716f0f4 Two CI fixes: Windows line-endings in manifest file, and "meta deterministic check".
- The Windows line-ending canonicalization was incomplete: we need to
  canonicalize the manifest text itself too!

- The "meta deterministic check" runs the cranelift-codegen build script
  N times outside of the source tree, examining what it produces to
  ensure the output is always the same (is detministic). This works fine
  when everything comes from the internal DSL, but when reading ISLE,
  this breaks because we no longer have the ISLE source paths.

  The initial ISLE integration did not hit this because without the
  `rebuild-isle` feature, it simply did nothing in the build script;
  now, with the manifest check, we hit the issue.

  The fix for now is just to turn off all ISLE-specific behavior in the
  build script by setting a special-purpose Cargo feature in the
  specific CI job. Eventually IMHO we should remove or find a better way
  to do this check.
2021-11-16 15:02:41 -08:00
Chris Fallin
a2b9664bed ISLE: guard against stale generated source in default build config.
Currently, the `build.rs` script that generates Rust source from the
ISLE DSL will only do this generation if the `rebuild-isle` Cargo
feature is specified. By default, it is not. This is based on the
principle that we (the build script) do not modify the source tree as
managed by git; git-managed files are strictly a human-managed and
human-edited resource. By adding the opt-in Cargo feature, a developer
is requesting the build script to perform an explicit action. (In my
understanding at least, this principle comes from the general philosophy
of hermetic builds: the output should be a pure function of the input,
and part of this is that the input is read-only. If we modify the source
tree, then all bets are off.)

Unfortunately, requiring the opt-in feature also creates a footgun that
is easy to hit: if a developer modifies the ISLE DSL source, but forgets
to specify the Cargo feature, then the compiler will silently be built
successfully with stale source, and will silently exclude any changes
that were made.

The generated source is checked into git for a good reason: we want DSL
compiler to not affect build times for the overwhelmingly common case
that Cranelift is used as a dependency but the backends are not being
actively developed. (This overhead comes mainly from building `islec`
itself.)

So, what to do? This PR implements a middle ground first described in
[this conversation](https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/pull/3506#discussion_r743113351), in which we:

- Generate a hash (SHA-512) of the ISLE DSL source and produce a
  "manifest" of ISLE inputs alongside the generated source; and
- Always read the ISLE DSL source, and see if the manifest is still
  valid, on builds that do not have the opt-in "rebuild" feature.

This allows us to know whether the ISLE compiler output would have been
the same (modulo changes to the DSL compiler itself, which are
out-of-scope here), without actually building the ISLE compiler and
running it.

If the compiler-backend developer modifies an ISLE source file and then
tries to build `cranelift-codegen` without adding the `rebuild-isle`
Cargo feature, they get the following output:

```text
  Error: the ISLE source files that resulted in the generated Rust source

        * src/isa/x64/lower/isle/generated_code.rs

  have changed but the generated source was not rebuilt! These ISLE source
  files are:

         * src/clif.isle
         * src/prelude.isle
         * src/isa/x64/inst.isle
         * src/isa/x64/lower.isle

  Please add `--features rebuild-isle` to your `cargo build` command
  if you wish to rebuild the generated source, then include these changes
  in any git commits you make that include the changes to the ISLE.

  For example:

    $ cargo build -p cranelift-codegen --features rebuild-isle

  (This build script cannot do this for you by default because we cannot
  modify checked-into-git source without your explicit opt-in.)
```

which will tell them exactly what they need to do to fix the problem!

Note that I am leaving the "Rebuild ISLE" CI job alone for now, because
otherwise, we are trusting whomever submits a PR to generate the correct
generated source. In other words, the manifest is a communication from
the checked-in tree to the developer, but we still need to verify that
the checked-in generated Rust source and the manifest are correct with
respect to the checked-in ISLE source.
2021-11-16 13:50:41 -08:00
Nick Fitzgerald
0b1bf104c6 Update miette graphical-forcing comment to reference upstream issue 2021-11-15 14:53:51 -08:00
Nick Fitzgerald
48ef2c0b84 Clarify comment about force_graphical in miette 2021-11-15 11:26:41 -08:00
Nick Fitzgerald
7a568b19b4 ISLE: run rustfmt on generated code 2021-11-05 15:59:49 -07:00
Nick Fitzgerald
d377b665c6 Initial ISLE integration with the x64 backend
On the build side, this commit introduces two things:

1. The automatic generation of various ISLE definitions for working with
CLIF. Specifically, it generates extern type definitions for clif opcodes and
the clif instruction data `enum`, as well as extractors for matching each clif
instructions. This happens inside the `cranelift-codegen-meta` crate.

2. The compilation of ISLE DSL sources to Rust code, that can be included in the
main `cranelift-codegen` compilation.

Next, this commit introduces the integration glue code required to get
ISLE-generated Rust code hooked up in clif-to-x64 lowering. When lowering a clif
instruction, we first try to use the ISLE code path. If it succeeds, then we are
done lowering this instruction. If it fails, then we proceed along the existing
hand-written code path for lowering.

Finally, this commit ports many lowering rules over from hand-written,
open-coded Rust to ISLE.

In the process of supporting ISLE, this commit also makes the x64 `Inst` capable
of expressing SSA by supporting 3-operand forms for all of the existing
instructions that only have a 2-operand form encoding:

    dst = src1 op src2

Rather than only the typical x86-64 2-operand form:

    dst = dst op src

This allows `MachInst` to be in SSA form, since `dst` and `src1` are
disentangled.

("3-operand" and "2-operand" are a little bit of a misnomer since not all
operations are binary operations, but we do the same thing for, e.g., unary
operations by disentangling the sole operand from the result.)

There are two motivations for this change:

1. To allow ISLE lowering code to have value-equivalence semantics. We want ISLE
   lowering to translate a CLIF expression that evaluates to some value into a
   `MachInst` expression that evaluates to the same value. We want both the
   lowering itself and the resulting `MachInst` to be pure and referentially
   transparent. This is both a nice paradigm for compiler writers that are
   authoring and maintaining lowering rules and is a prerequisite to any sort of
   formal verification of our lowering rules in the future.

2. Better align `MachInst` with `regalloc2`'s API, which requires that the input
   be in SSA form.
2021-10-12 17:11:58 -07:00
bjorn3
b2d9faa472 Slightly simplify build script 2021-10-12 15:12:26 +02:00
bjorn3
d590e6bc1f Remove x86 old-backend special case from cranelift-codegen-meta 2021-09-30 18:29:49 +02:00
bjorn3
0693b7dade Include git rev in the version number 2021-02-18 13:01:01 +01:00
Nick Fitzgerald
ae95ad8733 cranelift: Don't build peepmatic-based optimizations in build.rs
Instead, when the `rebuild-peephole-optimizers` feature is enabled, rebuild them
the first time they are used. This allows peepmatic to run when Cranelift's
`Opcode` is defined and available, which paves the way forward for:

* merging `peepmatic_runtime::operator::Operator` and Cranelift's `Opcode` (we
  are wasting a bunch of cycles converting between the two of them), and

* supporting vcode optimizations in `peepmatic`.
2020-07-17 14:35:16 -07:00
Benjamin Bouvier
abf157bd69 machinst x64: Only use the feature flag to enable the x64 new backend;
Before this patch, running the x64 new backend would require both
compiling with --features experimental_x64 and running with
`use_new_backend`.

This patches changes this behavior so that the runtime flag is not
needed anymore: using the feature flag will enforce usage of the new
backend everywhere, making using and testing it much simpler:

    cargo run --features experimental_x64 ;; other CLI options/flags

This also gives a hint at what the meta language generation would look
like after switching to the new backend.

Compiling only with the x64 codegen flag gives a nice compile time speedup.
2020-07-15 13:11:28 +02:00
Nick Fitzgerald
090d1c2d32 cranelift: Port most of simple_preopt.rs over to the peepmatic DSL
This ports all of the identity, no-op, simplification, and canonicalization
related optimizations over from being hand-coded to the `peepmatic` DSL. This
does not handle the branch-to-branch optimizations or most of the
divide-by-constant optimizations.
2020-05-14 07:52:23 -07:00
llogiq
0d8f8bc71f Fix some clippy warnings (#1277) 2019-12-07 09:47:43 -08:00
lzutao
7e5c33a29e Use array::iter 2019-10-30 09:47:25 +01:00
Benjamin Bouvier
563525b090 [meta] Remove mentions to Python in comments of the non-meta crate; 2019-07-05 17:50:17 +02:00
Benjamin Bouvier
f29a26de14 [meta] Remove the Python DSL
KILL THE SNAKE WITH FIRE.
2019-07-05 17:50:17 +02:00
Benjamin Bouvier
a45b814de8 Fixes #13: Enable conditional compilation of ISAs through features; 2019-02-12 08:19:57 -08:00
Benjamin Bouvier
25fdda6134 [meta] Move source generation responsibility into the meta crate itself; 2019-02-12 08:19:57 -08:00
lazypassion
747ad3c4c5 moved crates in lib/ to src/, renamed crates, modified some files' text (#660)
moved crates in lib/ to src/, renamed crates, modified some files' text (#660)
2019-01-28 15:56:54 -08:00