Fix shadowing identified in #5322 for imul and swiden_high/swiden_low/uwiden_high/uwiden_low combinations in the x64 backend, and remove some redundant rules from the aarch64 dynamic neon ruleset. Additionally, add tests to the x64 backend showing that the imul specializations are firing.
* Cranelift: Define `heap_load` and `heap_store` instructions
* Cranelift: Implement interpreter support for `heap_load` and `heap_store`
* Cranelift: Add a suite runtests for `heap_{load,store}`
There are so many knobs we can twist for heaps and I wanted to exhaustively test
all of them, so I wrote a script to generate the tests. I've checked in the
script in case we want to make any changes in the future, but I don't think it
is worth adding this to CI to check that scripts are up to date or anything like
that.
* Review feedback
Remove some unnecessary moves in the x64 gen_memcpy implementation -- the call instruction that's generated will already constrain the args to those registers.
* cranelift: Cleanup `fdemote`/`fpromote` tests
* cranelift: Fix `fdemote`/`fpromote` instruction docs
The verifier fails if the input and output types are the same
for these instructions
* cranelift: Fix `fdemote`/`fpromote` in the interpreter
* fuzzgen: Add `fdemote`/`fpromote`
We can encode more constants into 12-bit immediates if we do the following
rewrite for comparisons with odd constants:
A >= B + 1
==> A - 1 >= B
==> A > B
* Cranelift: Make `heap_addr` return calculated `base + index + offset`
Rather than return just the `base + index`.
(Note: I've chosen to use the nomenclature "index" for the dynamic operand and
"offset" for the static immediate.)
This move the addition of the `offset` into `heap_addr`, instead of leaving it
for the subsequent memory operation, so that we can Spectre-guard the full
address, and not allow speculative execution to read the first 4GiB of memory.
Before this commit, we were effectively doing
load(spectre_guard(base + index) + offset)
Now we are effectively doing
load(spectre_guard(base + index + offset))
Finally, this also corrects `heap_addr`'s documented semantics to say that it
returns an address that will trap on access if `index + offset + access_size` is
out of bounds for the given heap, rather than saying that the `heap_addr` itself
will trap. This matches the implemented behavior for static memories, and after
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/pull/5190 lands (which is blocked
on this commit) will also match the implemented behavior for dynamic memories.
* Update heap_addr docs
* Factor out `offset + size` to a helper
Modify return pseudo-instructions to have pairs of registers: virtual and real. This allows us to constrain the virtual registers to the real ones specified by the abi, instead of directly emitting moves to those real registers.
Add a MemFlags operand to the bitcast instruction, where only the
`big` and `little` flags are accepted. These define the lane order
to be used when casting between types of different lane counts.
Update all users to pass an appropriate MemFlags argument.
Implement lane swaps where necessary in the s390x back-end.
This is the final part necessary to fix
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/4566.
The sample program in cranelift/filetests/src/function_runner.rs
would abort with an mprotect failure under certain circumstances,
see https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/pull/4453#issuecomment-1303803222
Root cause was that enabling PROT_EXEC on the main process heap
may be prohibited, depending on Linux distro and version.
This only shows up in the doc test sample program because the main
clif-util is multi-threaded and therefore allocations will happen
on glibc's per-thread heap, which is allocated via mmap, and not
the main process heap.
Work around the problem by enabling the "selinux-fix" feature of
the cranelift-jit crate dependency in the filetests. Note that
this didn't compile out of the box, so a separate fix is also
required and provided as part of this PR.
Going forward, it would be preferable to always use mmap to allocate
the backing memory for JITted code.
* cranelift: improve syscall error/oom handling in JIT module
The JIT module has several places where it `expect`s or `panic`s
on syscall or allocator errors. For example, `mmap` and `mprotect`
can fail if Linux `vm.max_map_count` is not high enough, and some
users may wish to handle this error rather than immediately
crashing.
This commit plumbs these errors upward as new `ModuleError`
types, so that callers of jit module functions like
`finalize_definitions` and `define_function` can handle them
(or just `unwrap()`, as desired).
* cranelift: Remove ModuleError::Syscall variant
Syscall errors can just be folded into the generic Backend error,
which is an anyhow::Error
* cranelift-jit: return io::ErrorKind::OutOfMemory for alloc failure
Just using `io::Error::last_os_error()` is not correct as global
allocator impls are not required to set errno
The simplifier was performing an optimization to replace bitselect
with vselect if the all bytes of the condition mask could be shown
to be all ones or all zeros.
This optimization only ever made any difference in codegen on the
x64 target. Therefore, move this optimization to the x64 back-end
and perform it in ISLE instead. Resulting codegen should be
unchanged, with slightly improved compile time.
This also eliminates a few endian-dependent bitcast operations.
* fuzzgen: Request only one variable for bswap
This was included by accident. Bswap only has one input, instead of two.
* cranelift: Add `bswap.i128` support
Adds support only for x86, AArch64, S390X.
RISCV does not yet have bswap.
This branch removes the trapif and trapff instructions, in favor of using an explicit comparison and trapnz. This moves us closer to removing iflags and fflags, but introduces the need to implement instructions like iadd_cout in the x64 and aarch64 backends.
- Allow bitcast for vectors with differing lane widths
- Remove raw_bitcast IR instruction
- Change all users of raw_bitcast to bitcast
- Implement support for no-op bitcast cases across backends
This implements the second step of the plan outlined here:
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/4566#issuecomment-1234819394
Adds Bswap to the Cranelift IR. Implements the Bswap instruction
in the x64 and aarch64 codegen backends. Cranelift users can now:
```
builder.ins().bswap(value)
```
to get a native byteswap instruction.
* x64: implements the 32- and 64-bit bswap instruction, following
the pattern set by similar unary instrutions (Neg and Not) - it
only operates on a dst register, but is parameterized with both
a src and dst which are expected to be the same register.
As x64 bswap instruction is only for 32- or 64-bit registers,
the 16-bit swap is implemented as a rotate left by 8.
Updated x64 RexFlags type to support emitting for single-operand
instructions like bswap
* aarch64: Bswap gets emitted as aarch64 rev16, rev32,
or rev64 instruction as appropriate.
* s390x: Bswap was already supported in backend, just had to add
a bit of plumbing
* For completeness, added bswap to the interpreter as well.
* added filetests and runtests for each ISA
* added bswap to fuzzgen, thanks to afonso360 for the code there
* 128-bit swaps are not yet implemented, that can be done later
* aarch64: Fix incorrect masking for small types on bmask
`bmask` was accidentally relying on the uppermost bits of the register
for small types.
This was found by fuzzgen, when it generated a shift left followed by
a bmask, the shift left shifted the bits out of the range of the input
type (i8), however these are not automatically cleared since they
remained inside the 32 bits of the register.
That caused issues when the bmask tried to compare the whole register
instead of just the bottom bits. The solution here is to mask the upper
bits for small types.
* aarch64: Emit 32bit cmp on bmask
This fixes an issue where bmask was accidentally comparing the
upper bits of the register by always using a 64bit cmp.
* riscv: Mask high bits in bmask
* riscv: Add compile tests for br{z,nz}
* riscv: Use shifts to mask 32bit values
This produces less code than the AND since that version needs to
load an immediate constant from memory.
* cranelift: Update test input to hexadecimal values
This makes it a bit more clear what is being tested.
* riscv: Use addiw for masking 32 bit values
Co-authored-by: Trevor Elliott <telliott@fastly.com>
* aarch64: Update bmask rule priority
Co-authored-by: Trevor Elliott <telliott@fastly.com>
Add a new instruction uadd_overflow_trap, which is a fused version of iadd_ifcout and trapif. Adding this instruction removes a dependency on the iflags type, and would allow us to move closer to removing it entirely.
The instruction is defined for the i32 and i64 types only, and is currently only used in the legalization of heap_addr.
In particular, this was found to happen in #5099 because a `Result`
projection node was not deduplicating across two separate `isplit`s that
created it. (This is a separate issue we should also fix; `needs_dedup`
is I think overly conservative because `Result` can project out a single
value from a pure or impure node, but the projection itself should be
treated like any other pure operator.)
In any case, if we have a value `v0` and two separate `Result { value:
v0, result: N, ty }` nodes, each of these will fill in the type `ty` for
the `N`th output of `v0`, and the second will idempotently overwrite the
first; we should loosen the assert so that it allows this case.
Fixes#5099. Fixes#5100.
As discussed in the 2022/10/19 meeting, this PR removes many of the branch and select instructions that used iflags, in favor if using brz/brnz and select in their place. Additionally, it reworks selectif_spectre_guard to take an i8 input instead of an iflags input.
For reference, the removed instructions are: br_icmp, brif, brff, trueif, trueff, and selectif.
* cranelift: Remove iconst.i128
* bugpoint: Report Changed when only one instruction is mutated
* cranelift: Fix egraph bxor rule
* cranelift: Remove some simple_preopt opts for i128
Eliminate a few remaining instances of non-SSA code.
Remove infrastructure previously used for non-SSA code emission.
Related cleanup around flags handling.
This fixes#5086 by addressing two separate issues:
- The `ValueDataPacked::set_type()` helper had an embarrassing bitfield-manipulation bug that would mangle the rest of a `ValueDef` when setting its type. This is not normally used, only when the egraph elaboration fills in types after-the-fact on a multi-value node.
- The lowering rules for `isplit` on aarch64 and s390x were dispatching on the first output type, rather than the input type. When only the second output is used (as in the example in #5086), the first output type actually remains `INVALID` (and this is fine because it's never used).
Remove uses of reg_mod from the s390x backend. This required moving away from using r0/r1 as the result registers from a few different pseudo instructions, standardizing instead on r2/r3. That change was necessary as regalloc2 will not correctly allocate registers that aren't listed in the allocatable set, which r0/r1 are not.
Co-authored-by: Ulrich Weigand <ulrich.weigand@de.ibm.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Fallin <chris@cfallin.org>
Remove the boolean types from cranelift, and the associated instructions breduce, bextend, bconst, and bint. Standardize on using 1/0 for the return value from instructions that produce scalar boolean results, and -1/0 for boolean vector elements.
Fixes#3205
Co-authored-by: Afonso Bordado <afonso360@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ulrich Weigand <ulrich.weigand@de.ibm.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Fallin <chris@cfallin.org>
This is a simple error in the const-prop rules: uextend was not
masking iconst's u64 immediate when extending from i32 to
i64. Arguably an iconst.i32 should not have nonzero bits in the upper
32 of its immediate, but that's a separate design question. For now,
if our invariant is that the upper bits are ignored, then it is
required to mask the bits when const-evaling a `uextend`.
Fixes#5047.
* 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>
* Fix StructReturn handling: properly mark the clobber, and offset actual rets.
The legalization of `StructReturn` was causing issues in the new
call-handling code: the `StructReturn` ret was included in the `SigData` as
if it were an actual CLIF-level return value, but it is not.
Prior to using regalloc constraints for return values, we
unconditionally included rax (or the architecture's usual return
register) as a def, so it would be properly handled as "clobbered" by
the regalloc. With the new scheme, we include defs on the call only for
CLIF-level outputs. Callees with `StructReturn` args were thus not known
to clobber the return-value register, and values might be corrupted.
This PR updates the code to include a `StructReturn` ret as a clobber
rather than a returned value in the relevant spots. I observed it
causing saves/restores of rax in some CLIF that @bjorn3 provided me, but
I was having difficulty minimizing this into a test-case that I would be
comfortable including as a precise-output case (including the whole
thing verbatim would lock down a bunch of other irrelevant details and
cause test-update noise later). If we can find a more minimized example
I'm happy to include it as a filetest.
Fixes#5018.
* Replace resize+copy_from_slice with extend_from_slice
Vec::resize initializes the new space, which is wasted effort if we're
just going to call `copy_from_slice` on it immediately afterward. Using
`extend_from_slice` is simpler, and very slightly faster.
If the new size were bigger than the buffer we're copying from, then it
would make sense to initialize the excess. But it isn't: it's always
exactly the same size.
* Move helpers from Context to CompiledCode
These methods only use information from Context::compiled_code, so they
should live on CompiledCode instead.
* Remove an unnecessary #[cfg_attr]
There are other uses of `#[allow(clippy::too_many_arguments)]` in this
file, so apparently it doesn't need to be guarded by the "cargo-clippy"
feature.
* Fix a few comments
Two of these were wrong/misleading:
- `FunctionBuilder::new` does not clear the provided func_ctx. It does
debug-assert that the context is already clear, but I don't think
that's worth a comment.
- `switch_to_block` does not "create values for the arguments." That's
done by the combination of `append_block_params_for_function_params`
and `declare_wasm_parameters`.
* wasmtime-cranelift: Misc cleanups
The main change is to use the `CompiledCode` reference we already had
instead of getting it out of `Context` repeatedly. This removes a bunch
of `unwrap()` calls.
* wasmtime-cranelift: Factor out uncached compile
Resolve overlap in the RiscV64 backend by adding priorities to rules. Additionally, one test updated as a result of this work, as a peephole optimization for addition with immediates fires now.
* Leverage Cargo's workspace inheritance feature
This commit is an attempt to reduce the complexity of the Cargo
manifests in this repository with Cargo's workspace-inheritance feature
becoming stable in Rust 1.64.0. This feature allows specifying fields in
the root workspace `Cargo.toml` which are then reused throughout the
workspace. For example this PR shares definitions such as:
* All of the Wasmtime-family of crates now use `version.workspace =
true` to have a single location which defines the version number.
* All crates use `edition.workspace = true` to have one default edition
for the entire workspace.
* Common dependencies are listed in `[workspace.dependencies]` to avoid
typing the same version number in a lot of different places (e.g. the
`wasmparser = "0.89.0"` is now in just one spot.
Currently the workspace-inheritance feature doesn't allow having two
different versions to inherit, so all of the Cranelift-family of crates
still manually specify their version. The inter-crate dependencies,
however, are shared amongst the root workspace.
This feature can be seen as a method of "preprocessing" of sorts for
Cargo manifests. This will help us develop Wasmtime but shouldn't have
any actual impact on the published artifacts -- everything's dependency
lists are still the same.
* Fix wasi-crypto tests
* Port branches to ISLE (AArch64)
Ported the existing implementations of the following opcodes for AArch64
to ISLE:
- `Brz`
- `Brnz`
- `Brif`
- `Brff`
- `BrIcmp`
- `Jump`
- `BrTable`
Copyright (c) 2022 Arm Limited
* Remove dead code
Copyright (c) 2022 Arm Limited