Hi Richard,
Thanks for the speedy review. I completely agree this patch can wait for stage1, but it's related to some recent work Andrew Pinski has been doing in match.pd, so I thought I'd share it. Hypothetically, recognizing (x<<4)+(x>>60) as a rotation at the tree-level might lead to a code quality regression, if RTL expansion doesn't know to lower it back to use PLUS on those targets with lea but without rotate. > From: Richard Biener <richard.guent...@gmail.com> > Sent: 19 January 2024 11:04 > On Thu, Jan 18, 2024 at 8:55 PM Roger Sayle <ro...@nextmovesoftware.com> > wrote: > > > > This patch tweaks RTL expansion of multi-word shifts and rotates to > > use PLUS rather than IOR for disjunctive operations. During expansion > > of these operations, the middle-end creates RTL like (X<<C1) | (Y>>C2) > > where the constants C1 and C2 guarantee that bits don't overlap. > > Hence the IOR can be performed by any any_or_plus operation, such as > > IOR, XOR or PLUS; for word-size operations where carry chains aren't > > an issue these should all be equally fast (single-cycle) instructions. > > The benefit of this change is that targets with shift-and-add insns, > > like x86's lea, can benefit from the LSHIFT-ADD form. > > > > An example of a backend that benefits is ARC, which is demonstrated by > > these two simple functions: > > > > unsigned long long foo(unsigned long long x) { return x<<2; } > > > > which with -O2 is currently compiled to: > > > > foo: lsr r2,r0,30 > > asl_s r1,r1,2 > > asl_s r0,r0,2 > > j_s.d [blink] > > or_s r1,r1,r2 > > > > with this patch becomes: > > > > foo: lsr r2,r0,30 > > add2 r1,r2,r1 > > j_s.d [blink] > > asl_s r0,r0,2 > > > > unsigned long long bar(unsigned long long x) { return (x<<2)|(x>>62); > > } > > > > which with -O2 is currently compiled to 6 insns + return: > > > > bar: lsr r12,r0,30 > > asl_s r3,r1,2 > > asl_s r0,r0,2 > > lsr_s r1,r1,30 > > or_s r0,r0,r1 > > j_s.d [blink] > > or r1,r12,r3 > > > > with this patch becomes 4 insns + return: > > > > bar: lsr r3,r1,30 > > lsr r2,r0,30 > > add2 r1,r2,r1 > > j_s.d [blink] > > add2 r0,r3,r0 > > > > > > This patch has been tested on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu with make bootstrap > > and make -k check, both with and without --target_board=unix{-m32} > > with no new failures. Ok for mainline? > > For expand_shift_1 you add > > + where C is the bitsize of A. If N cannot be zero, > + use PLUS instead of IOR. > > but I don't see a check ensuring this other than mabe CONST_INT_P (op1) > suggesting that we enver end up with const0_rtx here. OTOH why is N zero a > problem and why is it not in the optabs.cc case where I don't see any such > check > (at least not obvious)? Excellent question. A common mistake in writing a rotate function in C or C++ is to write something like (x>>n)|(x<<(64-n)) or (x<<n)|(x>>(64-n)) which invokes undefined behavior when n == 0. It's OK to recognize these as rotates (relying on the undefined behavior), but correct/portable code (and RTL) needs the correct idiom(x>>n)|(x<<((-n)&63), which never invokes undefined behaviour. One interesting property of this idiom, is that shift by zero is then calculated as (x>>0)|(x<<0) which is x|x. This should then reveal the problem, for all non-zero values the IOR can be replaced by PLUS, but for zero shifts, X|X isn't the same as X+X or X^X. This only applies for single word rotations, and not multi-word shifts nor multi-word rotates, which explains why this test is only in one place. In theory, we could use ranger to check whether a rotate by a variable amount can ever be by zero bits, but the simplification used here is to continue using IOR for variable shifts, and PLUS for fixed/known shift values. The last remaining insight is that we only need to check for CONST_INT_P, as rotations/shifts by const0_rtx are handled earlier in this function (and eliminated by the tree-optimizers), i.e. rotation by a known constant is implicitly a rotation by a known non-zero constant. This is a little clearer if you read/cite more of the comment that was changed. Fortunately, this case is also well covered by the testsuite. I'd be happy to change the code to read: (CONST_INT_P (op1) && op1 != const0_rtx) ? add_optab : ior_optab But the test "if (op1 == const0_rtx)" already appears on line 2570 of expmed.cc. > Since this doesn't seem to fix a regression it probably has to wait for > stage1 to re-open. > > Thanks, > Richard. > > > 2024-01-18 Roger Sayle <ro...@nextmovesoftware.com> > > > > gcc/ChangeLog > > * expmed.cc (expand_shift_1): Use add_optab instead of ior_optab > > to generate PLUS instead or IOR when unioning disjoint bitfields. > > * optabs.cc (expand_subword_shift): Likewise. > > (expand_binop): Likewise for double-word rotate. > > Thanks again.