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4953 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Meng Zhuo
b7e7467865 test/codegen: add fsqrt test for riscv64
Add FSQRTD FSQRTS codegen tests for riscv64

Change-Id: I16ca3753ad1ba37afbd9d0f887b078e33f98fda0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/503275
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Auto-Submit: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: M Zhuo <mzh@golangcn.org>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
2023-06-15 15:16:20 +00:00
Keith Randall
c643b29381 cmd/compile: use callsite as line number for argument marshaling
Don't use the line number of the argument itself, as that may be from
arbitrarily earlier in the function.

Fixes #60673

Change-Id: Ifc0a2aaae221a256be3a4b0b2e04849bae4b79d7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/502656
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
2023-06-12 20:34:37 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
96d16803c2 cmd/compile: allow ir.OMIN/ir.OMAX in mayCall
CL 496257 adds min/max builtins, which may appear as argument to a
function call, so it will be tested by mayCall. But those ops are not
handled by mayCall, causes the compiler crashes.

Fixes #60582

Change-Id: I729f10bf62b4aad39ffcb1433f576e74d09fdd9a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/500575
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
2023-06-05 03:11:36 +00:00
Cherry Mui
fdb3dc471d cmd/internal/obj/arm: handle HAUTO etc. in addpool
HAUTO should be handled the same way as other stack offsets for
adding to constant pool. Add the missing cases.

Fixes #57955.

Change-Id: If7fc82cafb2bbf0a6121e73e353b8825cb36b5bc
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/463138
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
2023-06-01 19:29:08 +00:00
Austin Clements
c2e0bf0abf cmd/internal/testdir: pass if GOEXPERIMENT=cgocheck2 is set
Some testdir tests fail if GOEXPERIMENT=cgocheck2 is set. Fix this by
skipping these tests.

Change-Id: I58d4ef0cceb86bcf93220b4a44de9b9dc4879b16
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/499675
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2023-06-01 18:30:44 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
1dd24d8216 go/types, types2: don't infer type argument for unused parameter in interfaces
Two interface types that are assignable don't have to be identical;
specifically, if they are defined types, they can be different
defined types. If those defined types specify type parameters which
are never used, do not infer a type argument based on the instantiation
of a matching defined type.

Adjusted three existing tests where we inferred type arguments incorrectly.

Fixes #60377.

Change-Id: I91fb207235424b3cbc42b5fd93eee619e7541cb7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/498315
Auto-Submit: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
2023-05-25 21:37:01 +00:00
Derek Parker
c5ba9d2232 cmd/compile: prioritize non-CALL struct member comparisons
This patch optimizes reflectdata.geneq to pick apart structs in array
equality and prioritize non-CALL comparisons over those which involve
a runtime function call. This is similar to how arrays of strings
operate currently. Instead of looping over the entire array of structs
once, if there are any comparisons which involve a runtime function
call we instead loop twice. The first loop is all simple, quick
comparisons. If no inequality is found in the first loop the second loop
calls runtime functions for larger memory comparison, which is more
expensive.

For the benchmarks added in this change:

Old:

```
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: cmd/compile/internal/reflectdata
cpu: AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core Processor
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            797196              1497 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            758332              1581 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            764871              1599 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            760706              1558 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            763112              1476 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            747696              1547 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            756526              1562 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            768829              1486 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            764248              1477 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            752767              1545 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         757194              1542 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         748942              1552 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         766687              1554 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         732069              1541 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         759163              1576 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         796402              1629 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         726610              1570 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         735770              1584 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         745255              1610 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32         743872              1591 ns/op
PASS
ok      cmd/compile/internal/reflectdata        35.446s
```

New:

```
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: cmd/compile/internal/reflectdata
cpu: AMD Ryzen 9 3950X 16-Core Processor
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            618379              1827 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            619368              1922 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            616023              1910 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            617575              1905 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            610399              1889 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            615378              1823 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            613732              1883 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            613924              1894 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            657799              1876 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsEq-32            665580              1873 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1834915               627.4 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1806370               660.5 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1828075               625.5 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1819741               641.6 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1813128               632.3 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1865250               643.7 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1828617               632.8 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1862748               633.6 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1825432               638.7 ns/op
BenchmarkEqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32        1804382               628.8 ns/op
PASS
ok      cmd/compile/internal/reflectdata        36.571s
```

Benchstat comparison:

```
name                      old time/op  new time/op  delta
EqArrayOfStructsEq-32     1.53µs ± 4%  1.88µs ± 3%  +22.66%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
EqArrayOfStructsNotEq-32  1.57µs ± 3%  0.64µs ± 4%  -59.59%  (p=0.000 n=10+10)
```

So, the equal case is a bit slower (unrolling the loop helps with that),
but the non-equal case is now much faster.

Change-Id: I05d776456c79c48a3d6d74b18c45246e58ffbea6
GitHub-Last-Rev: f57ee07d05
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/go#59409
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/481895
Auto-Submit: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
2023-05-24 21:55:14 +00:00
Bryan Mills
02d234e34d Revert "cmd/compile: sparse conditional constant propagation"
This reverts CL 483875.

Reason for revert: appears to cause internal compiler errors on the ssacheck builder.

Change-Id: I662418384291470c1962c417797a5890dd9aa7a4
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/497855
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Auto-Submit: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2023-05-24 14:39:34 +00:00
Junxian Zhu
f0d575c266 cmd/compile: optimize math.Float64(32)bits and math.Float64(32)frombits on mips64x
This CL use MFC1/MTC1 instructions to move data between GPR and FPR instead of stores and loads to move float/int values.

goos: linux
goarch: mips64le
pkg: math
                      │   oldmath    │              newmath               │
                      │    sec/op    │   sec/op     vs base               │
Acos-4                   258.2n ± 0%   258.2n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.859 n=8)
Acosh-4                  378.7n ± 0%   323.9n ± 0%  -14.47% (p=0.000 n=8)
Asin-4                   255.1n ± 2%   255.5n ± 0%   +0.16% (p=0.002 n=8)
Asinh-4                  407.1n ± 0%   348.7n ± 0%  -14.35% (p=0.000 n=8)
Atan-4                   189.5n ± 0%   189.9n ± 3%        ~ (p=0.205 n=8)
Atanh-4                  355.6n ± 0%   323.4n ± 2%   -9.03% (p=0.000 n=8)
Atan2-4                  284.1n ± 7%   280.1n ± 4%        ~ (p=0.313 n=8)
Cbrt-4                   314.3n ± 0%   236.4n ± 0%  -24.79% (p=0.000 n=8)
Ceil-4                   144.3n ± 3%   139.6n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.069 n=8)
Compare-4               21.100n ± 0%   7.035n ± 0%  -66.66% (p=0.000 n=8)
Compare32-4             20.100n ± 0%   6.030n ± 0%  -70.00% (p=0.000 n=8)
Copysign-4              34.970n ± 0%   6.221n ± 0%  -82.21% (p=0.000 n=8)
Cos-4                    183.4n ± 3%   184.1n ± 5%        ~ (p=0.159 n=8)
Cosh-4                   487.9n ± 2%   419.6n ± 0%  -14.00% (p=0.000 n=8)
Erf-4                    160.6n ± 0%   157.9n ± 0%   -1.68% (p=0.009 n=8)
Erfc-4                   183.7n ± 4%   169.8n ± 0%   -7.54% (p=0.000 n=8)
Erfinv-4                 191.5n ± 4%   183.6n ± 0%   -4.13% (p=0.023 n=8)
Erfcinv-4                192.0n ± 7%   184.3n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.425 n=8)
Exp-4                    398.2n ± 0%   340.1n ± 4%  -14.58% (p=0.000 n=8)
ExpGo-4                  383.3n ± 0%   327.3n ± 0%  -14.62% (p=0.000 n=8)
Expm1-4                  248.7n ± 5%   216.0n ± 0%  -13.11% (p=0.000 n=8)
Exp2-4                   372.8n ± 0%   316.9n ± 3%  -14.98% (p=0.000 n=8)
Exp2Go-4                 374.1n ± 0%   320.5n ± 0%  -14.33% (p=0.000 n=8)
Abs-4                    3.013n ± 0%   3.016n ± 0%   +0.10% (p=0.020 n=8)
Dim-4                    5.021n ± 0%   5.022n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.270 n=8)
Floor-4                  127.5n ± 4%   126.2n ± 3%        ~ (p=0.186 n=8)
Max-4                    72.32n ± 0%   61.33n ± 0%  -15.20% (p=0.000 n=8)
Min-4                    83.33n ± 1%   61.36n ± 0%  -26.37% (p=0.000 n=8)
Mod-4                    690.7n ± 0%   454.5n ± 0%  -34.20% (p=0.000 n=8)
Frexp-4                 116.30n ± 1%   71.80n ± 1%  -38.26% (p=0.000 n=8)
Gamma-4                  389.0n ± 0%   355.9n ± 1%   -8.48% (p=0.000 n=8)
Hypot-4                 102.40n ± 0%   83.90n ± 0%  -18.07% (p=0.000 n=8)
HypotGo-4               105.45n ± 4%   84.82n ± 2%  -19.56% (p=0.000 n=8)
Ilogb-4                  99.13n ± 4%   63.71n ± 2%  -35.73% (p=0.000 n=8)
J0-4                     859.7n ± 0%   854.8n ± 0%   -0.57% (p=0.000 n=8)
J1-4                     873.9n ± 0%   875.7n ± 0%   +0.21% (p=0.007 n=8)
Jn-4                     1.855µ ± 0%   1.867µ ± 0%   +0.65% (p=0.000 n=8)
Ldexp-4                 130.50n ± 2%   64.35n ± 0%  -50.69% (p=0.000 n=8)
Lgamma-4                 208.8n ± 0%   200.9n ± 0%   -3.78% (p=0.000 n=8)
Log-4                    294.1n ± 0%   255.2n ± 3%  -13.22% (p=0.000 n=8)
Logb-4                  105.45n ± 1%   66.81n ± 1%  -36.64% (p=0.000 n=8)
Log1p-4                  268.2n ± 0%   211.3n ± 0%  -21.21% (p=0.000 n=8)
Log10-4                  295.4n ± 0%   255.2n ± 2%  -13.59% (p=0.000 n=8)
Log2-4                   152.9n ± 1%   127.5n ± 0%  -16.61% (p=0.000 n=8)
Modf-4                  103.40n ± 0%   75.36n ± 0%  -27.12% (p=0.000 n=8)
Nextafter32-4           121.20n ± 1%   78.40n ± 0%  -35.31% (p=0.000 n=8)
Nextafter64-4           110.40n ± 1%   64.91n ± 0%  -41.20% (p=0.000 n=8)
PowInt-4                 509.8n ± 1%   369.3n ± 1%  -27.56% (p=0.000 n=8)
PowFrac-4               1189.0n ± 0%   947.8n ± 0%  -20.29% (p=0.000 n=8)
Pow10Pos-4               15.07n ± 0%   15.07n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.733 n=8)
Pow10Neg-4               20.10n ± 0%   20.10n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.576 n=8)
Round-4                  44.22n ± 0%   26.12n ± 0%  -40.92% (p=0.000 n=8)
RoundToEven-4            46.22n ± 0%   27.12n ± 0%  -41.31% (p=0.000 n=8)
Remainder-4              539.0n ± 1%   417.1n ± 1%  -22.62% (p=0.000 n=8)
Signbit-4               17.985n ± 0%   5.694n ± 0%  -68.34% (p=0.000 n=8)
Sin-4                    185.7n ± 5%   172.9n ± 0%   -6.89% (p=0.001 n=8)
Sincos-4                 176.6n ± 0%   200.9n ± 0%  +13.76% (p=0.000 n=8)
Sinh-4                   495.8n ± 0%   435.9n ± 0%  -12.09% (p=0.000 n=8)
SqrtIndirect-4           5.022n ± 0%   5.024n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.083 n=8)
SqrtLatency-4            8.038n ± 0%   8.044n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.524 n=8)
SqrtIndirectLatency-4    8.035n ± 0%   8.039n ± 0%   +0.06% (p=0.017 n=8)
SqrtGoLatency-4          340.1n ± 0%   278.3n ± 0%  -18.19% (p=0.000 n=8)
SqrtPrime-4              5.381µ ± 0%   5.386µ ± 0%        ~ (p=0.662 n=8)
Tan-4                    198.6n ± 1%   183.1n ± 0%   -7.85% (p=0.000 n=8)
Tanh-4                   491.3n ± 1%   440.8n ± 1%  -10.29% (p=0.000 n=8)
Trunc-4                  121.7n ± 0%   121.7n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.769 n=8)
Y0-4                     855.1n ± 0%   859.8n ± 0%   +0.54% (p=0.007 n=8)
Y1-4                     862.3n ± 0%   865.1n ± 0%   +0.32% (p=0.007 n=8)
Yn-4                     1.830µ ± 0%   1.837µ ± 0%   +0.36% (p=0.011 n=8)
Float64bits-4           13.060n ± 0%   3.016n ± 0%  -76.91% (p=0.000 n=8)
Float64frombits-4       13.060n ± 0%   3.018n ± 0%  -76.90% (p=0.000 n=8)
Float32bits-4           13.060n ± 0%   3.016n ± 0%  -76.91% (p=0.000 n=8)
Float32frombits-4       13.070n ± 0%   3.013n ± 0%  -76.94% (p=0.000 n=8)
FMA-4                    446.0n ± 0%   413.1n ± 1%   -7.38% (p=0.000 n=8)
geomean                  143.4n        108.3n       -24.49%

Change-Id: I2067f7a5ae1126ada7ab3fb2083710e8212535e9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/493815
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
2023-05-24 03:36:31 +00:00
Yi Yang
fa50248ce6 cmd/compile: sparse conditional constant propagation
sparse conditional constant propagation can discover optimization opportunities that cannot be found by just combining constant folding and constant propagation and dead code elimination separately.

Updates #59399

Change-Id: Ia954e906480654a6f0cc065d75b5912f96f36b2e
GitHub-Last-Rev: 90fc02db99
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/go#59575
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/483875
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Pratt <mpratt@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2023-05-24 02:54:03 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
35a71dc56d cmd/compile: avoid slicebytetostring call in len(string([]byte))
Change-Id: Ie04503e61400a793a6a29a4b58795254deabe472
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/497276
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Auto-Submit: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2023-05-23 19:27:38 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
4e679e26a3 test: remove *_unified.go variants
CL 415241 and CL 411935 break tests into unified/nounified variants, for
compatibility with old frontend while developing unified IR. Now the old
frontend was gone, so moving those tests back to the original files.

Change-Id: Iecdcd4e6ee33c723f6ac02189b0be26248e15f0f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/497275
Run-TryBot: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Auto-Submit: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
2023-05-23 17:16:35 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
7f1467ff4d cmd/compile: incorporate inlined function names into closure naming
In Go 1.17, cmd/compile gained the ability to inline calls to
functions that contain function literals (aka "closures"). This was
implemented by duplicating the function literal body and emitting a
second LSym, because in general it might be optimized better than the
original function literal.

However, the second LSym was named simply as any other function
literal appearing literally in the enclosing function would be named.
E.g., if f has a closure "f.funcX", and f is inlined into g, we would
create "g.funcY" (N.B., X and Y need not be the same.). Users then
have no idea this function originally came from f.

With this CL, the inlined call stack is incorporated into the clone
LSym's name: instead of "g.funcY", it's named "g.f.funcY".

In the future, it seems desirable to arrange for the clone's name to
appear exactly as the original name, so stack traces remain the same
as when -l or -d=inlfuncswithclosures are used. But it's unclear
whether the linker supports that today, or whether any downstream
tooling would be confused by this.

Updates #60324.

Change-Id: Ifad0ccef7e959e72005beeecdfffd872f63982f8
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/497137
Reviewed-by: Michael Pratt <mpratt@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
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2023-05-22 22:47:15 +00:00
Keith Randall
bd3f44e4ff cmd/compile: constant-fold loads from constant dictionaries and types
Retrying the original CL with a small modification. The original CL
did not handle the case of reading an itab out of a dictionary
correctly.  When we read an itab out of a dictionary, we must treat
the type inside that itab as maybe being put in an interface.

Original CL: 486895
Revert CL: 490156

Change-Id: Id2dc1699d184cd8c63dac83986a70b60b4e6cbd7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/491495
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
2023-05-19 18:10:11 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
956d31ecd5 cmd/compile: enable more lenient type inference for untyped arguments
This enables the implementation for proposal #58671, which is
a likely accept. By enabling it early we get a bit extra soak
time for this feature. The change can be reverted trivially, if
need be.

For #58671.

Change-Id: Id6c27515e45ff79f4f1d2fc1706f3f672ccdd1ab
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495955
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
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2023-05-18 00:35:53 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
7240d7e9e4 cmd/compile/internal/noder: suppress unionType consistency check
In the types1 universe, we only need to represent value types. For
interfaces, this means we only need to worry about pure interfaces. A
pure interface can embed a union type, but the overall union must be
equivalent to "any".

In go.dev/cl/458619, we changed the types1 reader to return "any", but
to incorporate a consistency check to make sure this is valid.
Unfortunately, a pure interface can actually still reference impure
interfaces, and in general this is hard to check precisely without
reimplementing a lot of types2 data structures and logic into types1.

We haven't had any other reports of this check failing since 1.20, so
it seems simplest to just suppress for now.

Fixes #60117.

Change-Id: I5053faafe2d1068c6d438b2193347546bf5330cd
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495455
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
2023-05-16 21:34:45 +00:00
Keith Randall
6042a062dc cmd/compile: make memcombine pass a bit more robust to reassociation of exprs
Be more liberal about expanding the OR tree. Handle any tree shape
instead of a fully left or right associative tree.

Also remove tail feature, it isn't ever needed.

Change-Id: If16bebef94b952a604d6069e9be3d9129994cb6f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494056
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Berger <ryanbberger@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
2023-05-16 19:13:26 +00:00
eric fang
e0ceba8139 cmd/compile: enhance tighten pass for memory values
[This is a roll-forward of CL 458755, which was reverted due to make.bash
being broken on GOAMD64=v3. But it turned out that the problem was caused
by wrong bswap/load rewrite rules, and it was fixed in CL 492616.]

This CL enhances the tighten pass. Previously if a value has memory arg,
then the tighten pass won't move it, actually if the memory state is
consistent among definition and use block, we can move the value. This
CL optimizes this case. This is useful for the following situation:
b1:
  x = load(...mem)
  if(...) goto b2 else b3
b2:
  use(x)
b3:
  some_op_not_use_x

For the micro-benchmark mentioned in #56620, the performance improvement
is about 15%.
There's no noticeable performance change in the go1 benchmark.

Fixes #56620

Change-Id: I36ea68bed384986cd3ae81cb9e6efe84bb213adc
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492895
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Eric Fang <eric.fang@arm.com>
2023-05-16 01:01:38 +00:00
Lynn Boger
4481042c43 cmd/compile: update rules to generate more prefixed instructions
This modifies some existing rules to allow more prefixed instructions
to be generated when using GOPPC64=power10. Some rules also check
if PCRel is available, which is currently supported for linux/ppc64le
and linux/ppc64 (internal linking only).

Prior to p10, DS-offset loads and stores had a 16 bit size limit for
the offset field. If the offset of the data for load or store was
beyond this range then an indexed load or store would be selected by
the rules.

In p10 the assembler can generate prefixed instructions in this case,
but does not if an indexed instruction was selected during the lowering
pass.

This allows many more cases to use prefixed loads or stores, reducing
function sizes and improving performance in some cases where the code
change happens in key loops.

For example in strconv BenchmarkAppendQuoteRune before:

  12c5e4:       15 00 10 06     pla     r10,1425660
  12c5e8:       fc c0 40 39
  12c5ec:       00 00 6a e8     ld      r3,0(r10)
  12c5f0:       10 00 aa e8     ld      r5,16(r10)

After this change:

  12a828:       15 00 10 04     pld     r3,1433272
  12a82c:       b8 de 60 e4
  12a830:       15 00 10 04     pld     r5,1433280
  12a834:       c0 de a0 e4

Performs better in the second case.

A testcase was added to verify that the rules correctly select a load or
store based on the offset and whether power10 or earlier.

Change-Id: I4335fed0bd9b8aba8a4f84d69b89f819cc464846
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/477398
Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Archana Ravindar <aravind5@in.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Paul Murphy <murp@ibm.com>
2023-05-15 18:20:54 +00:00
Cherry Mui
994eca4883 test: add escape test for reflect.Value operations
With CL 408826 reflect.Value does not always escape. We need to
make sure Value operations does (or does not) escape the Value
correctly. This CL adds a test.

There are still a few unfortunate cases, where some Value
operations escape more than necessary (comparing to a non-reflect
version of the code), but hard to fix. These are mostly that a
Value would escape conditionally (mostly on the type of the Value),
but currently we don't have a good way to express that.

Change-Id: I9fdfc7584670aa09c5a01f6b2803f2043aaddb65
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/441938
Run-TryBot: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
2023-05-12 23:13:19 +00:00
Cherry Mui
be4fe08b57 reflect: do not escape Value.Type
Types are either static (for compiler-created types) or heap
allocated and always reachable (for reflection-created types, held
in the central map). So there is no need to escape types.

With CL 408826 reflect.Value does not always escape. Some functions
that escapes Value.typ would make the Value escape without this CL.

Had to add a special case for the inliner to keep (*Value).Type
still inlineable.

Change-Id: I7c14d35fd26328347b509a06eb5bd1534d40775f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/413474
Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
2023-05-12 21:11:51 +00:00
Dmitri Shuralyov
7cc4516ac8 internal/testdir: move to cmd/internal/testdir
The effect and motivation is for the test to be selected when doing
'go test cmd' and not when doing 'go test std' since it's primarily
about testing the Go compiler and linker. Other than that, it's run
by all.bash and 'go test std cmd' as before.

For #56844.
Fixes #60059.

Change-Id: I2d499af013f9d9b8761fdf4573f8d27d80c1fccf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/493876
Run-TryBot: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
2023-05-12 17:18:08 +00:00
Austin Clements
b679e31cdb test/bench: delete
Russ added test/bench/go1 in CL 5484071 to have a stable suite of
programs to use as benchmarks. For the compiler and runtime we had
back then, those were reasonable benchmarks, but the compiler and
runtime are now far more sophisticated and these benchmarks no longer
have good coverage. We also now have better benchmark suites
maintained outside the repo (e.g., golang.org/x/benchmarks). Keeping
test/bench/go1 at this point is actively misleading.

Indirectly related to #37486, as this also removes the last package
dist test runs outside of src/.

Change-Id: I2867ef303fe48a02acce58ace4ee682add8acdbf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494193
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
2023-05-12 12:35:07 +00:00
Austin Clements
b6c75c5fb1 test,internal/testdir: don't set GOOS/GOARCH
The test directory driver currently sets the GOOS/GOARCH environment
variables if they aren't set. This appears to be in service of a
single test, test/env.go, which was introduced in September 2008 along
with os.Getenv. It's not entirely clear what that test is even trying
to check, since runtime.GOOS isn't necessarily the same as $GOOS. We
keep the test around because golang.org/x/tools/go/ssa/interp uses it
as a test case, but we simplify the test and eliminate the need for
the driver to set GOOS/GOARCH.

Change-Id: I5acc0093b557c95d1f0a526d031210256a68222d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/493601
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2023-05-12 12:34:59 +00:00
Stefan
95c4f320d5 cmd/compile: add De Morgan's rewrite rule
Adds rules that rewrites statements such as ~P&~Q as ~(P|Q) and ~P|~Q as ~(P&Q), removing an extraneous instruction.

Change-Id: Icedb97df741680ddf9799df79df78657173aa500
GitHub-Last-Rev: f22e2350c9
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/go#60018
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/493175
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Stefan M <st3f4nm4d4@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
2023-05-10 16:32:25 +00:00
Lynn Boger
bc3bdfa977 test: add memcombine testcases for ppc64
Thanks to the recent addition of the memcombine pass, the
ppc64 ports now have the memcombine optimizations. Previously
in PPC64.rules, the memcombine rules were only added for
ppc64le targets due to the significant increase in size of
the rewritePPC64.go file when those rules were added. The
ppc64 and ppc64le rules had to be different because of the
byte order due to endianness differences.

This enables the memcombine tests to be run on ppc64 as well
as ppc64le.

Change-Id: I4081e2d94617a1b66541d536c0c2662e266c9c1e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492615
Run-TryBot: Lynn Boger <laboger@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Lynn Boger <laboger@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
2023-05-08 16:50:23 +00:00
Junxian Zhu
5cad8d41ca math: optimize math.Abs on mipsx
This commit optimized math.Abs function implementation on mipsx.
Tested on loongson 3A2000.

goos: linux
goarch: mipsle
pkg: math
                      │   oldmath    │              newmath               │
                      │    sec/op    │   sec/op     vs base               │
Acos-4                   282.6n ± 0%   282.3n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.140 n=7)
Acosh-4                  506.1n ± 0%   451.8n ± 0%  -10.73% (p=0.001 n=7)
Asin-4                   272.3n ± 0%   272.2n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.808 n=7)
Asinh-4                  529.7n ± 0%   475.3n ± 0%  -10.27% (p=0.001 n=7)
Atan-4                   208.2n ± 0%   207.9n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.134 n=7)
Atanh-4                  503.4n ± 1%   449.7n ± 0%  -10.67% (p=0.001 n=7)
Atan2-4                  310.5n ± 0%   310.5n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.928 n=7)
Cbrt-4                   359.3n ± 0%   358.8n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.121 n=7)
Ceil-4                   203.9n ± 0%   204.0n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.600 n=7)
Compare-4                23.11n ± 0%   23.11n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.702 n=7)
Compare32-4              19.09n ± 0%   19.12n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.070 n=7)
Copysign-4               33.20n ± 0%   34.02n ± 0%   +2.47% (p=0.001 n=7)
Cos-4                    422.5n ± 0%   385.4n ± 1%   -8.78% (p=0.001 n=7)
Cosh-4                   628.0n ± 0%   545.5n ± 0%  -13.14% (p=0.001 n=7)
Erf-4                    193.7n ± 2%   192.7n ± 1%        ~ (p=0.430 n=7)
Erfc-4                   192.8n ± 1%   193.0n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.245 n=7)
Erfinv-4                 220.7n ± 1%   221.5n ± 2%        ~ (p=0.272 n=7)
Erfcinv-4                221.3n ± 1%   220.4n ± 2%        ~ (p=0.738 n=7)
Exp-4                    471.4n ± 0%   435.1n ± 0%   -7.70% (p=0.001 n=7)
ExpGo-4                  470.6n ± 0%   434.0n ± 0%   -7.78% (p=0.001 n=7)
Expm1-4                  243.1n ± 0%   243.4n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.417 n=7)
Exp2-4                   463.1n ± 0%   427.0n ± 0%   -7.80% (p=0.001 n=7)
Exp2Go-4                 462.4n ± 0%   426.2n ± 5%   -7.83% (p=0.001 n=7)
Abs-4                   37.000n ± 0%   8.039n ± 9%  -78.27% (p=0.001 n=7)
Dim-4                    18.09n ± 0%   18.11n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.094 n=7)
Floor-4                  151.9n ± 0%   151.8n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.190 n=7)
Max-4                    116.7n ± 1%   116.7n ± 1%        ~ (p=0.842 n=7)
Min-4                    116.6n ± 1%   116.6n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.464 n=7)
Mod-4                   1244.0n ± 0%   980.9n ± 0%  -21.15% (p=0.001 n=7)
Frexp-4                  199.0n ± 0%   146.7n ± 0%  -26.28% (p=0.001 n=7)
Gamma-4                  516.4n ± 0%   479.3n ± 1%   -7.18% (p=0.001 n=7)
Hypot-4                  169.8n ± 0%   117.8n ± 2%  -30.62% (p=0.001 n=7)
HypotGo-4                170.8n ± 0%   117.5n ± 0%  -31.21% (p=0.001 n=7)
Ilogb-4                  160.8n ± 0%   109.5n ± 0%  -31.90% (p=0.001 n=7)
J0-4                     1.359µ ± 0%   1.305µ ± 0%   -3.97% (p=0.001 n=7)
J1-4                     1.386µ ± 0%   1.334µ ± 0%   -3.75% (p=0.001 n=7)
Jn-4                     2.864µ ± 0%   2.758µ ± 0%   -3.70% (p=0.001 n=7)
Ldexp-4                  202.9n ± 0%   151.7n ± 0%  -25.23% (p=0.001 n=7)
Lgamma-4                 234.0n ± 0%   234.3n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.199 n=7)
Log-4                    444.1n ± 0%   407.9n ± 0%   -8.15% (p=0.001 n=7)
Logb-4                   157.8n ± 0%   121.6n ± 0%  -22.94% (p=0.001 n=7)
Log1p-4                  354.8n ± 0%   315.4n ± 0%  -11.10% (p=0.001 n=7)
Log10-4                  453.9n ± 0%   417.9n ± 0%   -7.93% (p=0.001 n=7)
Log2-4                   245.3n ± 0%   209.1n ± 0%  -14.76% (p=0.001 n=7)
Modf-4                   126.6n ± 0%   126.6n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.126 n=7)
Nextafter32-4            112.5n ± 0%   112.5n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.853 n=7)
Nextafter64-4            141.7n ± 0%   141.6n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.331 n=7)
PowInt-4                 878.8n ± 1%   758.3n ± 1%  -13.71% (p=0.001 n=7)
PowFrac-4                1.809µ ± 0%   1.615µ ± 0%  -10.72% (p=0.001 n=7)
Pow10Pos-4               18.10n ± 0%   18.12n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.464 n=7)
Pow10Neg-4               17.09n ± 0%   17.09n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.263 n=7)
Round-4                  68.36n ± 0%   68.33n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.325 n=7)
RoundToEven-4            78.40n ± 0%   78.40n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.934 n=7)
Remainder-4              894.0n ± 1%   753.4n ± 1%  -15.73% (p=0.001 n=7)
Signbit-4                18.09n ± 0%   18.09n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.761 n=7)
Sin-4                    389.8n ± 1%   389.8n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.995 n=7)
Sincos-4                 416.0n ± 0%   415.9n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.361 n=7)
Sinh-4                   634.6n ± 4%   585.6n ± 1%   -7.72% (p=0.001 n=7)
SqrtIndirect-4           8.035n ± 0%   8.036n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.523 n=7)
SqrtLatency-4            8.039n ± 0%   8.037n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.218 n=7)
SqrtIndirectLatency-4    8.040n ± 0%   8.040n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.652 n=7)
SqrtGoLatency-4          895.7n ± 0%   896.6n ± 0%   +0.10% (p=0.004 n=7)
SqrtPrime-4              5.406µ ± 0%   5.407µ ± 0%        ~ (p=0.592 n=7)
Tan-4                    406.1n ± 0%   405.8n ± 1%        ~ (p=0.435 n=7)
Tanh-4                   627.6n ± 0%   545.5n ± 0%  -13.08% (p=0.001 n=7)
Trunc-4                  146.7n ± 1%   146.7n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.755 n=7)
Y0-4                     1.359µ ± 0%   1.310µ ± 0%   -3.61% (p=0.001 n=7)
Y1-4                     1.351µ ± 0%   1.301µ ± 0%   -3.70% (p=0.001 n=7)
Yn-4                     2.829µ ± 0%   2.729µ ± 0%   -3.53% (p=0.001 n=7)
Float64bits-4            14.08n ± 0%   14.07n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.069 n=7)
Float64frombits-4        19.09n ± 0%   19.10n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.755 n=7)
Float32bits-4            13.06n ± 0%   13.07n ± 1%        ~ (p=0.586 n=7)
Float32frombits-4        13.06n ± 0%   13.06n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.853 n=7)
FMA-4                    606.9n ± 0%   606.8n ± 0%        ~ (p=0.393 n=7)
geomean                  201.1n        185.4n        -7.81%

Change-Id: I6d41a97ad3789ed5731588588859ac0b8b13b664
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/484675
Reviewed-by: Rong Zhang <rongrong@oss.cipunited.com>
Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
2023-05-08 15:53:28 +00:00
Than McIntosh
445e520d49 cmd/compile: allow more inlining of functions that construct closures
[This is a roll-forward of CL 479095, which was reverted due to a bad
interaction between inlining and escape analysis, then later fixed
first with an attempt in CL 482355, then again in CL 484859, and then
one more time with CL 492135.]

Currently, when the inliner is determining if a function is
inlineable, it descends into the bodies of closures constructed by
that function. This has several unfortunate consequences:

- If the closure contains a disallowed operation (e.g., a defer), then
  the outer function can't be inlined. It makes sense that the
  *closure* can't be inlined in this case, but it doesn't make sense
  to punish the function that constructs the closure.

- The hairiness of the closure counts against the inlining budget of
  the outer function. Since we currently copy the closure body when
  inlining the outer function, this makes sense from the perspective
  of export data size and binary size, but ultimately doesn't make
  much sense from the perspective of what should be inlineable.

- Since the inliner walks into every closure created by an outer
  function in addition to starting a walk at every closure, this adds
  an n^2 factor to inlinability analysis.

This CL simply drops this behavior.

In std, this makes 57 more functions inlinable, and disallows inlining
for 10 (due to the basic instability of our bottom-up inlining
approach), for an net increase of 47 inlinable functions (+0.6%).

This will help significantly with the performance of the functions to
be added for #56102, which have a somewhat complicated nesting of
closures with a performance-critical fast path.

The downside of this seems to be a potential increase in export data
and text size, but the practical impact of this seems to be
negligible:

	       │    before    │           after            │
	       │    bytes     │    bytes      vs base      │
Go/binary        15.12Mi ± 0%   15.14Mi ± 0%  +0.16% (n=1)
Go/text          5.220Mi ± 0%   5.237Mi ± 0%  +0.32% (n=1)
Compile/binary   22.92Mi ± 0%   22.94Mi ± 0%  +0.07% (n=1)
Compile/text     8.428Mi ± 0%   8.435Mi ± 0%  +0.08% (n=1)

Change-Id: I5f75fcceb177f05853996b75184a486528eafe96
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492017
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
2023-05-05 21:04:48 +00:00
Than McIntosh
89138ce740 cmd/compile: un-hide closure func if parent expr moved to staticinit
If the function referenced by a closure expression is incorporated
into a static init, be sure to mark it as non-hidden, since otherwise
it will be live but no longer reachable from the init func, hence it
will be skipped during escape analysis, which can lead to
miscompilations.

Fixes #59680.

Change-Id: Ib858aee296efcc0b7655d25c23ab8a6a8dbdc5f9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492135
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2023-05-05 21:04:38 +00:00
Than McIntosh
ea69de9b92 cmd/compile: rework marking of dead hidden closure functions
[This is a roll-forward of CL 484859, this time including a fix for
issue #59709. The call to do dead function marking was taking place in
the wrong spot, causing it to run more than once if generics were
instantiated.]

This patch generalizes the code in the inliner that marks unreferenced
hidden closure functions as dead. Rather than doing the marking on the
fly (previous approach), this new approach does a single pass at the
end of inlining, which catches more dead functions.

Change-Id: I0e079ad755c21295477201acbd7e1a732a98fffd
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492016
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
2023-05-05 21:04:28 +00:00
Junxian Zhu
574431cfcd math: optimize math.Abs on mips64x
This commit optimized math.Abs function implementation on mips64x.
Tested on loongson 3A2000.

goos: linux
goarch: mips64le
pkg: math
                      │    oldmath    │               newmath               │
                      │    sec/op     │    sec/op     vs base               │
Acos-4                   258.0n ± ∞ ¹   257.1n ± ∞ ¹   -0.35% (p=0.008 n=5)
Acosh-4                  417.0n ± ∞ ¹   377.9n ± ∞ ¹   -9.38% (p=0.008 n=5)
Asin-4                   248.0n ± ∞ ¹   259.9n ± ∞ ¹   +4.80% (p=0.008 n=5)
Asinh-4                  439.6n ± ∞ ¹   408.3n ± ∞ ¹   -7.12% (p=0.008 n=5)
Atan-4                   189.6n ± ∞ ¹   188.8n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.056 n=5)
Atanh-4                  390.0n ± ∞ ¹   356.4n ± ∞ ¹   -8.62% (p=0.008 n=5)
Atan2-4                  279.0n ± ∞ ¹   263.9n ± ∞ ¹   -5.41% (p=0.008 n=5)
Cbrt-4                   314.2n ± ∞ ¹   322.3n ± ∞ ¹   +2.58% (p=0.008 n=5)
Ceil-4                   139.7n ± ∞ ¹   136.6n ± ∞ ¹   -2.22% (p=0.008 n=5)
Compare-4                21.11n ± ∞ ¹   21.09n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.405 n=5)
Compare32-4              20.10n ± ∞ ¹   20.12n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.206 n=5)
Copysign-4               32.17n ± ∞ ¹   35.71n ± ∞ ¹  +11.00% (p=0.008 n=5)
Cos-4                    222.8n ± ∞ ¹   169.8n ± ∞ ¹  -23.79% (p=0.008 n=5)
Cosh-4                   550.2n ± ∞ ¹   477.4n ± ∞ ¹  -13.23% (p=0.008 n=5)
Erf-4                    171.6n ± ∞ ¹   174.5n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.635 n=5)
Erfc-4                   182.6n ± ∞ ¹   170.2n ± ∞ ¹   -6.79% (p=0.008 n=5)
Erfinv-4                 177.6n ± ∞ ¹   196.6n ± ∞ ¹  +10.70% (p=0.008 n=5)
Erfcinv-4                177.8n ± ∞ ¹   197.8n ± ∞ ¹  +11.25% (p=0.008 n=5)
Exp-4                    422.8n ± ∞ ¹   382.1n ± ∞ ¹   -9.63% (p=0.008 n=5)
ExpGo-4                  416.1n ± ∞ ¹   383.2n ± ∞ ¹   -7.91% (p=0.008 n=5)
Expm1-4                  232.9n ± ∞ ¹   252.2n ± ∞ ¹   +8.29% (p=0.008 n=5)
Exp2-4                   404.8n ± ∞ ¹   389.1n ± ∞ ¹   -3.88% (p=0.008 n=5)
Exp2Go-4                 407.0n ± ∞ ¹   372.3n ± ∞ ¹   -8.53% (p=0.008 n=5)
Abs-4                   30.120n ± ∞ ¹   3.014n ± ∞ ¹  -89.99% (p=0.008 n=5)
Dim-4                    5.021n ± ∞ ¹   5.023n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.071 n=5)
Floor-4                  127.8n ± ∞ ¹   127.1n ± ∞ ¹   -0.55% (p=0.008 n=5)
Max-4                    77.69n ± ∞ ¹   76.33n ± ∞ ¹   -1.75% (p=0.008 n=5)
Min-4                    83.27n ± ∞ ¹   77.87n ± ∞ ¹   -6.48% (p=0.008 n=5)
Mod-4                    906.2n ± ∞ ¹   692.9n ± ∞ ¹  -23.54% (p=0.008 n=5)
Frexp-4                  150.6n ± ∞ ¹   108.6n ± ∞ ¹  -27.89% (p=0.008 n=5)
Gamma-4                  418.4n ± ∞ ¹   386.1n ± ∞ ¹   -7.72% (p=0.008 n=5)
Hypot-4                 148.20n ± ∞ ¹   93.78n ± ∞ ¹  -36.72% (p=0.008 n=5)
HypotGo-4               148.20n ± ∞ ¹   94.47n ± ∞ ¹  -36.26% (p=0.008 n=5)
Ilogb-4                 135.50n ± ∞ ¹   92.38n ± ∞ ¹  -31.82% (p=0.008 n=5)
J0-4                     937.7n ± ∞ ¹   861.7n ± ∞ ¹   -8.10% (p=0.008 n=5)
J1-4                     915.4n ± ∞ ¹   875.9n ± ∞ ¹   -4.32% (p=0.008 n=5)
Jn-4                     1.974µ ± ∞ ¹   1.863µ ± ∞ ¹   -5.62% (p=0.008 n=5)
Ldexp-4                  158.5n ± ∞ ¹   129.3n ± ∞ ¹  -18.42% (p=0.008 n=5)
Lgamma-4                 209.0n ± ∞ ¹   211.8n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.095 n=5)
Log-4                    326.4n ± ∞ ¹   295.2n ± ∞ ¹   -9.56% (p=0.008 n=5)
Logb-4                   147.7n ± ∞ ¹   105.0n ± ∞ ¹  -28.91% (p=0.008 n=5)
Log1p-4                  303.4n ± ∞ ¹   266.3n ± ∞ ¹  -12.23% (p=0.008 n=5)
Log10-4                  329.2n ± ∞ ¹   298.3n ± ∞ ¹   -9.39% (p=0.008 n=5)
Log2-4                   187.4n ± ∞ ¹   153.0n ± ∞ ¹  -18.36% (p=0.008 n=5)
Modf-4                   110.5n ± ∞ ¹   103.5n ± ∞ ¹   -6.33% (p=0.008 n=5)
Nextafter32-4            128.4n ± ∞ ¹   121.5n ± ∞ ¹   -5.37% (p=0.016 n=5)
Nextafter64-4            109.5n ± ∞ ¹   110.5n ± ∞ ¹   +0.91% (p=0.008 n=5)
PowInt-4                 603.3n ± ∞ ¹   516.4n ± ∞ ¹  -14.40% (p=0.008 n=5)
PowFrac-4                1.365µ ± ∞ ¹   1.183µ ± ∞ ¹  -13.33% (p=0.008 n=5)
Pow10Pos-4               15.07n ± ∞ ¹   15.07n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.738 n=5)
Pow10Neg-4               21.11n ± ∞ ¹   21.10n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.190 n=5)
Round-4                  44.23n ± ∞ ¹   44.22n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.635 n=5)
RoundToEven-4            50.25n ± ∞ ¹   46.27n ± ∞ ¹   -7.92% (p=0.008 n=5)
Remainder-4              675.6n ± ∞ ¹   530.4n ± ∞ ¹  -21.49% (p=0.008 n=5)
Signbit-4                17.07n ± ∞ ¹   17.95n ± ∞ ¹   +5.16% (p=0.008 n=5)
Sin-4                    171.6n ± ∞ ¹   189.1n ± ∞ ¹  +10.20% (p=0.008 n=5)
Sincos-4                 201.5n ± ∞ ¹   200.5n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.421 n=5)
Sinh-4                   529.6n ± ∞ ¹   484.6n ± ∞ ¹   -8.50% (p=0.008 n=5)
SqrtIndirect-4           5.021n ± ∞ ¹   5.023n ± ∞ ¹   +0.04% (p=0.048 n=5)
SqrtLatency-4            8.032n ± ∞ ¹   8.039n ± ∞ ¹   +0.09% (p=0.024 n=5)
SqrtIndirectLatency-4    8.036n ± ∞ ¹   8.038n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.056 n=5)
SqrtGoLatency-4          338.8n ± ∞ ¹   338.7n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.841 n=5)
SqrtPrime-4              5.379µ ± ∞ ¹   5.382µ ± ∞ ¹   +0.06% (p=0.048 n=5)
Tan-4                    182.7n ± ∞ ¹   191.8n ± ∞ ¹   +4.98% (p=0.008 n=5)
Tanh-4                   558.7n ± ∞ ¹   497.6n ± ∞ ¹  -10.94% (p=0.008 n=5)
Trunc-4                  122.5n ± ∞ ¹   122.6n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.405 n=5)
Y0-4                     892.8n ± ∞ ¹   851.7n ± ∞ ¹   -4.60% (p=0.008 n=5)
Y1-4                     887.2n ± ∞ ¹   863.2n ± ∞ ¹   -2.71% (p=0.008 n=5)
Yn-4                     1.889µ ± ∞ ¹   1.832µ ± ∞ ¹   -3.02% (p=0.008 n=5)
Float64bits-4            13.05n ± ∞ ¹   13.06n ± ∞ ¹   +0.08% (p=0.040 n=5)
Float64frombits-4        13.05n ± ∞ ¹   13.06n ± ∞ ¹        ~ (p=0.143 n=5)
Float32bits-4            13.05n ± ∞ ¹   13.06n ± ∞ ¹   +0.08% (p=0.008 n=5)
Float32frombits-4        13.05n ± ∞ ¹   13.08n ± ∞ ¹   +0.23% (p=0.016 n=5)
FMA-4                    445.7n ± ∞ ¹   448.1n ± ∞ ¹   +0.54% (p=0.008 n=5)
geomean                  157.2n         142.8n         -9.17%

Change-Id: I9bf104848b588c9ecf79401a81d483d7fcdb0a79
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/481575
Reviewed-by: M Zhuo <mzh@golangcn.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Rong Zhang <rongrong@oss.cipunited.com>
2023-05-05 14:54:39 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
767fbe01ae cmd/compile: fix compilation of inferred type arguments
Previously, type arguments could only be inferred for generic
functions in call expressions, whereas with the reverse type inference
proposal they can now be inferred in assignment contexts too. As a
consequence, we now need to check Info.Instances to find the inferred
type for more cases now.

Updates #59338.
Fixes #59955.

Change-Id: I9b6465395869459c2387d0424febe7337b28b90e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492455
Auto-Submit: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2023-05-03 22:12:27 +00:00
Daniel Martí
aa6e168480 Revert "cmd/compile: enhance tighten pass for memory values"
This reverts CL 458755.

Reason for revert: broke make.bash on GOAMD64=v3:

/workdir/go/src/crypto/sha1/sha1.go:54:35: internal compiler error: '(*digest).MarshalBinary': func (*digest).MarshalBinary, startMem[b13] has different values, old v206, new v338

goroutine 34 [running]:
runtime/debug.Stack()
	/workdir/go/src/runtime/debug/stack.go:24 +0x9f
bootstrap/cmd/compile/internal/base.FatalfAt({0x13, 0xaa0f1}, {0xc000db4440, 0x40}, {0xc0013b0000, 0x5, 0x5})
	/workdir/go/src/cmd/compile/internal/base/print.go:234 +0x2d1
bootstrap/cmd/compile/internal/base.Fatalf(...)
	/workdir/go/src/cmd/compile/internal/base/print.go:203
bootstrap/cmd/compile/internal/ssagen.(*ssafn).Fatalf(0xc000d90000, {0x13, 0xaa0f1}, {0xcb7b91, 0x3a}, {0xc000d99bc0, 0x4, 0x4})
	/workdir/go/src/cmd/compile/internal/ssagen/ssa.go:7896 +0x1f8
bootstrap/cmd/compile/internal/ssa.(*Func).Fatalf(0xc000d82340, {0xcb7b91, 0x3a}, {0xc000d99bc0, 0x4, 0x4})
	/workdir/go/src/cmd/compile/internal/ssa/func.go:716 +0x342
bootstrap/cmd/compile/internal/ssa.memState(0xc000d82340, {0xc000ec6200, 0x22, 0x40}, {0xc001046000, 0x22, 0x40})
	/workdir/go/src/cmd/compile/internal/ssa/tighten.go:240 +0x6c5
bootstrap/cmd/compile/internal/ssa.tighten(0xc000d82340)
[...]

Change-Id: Ic445fb48fe0f2c60ac67abe259b66594f1419152
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492335
Run-TryBot: Daniel Martí <mvdan@mvdan.cc>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
2023-05-03 21:28:37 +00:00
erifan01
ea8f037996 cmd/compile: enhance tighten pass for memory values
This CL enhances the tighten pass. Previously if a value has memory arg,
then the tighten pass won't move it, actually if the memory state is
consistent among definition and use block, we can move the value. This
CL optimizes this case. This is useful for the following situation:
b1:
  x = load(...mem)
  if(...) goto b2 else b3
b2:
  use(x)
b3:
  some_op_not_use_x

For the micro-benchmark mentioned in #56620, the performance improvement
is about 15%.
There's no noticeable performance change in the go1 benchmark.

Fixes #56620

Change-Id: I9b152754f27231f583a6995fc7cd8472aa7d390c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/458755
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Auto-Submit: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2023-05-03 19:56:09 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
1f570787a8 cmd/compile: enable reverse type inference
For #59338.

Change-Id: I8141d421cdc60e47ee5794fc1ca81246bd8a8a25
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/491475
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
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2023-05-03 19:36:20 +00:00
Cherry Mui
19fd96512c cmd/link: put zero-sized data symbols at same address as runtime.zerobase
Put zero-sized data symbols at same address as runtime.zerobase,
so zero-sized global variables have the same address as zero-sized
allocations.

Change-Id: Ib3145dc1b663a9794dfabc0e6abd2384960f2c49
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/490435
Run-TryBot: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
2023-04-28 18:35:43 +00:00
Austin Clements
0f099a4bc5 runtime, cmd: rationalize StackLimit and StackGuard
The current definitions of StackLimit and StackGuard only indirectly
specify the NOSPLIT stack limit and duplicate a literal constant
(928). Currently, they define the stack guard delta, and from there
compute the NOSPLIT limit.

Rationalize these by defining a new constant, abi.StackNosplitBase,
which consolidates and directly specifies the NOSPLIT stack limit (in
the default case). From this we then compute the stack guard delta,
inverting the relationship between these two constants. While we're
here, we rename StackLimit to StackNosplit to make it clearer what's
being limited.

This change does not affect the values of these constants in the
default configuration. It does slightly change how
StackGuardMultiplier values other than 1 affect the constants, but
this multiplier is a pretty rough heuristic anyway.

                    before after
stackNosplit           800   800
_StackGuard            928   928
stackNosplit -race    1728  1600
_StackGuard -race     1856  1728

For #59670.

Change-Id: Ia94094c5e47897e7c088d24b4a5e33f5c2768db5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/486976
Auto-Submit: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
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2023-04-21 19:28:56 +00:00
Austin Clements
d11ff3f081 Revert "runtime, cmd: rationalize StackLimit and StackGuard"
This reverts commit CL 486380.

Submitted out of order and breaks bootstrap.

Change-Id: I67bd225094b5c9713b97f70feba04d2c99b7da76
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/486916
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
TryBot-Bypass: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2023-04-20 16:19:35 +00:00
Austin Clements
921699fe5f runtime, cmd: rationalize StackLimit and StackGuard
The current definitions of StackLimit and StackGuard only indirectly
specify the NOSPLIT stack limit and duplicate a literal constant
(928). Currently, they define the stack guard delta, and from there
compute the NOSPLIT limit.

Rationalize these by defining a new constant, abi.StackNosplitBase,
which consolidates and directly specifies the NOSPLIT stack limit (in
the default case). From this we then compute the stack guard delta,
inverting the relationship between these two constants. While we're
here, we rename StackLimit to StackNosplit to make it clearer what's
being limited.

This change does not affect the values of these constants in the
default configuration. It does slightly change how
StackGuardMultiplier values other than 1 affect the constants, but
this multiplier is a pretty rough heuristic anyway.

                    before after
stackNosplit           800   800
_StackGuard            928   928
stackNosplit -race    1728  1600
_StackGuard -race     1856  1728

For #59670.

Change-Id: Ibe20825ebe0076bbd7b0b7501177b16c9dbcb79e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/486380
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
2023-04-20 16:05:21 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
d93f02010c cmd/compile/internal/types2: only mark variables as used if they are
Marking variables in erroneous variable declarations as used is
convenient for tests but doesn't necessarily hide follow-on errors
in real code: either the variable is not supposed to be declared in
the first place and then we should get an error if it is not used,
or it is there because it is intended to be used, and the we expect
an error it if is not used.

This brings types2 closer to go/types.

Change-Id: If7ee1298fc770f7ad0cefe7e968533fd50ec2343
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/486175
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
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2023-04-19 14:07:00 +00:00
Keith Randall
6b165577fe cmd/compile: remove memequal call from string compares in more cases
Add more rules to ensure that order doesn't matter.

Add memequal 0 rule.

Try to use a constant argument to memequal when one is available.

Fixes #59684

Change-Id: I36e85ffbd949396ed700ed6e8ec2bc3ae013f5d2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/485535
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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2023-04-18 21:31:33 +00:00
Than McIntosh
7c1ed1fa8f Revert "cmd/compile: rework marking of dead hidden closure functions"
This reverts commit http://go.dev/cl//484859

Reason for revert: causes linker errors in a number of google-internal tests.

Change-Id: I322252f784a46d2b1d447ebcdca86ce14bc0cc91
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/485755
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
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2023-04-18 16:03:22 +00:00
Michael Knyszek
ce10e9d845 Revert "cmd/compile: allow more inlining of functions that construct closures"
This reverts commit f8162a0e72.

Reason for revert: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/59680

Change-Id: I91821c691a2d019ff0ad5b69509e32f3d56b8f67
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/485498
Reviewed-by: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
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2023-04-17 21:45:00 +00:00
Than McIntosh
f8162a0e72 cmd/compile: allow more inlining of functions that construct closures
[This is a roll-forward of CL 479095, which was reverted due to a bad
interaction between inlining and escape analysis, then later fixed
fist with an attempt in CL 482355, then again in 484859 .]

Currently, when the inliner is determining if a function is
inlineable, it descends into the bodies of closures constructed by
that function. This has several unfortunate consequences:

- If the closure contains a disallowed operation (e.g., a defer), then
  the outer function can't be inlined. It makes sense that the
  *closure* can't be inlined in this case, but it doesn't make sense
  to punish the function that constructs the closure.

- The hairiness of the closure counts against the inlining budget of
  the outer function. Since we currently copy the closure body when
  inlining the outer function, this makes sense from the perspective
  of export data size and binary size, but ultimately doesn't make
  much sense from the perspective of what should be inlineable.

- Since the inliner walks into every closure created by an outer
  function in addition to starting a walk at every closure, this adds
  an n^2 factor to inlinability analysis.

This CL simply drops this behavior.

In std, this makes 57 more functions inlinable, and disallows inlining
for 10 (due to the basic instability of our bottom-up inlining
approach), for an net increase of 47 inlinable functions (+0.6%).

This will help significantly with the performance of the functions to
be added for #56102, which have a somewhat complicated nesting of
closures with a performance-critical fast path.

The downside of this seems to be a potential increase in export data
and text size, but the practical impact of this seems to be
negligible:

	       │    before    │           after            │
	       │    bytes     │    bytes      vs base      │
Go/binary        15.12Mi ± 0%   15.14Mi ± 0%  +0.16% (n=1)
Go/text          5.220Mi ± 0%   5.237Mi ± 0%  +0.32% (n=1)
Compile/binary   22.92Mi ± 0%   22.94Mi ± 0%  +0.07% (n=1)
Compile/text     8.428Mi ± 0%   8.435Mi ± 0%  +0.08% (n=1)

Updates #56102.

Change-Id: I6e938d596992ffb473cf51e7e598f372ce08deb0
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/484860
Run-TryBot: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
2023-04-17 14:52:41 +00:00
Than McIntosh
d240226fe5 cmd/compile: rework marking of dead hidden closure functions
This patch generalizes the code in the inliner that marks unreferenced
hidden closure functions as dead. Rather than doing the marking on the
fly (previous approach), this new approach does a single pass at the
end of inlining, which catches more dead functions.

Fixes #59638.
Updates #59404.
Updates #59547.

Change-Id: I54fd63e9e37c9123b08a3e7def7d1989919bba91
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/484859
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
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2023-04-17 14:52:32 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
74b52d9519 cmd/compile: better code generation for constant-fold switch
CL 399694 added constant-fold switch early in compilation. So function:

func f() string {
    switch intSize {
    case 32:
        return "32"
    case 64:
        return "64"
    default:
        panic("unreachable")
    }
}

will be constant-fold to:

func f() string {
    switch intSize {
    case 64:
        return "64"
    }
}

When this function get inlined, there is a check whether we can delay
declaring the result parameter until the "return" statement. For the
original function, we can't delay the result, because there's more than
one return statement. However, the constant-fold one can, because
there's on one return statement in the body now. The result parameter
~R0 ends up declaring inside the switch statement scope.

Now, when walking the switch statement, it's re-written into if-else
statement. Without typecheck.EvalConst, the if condition "if 64 == 64"
is passed as-is to the ssa generation pass. Because "64 == 64" is not a
constant, the ssagen creates normal blocks for branching the results.
This confuses the liveness analysis, because ~R0 is only live inside the
if block. With typecheck.EvalConst, "64 == 64" is evaluated to "true",
so ssagen can branch the result without emitting conditional blocks.

Instead, the constant-fold can be re-written as:

switch {
case true:
    // Body
}

So it does not depend on the delay results check during inlining. Adding
a test, which will fail when typecheck.EvalConst is removed, so we can
do the cleanup without breaking things.

Change-Id: I638730bb147140de84260653741431b807ff2f15
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/484316
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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2023-04-14 17:58:01 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
20c349e534 cmd/compile: reenable inline static init
Updates #58293
Updates #58339
Fixes #58439

Change-Id: I06d2d92f86fa4a672d69515c4066d69d3e0fc75b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/467016
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
2023-04-14 17:57:36 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
a141c58c85 cmd/compile: handle string concatenation in static init inliner
Static init inliner is using typecheck.EvalConst to handle string
concatenation expressions. But static init inliner may reveal constant
expressions after substitution, and the compiler needs to evaluate those
expressions in non-constant semantic. Using typecheck.EvalConst, which
always evaluates expressions in constant semantic, is not the right
choice.

For safety, this CL fold the logic to handle string concatenation to
static init inliner, so there won't be regression in handling constant
expressions in non-constant semantic. And also, future CL can simplify
typecheck.EvalConst logic.

Updates #58293
Updates #58339
Fixes #58439

Change-Id: I74068d99c245938e576afe9460cbd2b39677bbff
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/466277
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
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Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2023-04-14 17:57:14 +00:00
Keith Randall
2b92c39fe0 cmd/link: establish dependable package initialization order
(This is a retry of CL 462035 which was reverted at 474976.
The only change from that CL is the aix fix SRODATA->SNOPTRDATA
at inittask.go:141)

As described here:

https://github.com/golang/go/issues/31636#issuecomment-493271830

"Find the lexically earliest package that is not initialized yet,
but has had all its dependencies initialized, initialize that package,
 and repeat."

Simplify the runtime a bit, by just computing the ordering required
in the linker and giving a list to the runtime.

Update #31636
Fixes #57411

RELNOTE=yes

Change-Id: I28c09451d6aa677d7394c179d23c2c02c503fc56
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/478916
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
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2023-04-14 16:55:22 +00:00
Than McIntosh
8854be4180 Revert "cmd/compile: allow more inlining of functions that construct closures"
This reverts commit http://go.dev/cl/c/482356.

Reason for revert: Reverting this change again, since it is causing additional failures in google-internal testing.

Change-Id: I9234946f62e5bb18c2f873a65e8b298d04af0809
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/484735
Reviewed-by: Florian Zenker <floriank@google.com>
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2023-04-14 14:45:59 +00:00
Junwei Zuo
89567a35c1 cmd/compile: fix ir.StaticValue for ORANGE
Range statement will mutate the key and value, so we should treat them as reassigned.

Fixes #59572

Change-Id: I9c6b67d938760a0c6a1d9739f2737c67af4a3a10
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/483855
Run-TryBot: Wayne Zuo <wdvxdr@golangcn.org>
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Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
2023-04-12 19:28:47 +00:00
Johan Brandhorst-Satzkorn
319b75ed33 all: add wasip1 support
Fixes #58141

Co-authored-by: Richard Musiol <neelance@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Achille Roussel <achille.roussel@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Julien Fabre <ju.pryz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Evan Phoenix <evan@phx.io>
Change-Id: I49b66946acc90fdf09ed9223096bfec9a1e5b923
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/479627
Run-TryBot: Johan Brandhorst-Satzkorn <johan.brandhorst@gmail.com>
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2023-04-11 20:56:32 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
63a08e61bd cmd/compile: teach prove about bitwise OR operation
For now, only apply the rule if either of arguments are constants. That
would catch a lot of real user code, without slowing down the compiler
with code generated for string comparison (experience in CL 410336).

Updates #57959
Fixes #45928

Change-Id: Ie2e830d6d0d71cda3947818b22c2775bd94f7971
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/483359
Auto-Submit: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
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2023-04-10 17:13:41 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
231f290e51 runtime: mark map bucket slots as empty during map clear
So iterators that are in progress can know entries have been deleted and
terminate the iterator properly.

Update #55002
Update #56351
Fixes #59411

Change-Id: I924f16a00fe4ed6564f730a677348a6011d3fb67
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/481935
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Auto-Submit: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
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2023-04-08 05:25:04 +00:00
Keith Randall
b3bc8620f8 cmd/compile: use correct type for byteswaps on multi-byte stores
Use the type of the store for the byteswap, not the type of the
store's value argument.

Normally when we're storing a 16-bit value, the value being stored is
also typed as 16 bits. But sometimes it is typed as something smaller,
usually because it is the result of an upcast from a smaller value,
and that upcast needs no instructions.

If the type of the store's arg is thinner than the type being stored,
and the byteswap'd value uses that thinner type, and the byteswap'd
value needs to be spilled & restored, that spill/restore happens using
the thinner type, which causes us to lose some of the top bits of the
value.

Fixes #59367

Change-Id: If6ce1e8a76f18bf8e9d79871b6caa438bc3cce4d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/481395
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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2023-04-07 21:11:29 +00:00
Than McIntosh
39986d28e4 cmd/compile: allow more inlining of functions that construct closures
[This is a roll-forward of CL 479095, which was reverted due to a bad
interaction between inlining and escape analysis since fixed in CL 482355.]

Currently, when the inliner is determining if a function is
inlineable, it descends into the bodies of closures constructed by
that function. This has several unfortunate consequences:

- If the closure contains a disallowed operation (e.g., a defer), then
  the outer function can't be inlined. It makes sense that the
  *closure* can't be inlined in this case, but it doesn't make sense
  to punish the function that constructs the closure.

- The hairiness of the closure counts against the inlining budget of
  the outer function. Since we currently copy the closure body when
  inlining the outer function, this makes sense from the perspective
  of export data size and binary size, but ultimately doesn't make
  much sense from the perspective of what should be inlineable.

- Since the inliner walks into every closure created by an outer
  function in addition to starting a walk at every closure, this adds
  an n^2 factor to inlinability analysis.

This CL simply drops this behavior.

In std, this makes 57 more functions inlinable, and disallows inlining
for 10 (due to the basic instability of our bottom-up inlining
approach), for an net increase of 47 inlinable functions (+0.6%).

This will help significantly with the performance of the functions to
be added for #56102, which have a somewhat complicated nesting of
closures with a performance-critical fast path.

The downside of this seems to be a potential increase in export data
and text size, but the practical impact of this seems to be
negligible:

	       │    before    │           after            │
	       │    bytes     │    bytes      vs base      │
Go/binary        15.12Mi ± 0%   15.14Mi ± 0%  +0.16% (n=1)
Go/text          5.220Mi ± 0%   5.237Mi ± 0%  +0.32% (n=1)
Compile/binary   22.92Mi ± 0%   22.94Mi ± 0%  +0.07% (n=1)
Compile/text     8.428Mi ± 0%   8.435Mi ± 0%  +0.08% (n=1)

Updates #56102.

Change-Id: I1f4fc96c71609c8feb59fecdb92b69ba7e3b5b41
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/482356
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Run-TryBot: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
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2023-04-07 15:12:08 +00:00
Than McIntosh
f1caf1aa1c cmd/compile: deadcode unreferenced hidden closures during inlining
When a closure is inlined, it may contain other hidden closures, which
the inliner will duplicate, rendering the original nested closures as
unreachable. Because they are unreachable, they don't get processed in
escape analysis, meaning that go/defer statements don't get rewritten,
which can then in turn trigger errors in walk. This patch looks for
nested hidden closures and marks them as dead, so that they can be
skipped later on in the compilation flow.  NB: if during escape
analysis we rediscover a hidden closure (due to an explicit reference)
that was previously marked dead, revive it at that point.

Fixes #59404.

Change-Id: I76db1e9cf1ee38bd1147aeae823f916dbbbf081b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/482355
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Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
2023-04-07 15:07:18 +00:00
ruinan
9be533a8ee cmd/compile: get more bounds info from logic operators in prove pass
Currently, the prove pass can get knowledge from some specific logic
operators only before the CFG is explored, which means that the bounds
information of the branch will be ignored.

This CL updates the facts table by the logic operators in every
branch. Combined with the branch information, this will be helpful for
BCE in some circumstances.

Fixes #57243

Change-Id: I0bd164f1b47804ccfc37879abe9788740b016fd5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/419555
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Eric Fang <eric.fang@arm.com>
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Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
2023-04-07 10:09:11 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
1e5955aabd cmd/compile: don't set range expr key/value type if already set
Unified IR already records the correct type for them.

Fixes #59378

Change-Id: I275c45b48f67bde55c8e2079d60b5868d0acde7f
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/481555
Reviewed-by: Michael Knyszek <mknyszek@google.com>
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2023-04-05 17:48:15 +00:00
Than McIntosh
f5371581c7 Revert "cmd/compile: allow more inlining of functions that construct closures"
This reverts commit http://go.dev/cl//479095

Reason for revert: causes failures in google-internal testing

Change-Id: If1018b35be0b8627e2959f116179ada24d44d67c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/481637
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2023-04-03 14:51:33 +00:00
Keith Randall
8edcdddb23 crypto/subtle: don't cast to *uintptr when word size is 0
Casting to a *uintptr is not ok if there isn't at least 8 bytes of
data backing that pointer (on 64-bit archs).
So although we end up making a slice of 0 length with that pointer,
the cast itself doesn't know that.
Instead, bail early if the result is going to be 0 length.

Fixes #59334

Change-Id: Id3c0e09d341d838835c0382cccfb0f71dc3dc7e6
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/480575
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Reviewed-by: Emmanuel Odeke <emmanuel@orijtech.com>
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Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
2023-03-31 23:25:07 +00:00
Austin Clements
2ff684a541 cmd/compile: allow more inlining of functions that construct closures
Currently, when the inliner is determining if a function is
inlineable, it descends into the bodies of closures constructed by
that function. This has several unfortunate consequences:

- If the closure contains a disallowed operation (e.g., a defer), then
  the outer function can't be inlined. It makes sense that the
  *closure* can't be inlined in this case, but it doesn't make sense
  to punish the function that constructs the closure.

- The hairiness of the closure counts against the inlining budget of
  the outer function. Since we currently copy the closure body when
  inlining the outer function, this makes sense from the perspective
  of export data size and binary size, but ultimately doesn't make
  much sense from the perspective of what should be inlineable.

- Since the inliner walks into every closure created by an outer
  function in addition to starting a walk at every closure, this adds
  an n^2 factor to inlinability analysis.

This CL simply drops this behavior.

In std, this makes 57 more functions inlinable, and disallows inlining
for 10 (due to the basic instability of our bottom-up inlining
approach), for an net increase of 47 inlinable functions (+0.6%).

This will help significantly with the performance of the functions to
be added for #56102, which have a somewhat complicated nesting of
closures with a performance-critical fast path.

The downside of this seems to be a potential increase in export data
and text size, but the practical impact of this seems to be
negligible:

               │    before    │           after            │
               │    bytes     │    bytes      vs base      │
Go/binary        15.12Mi ± 0%   15.14Mi ± 0%  +0.16% (n=1)
Go/text          5.220Mi ± 0%   5.237Mi ± 0%  +0.32% (n=1)
Compile/binary   22.92Mi ± 0%   22.94Mi ± 0%  +0.07% (n=1)
Compile/text     8.428Mi ± 0%   8.435Mi ± 0%  +0.08% (n=1)

Change-Id: Ie9e38104fed5689a94c368288653fd7cb4b7a35e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/479095
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
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2023-03-31 20:00:40 +00:00
Keith Randall
0d9eb8bea2 cmd/compile: casts from slices to array pointers are known to be non-nil
The cast is proceeded by a bounds check. If the bounds check passes
then we know the pointer in the slice is non-nil.

... except casts to pointers of 0-sized arrays. They are strange, as
the bounds check can pass for a nil input.

Change-Id: Ic01cf4a82d59fbe3071d4b271c94efca9cafaec1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/479335
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
2023-03-29 21:55:11 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
91a40f43b6 go/types, types2: don't report assignment mismatch errors if there are other errors
Change the Checker.use/useLHS functions to report if all "used"
expressions evaluated without error. Use that information to
control whether to report an assignment mismatch error or not.
This will reduce the number of errors reported per assignment,
where the assignment mismatch is only one of the errors.

Change-Id: Ia0fc3203253b002e4e1d5759d8d5644999af6884
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/478756
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
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2023-03-28 22:22:08 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
a6f564c8e9 test: add test that caused a gofrontend crash
For #55242

Change-Id: I092b1881623ea997b178d038c0afd10cd5bca937
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/479898
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
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2023-03-28 20:27:13 +00:00
Keith Randall
61bc17f04e cmd/compile: don't assume pointer of a slice is non-nil
unsafe.SliceData can return pointers which are nil. That function gets
lowered to the SSA OpSlicePtr, which the compiler assumes is non-nil.
This used to be the case as OpSlicePtr was only used in situations
where the bounds check already passed. But with unsafe.SliceData that
is no longer the case.

There are situations where we know it is nil. Use Bounded() to
indicate that.

I looked through all the uses of OSPTR and added SetBounded where it
made sense. Most OSPTR results are passed directly to runtime calls
(e.g. memmove), so even if we know they are non-nil that info isn't
helpful.

Fixes #59293

Change-Id: I437a15330db48e0082acfb1f89caf8c56723fc51
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/479896
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
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2023-03-28 19:55:43 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
8c5e8a38df go/types, types2: refactor initVars
As with changes in prior CLs, we don't suppress legitimate
"declared but not used" errors anymore simply because the
respective variables are used in incorrect assignments,
unrelated to the variables in question.
Adjust several (ancient) tests accordingly.

Change-Id: I5826393264d9d8085c64777a330d4efeb735dd2d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/478716
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
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2023-03-28 18:13:13 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
abf9b112fd go/types, types2: more systematic use of Checker.use und useLHS
This CL re-introduces useLHS because we don't want to suppress
correct "declared but not used" errors for variables that only
appear on the LHS of an assignment (using Checker.use would mark
them as used).

This CL also adjusts a couple of places where types2 differed
from go/types (and suppressed valid "declared and not used"
errors). Now those errors are surfaced. Adjusted a handful of
tests accordingly.

Change-Id: Ia555139a05049887aeeec9e5221b1f41432c1a57
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/478635
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
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Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
2023-03-28 14:28:33 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
bf9d9b7dba go/types, types2: better error message for some invalid integer array lengths
Don't say "array length must be integer" if it is in fact an integer.

Fixes #59209

Change-Id: If60b93a0418f5837ac334412d3838eec25eeb855
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/479115
Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
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2023-03-27 18:59:51 +00:00
Robert Griesemer
171850f169 cmd/compile: don't panic if unsafe.Sizeof/Offsetof is used with oversize types
In the Sizes API, recognize an overflow (to a negative value) as a
consequence of an oversize value, and specify as such in the API.

Adjust the various size computations to take overflow into account.

Recognize a negative size or offset as an error and report it rather
than panicking.

Use the same protocol for results provided by the default (StdSizes)
and external Sizes implementations.

Add a new error code TypeTooLarge for the new errors.

Fixes #59190.
Fixes #59207.

Change-Id: I8c33a9e69932760275100112dde627289ac7695b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/478919
Run-TryBot: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com>
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2023-03-27 16:52:49 +00:00
erifan01
42f99b203d cmd/compile: optimize cmp to cmn under conditions < and >= on arm64
Under the right conditions we can optimize cmp comparisons to cmn
comparisons, such as:
func foo(a, b int) int {
  var c int
  if a + b < 0 {
  	c = 1
  }
  return c
}

Previously it's compiled as:
  ADD     R1, R0, R1
  CMP     $0, R1
  CSET    LT, R0
With this CL it's compiled as:
  CMN     R1, R0
  CSET    MI, R0
Here we need to pay attention to the overflow situation of a+b, the MI
flag means N==1, which doesn't honor the overflow flag V, its value
depends only on the sign of the result. So it has the same semantic of
the Go code, so it's correct.

Similarly, this CL also optimizes the case of >= comparison
using the PL conditional flag.

Change-Id: I47179faba5b30cca84ea69bafa2ad5241bf6dfba
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/476116
Run-TryBot: Eric Fang <eric.fang@arm.com>
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Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
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2023-03-24 01:19:09 +00:00
Ian Lance Taylor
09e9a9eac9 test: add test that caused gofrontend crash
For #59169

Change-Id: Id72ad9fe8b6e1d7cf64f972520ae8858f70c025a
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/478217
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Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2023-03-22 18:56:30 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
07559ceb72 cmd/compile: mark negative size memclr non-inlineable
Fixes #59174

Change-Id: I72b2b068830b90d42a0186addd004fb3175b9126
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/478375
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
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Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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2023-03-22 16:43:10 +00:00
erifan01
91a2e921dd cmd/compile: fix incorrect truncating when converting CMP to TST on arm64
CL 420434 optimized CMP into TST in some situations, but it has a bug,
these four rules are not correct:
(LessThan (CMPWconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (LessThan (TSTconst [c] y))
(LessEqual (CMPWconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (LessEqual (TSTconst [c] y))
(GreaterThan (CMPWconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (GreaterThan (TSTconst [c] y))
(GreaterEqual (CMPWconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (GreaterEqual (TSTconst [c] y))

But due to the existence of this rule
(LessThan (CMPWconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 =>
(LessThan (TSTWconst [int32(c)] y)), the above rules have never been
fired. This CL corrects them as:
(LessThan (CMPconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (LessThan (TSTconst [c] y))
(LessEqual (CMPconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (LessEqual (TSTconst [c] y))
(GreaterThan (CMPconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (GreaterThan (TSTconst [c] y))
(GreaterEqual (CMPconst [0] x:(ANDconst [c] y))) && x.Uses == 1 => (GreaterEqual (TSTconst [c] y))

Change-Id: I7d60bcc9a266ee58388baeaab9f493b57cf1ad55
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/473617
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2023-03-22 08:32:53 +00:00
Yi Yang
da4687923b cmd/compile: add rewrite rules for arithmetic operations
Add the following common local transformations

(t + x) - (t + y) == x - y
(t + x) - (y + t) == x - y
(x + t) - (y + t) == x - y
(x + t) - (t + y) == x - y
(x - t) + (t + y) == x + y
(x - t) + (y + t) == x + y

The compiler itself matches such patterns many times. This also aligns with other popular compilers.

Fixes #59111

Change-Id: Ibdfdb414782f8fcaa20b84ac5d43d0d9ae2c7b60
GitHub-Last-Rev: 1aad82e62e
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/go#59119
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/477555
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
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2023-03-20 15:42:09 +00:00
Wayne Zuo
cedfcba3e8 cmd/compile: instrinsify TrailingZeros{8,32,64} for 386
This CL add support for instrinsifying the TrialingZeros{8,32,64}
functions for 386 architecture. We need handle the case when the input
is 0, which could lead to undefined output from the BSFL instruction.

Next CL will remove the assembly code in runtime/internal/sys package.

Change-Id: Ic168edf68e81bf69a536102100fdd3f56f0f4a1b
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/475735
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Wayne Zuo <wdvxdr@golangcn.org>
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2023-03-14 08:10:32 +00:00
Than McIntosh
f5c7416511 cmd/compile: reorder operations in SCCs to enable more inlining
This patch changes the relative order of "CanInline" and "InlineCalls"
operations within the inliner for clumps of functions corresponding to
strongly connected components in the call graph. This helps increase
the amount of inlining within SCCs, particularly in Go's runtime
package, which has a couple of very large SCCs.

For a given SCC of the form { fn1, fn2, ... fnk }, the inliner would
(prior to this point) walk through the list of functions and for each
function first compute inlinability ("CanInline") and then perform
inlining ("InlineCalls"). This meant that if there was an inlinable
call from fn3 to fn4 (for example), this call would never be inlined,
since at the point fn3 was visited, we would not have computed
inlinability for fn4.

We now do inlinability analysis for all functions in an SCC first,
then do actual inlining for everything. This results in 47 additional
inlines in the Go runtime package (a fairly modest increase
percentage-wise of 0.6%).

Updates #58905.

Change-Id: I48dbb1ca16f0b12f256d9eeba8cf7f3e6dd853cd
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/474955
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Reviewed-by: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
2023-03-09 22:13:26 +00:00
Keith Randall
642542cb3c Revert "cmd/link: establish dependable package initialization order"
This reverts commit ce2a609909.
aka CL 462035

Reason for revert: this CL is causing some problems in some internal Google programs.

Change-Id: I4476b8d8d2c3d7b5703d1d85c93baebb4b4e5d26
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/474976
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2023-03-09 19:19:41 +00:00
Keith Randall
54d05e4e25 test: test for issue 53087
This issue has been fixed with unified IR, so just add a test.

Update #53087

Change-Id: I965d9f27529fa6b7c89e2921c65e5a100daeb9fe
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/410197
Reviewed-by: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuel Odeke <emmanuel@orijtech.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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Auto-Submit: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
2023-03-08 16:23:09 +00:00
Cherry Mui
b675a75c3d cmd/compile: enable address folding for globals on ARM64, just not -dynlink mode
On ARM64, in -dynlink mode (building a shared library or a plugin),
accessing global variable is made using the GOT. Currently, the
GOT accessing instruction sequence our assembler generates doesn't
handle large offset well, so we don't fold the offset into loads
and stores in the compiler. Currently, the rewrite rules are
guarded with the -shared flag. However, the GOT access
instructions are only generated in the -dynlink mode (which
implies -shared, but not the other direction).

CL 445535 attempted to remove the guard althgether. But that
causes build failure for -dynlink mode for the reason above. This
CL changes it to guard specifically on -dynlink mode, allowing
the optimization in more cases (-shared but not -dynlink build
modes).

Updates #58826.

Change-Id: I1391db6a33e8d0455a304e7cae7fcfdeb49bfdab
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/473999
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2023-03-07 21:29:30 +00:00
David Chase
c20d959163 cmd/compile: experimental loop iterator capture semantics change
Adds:
GOEXPERIMENT=loopvar (expected way of invoking)
-d=loopvar={-1,0,1,2,11,12} (for per-package control and/or logging)
-d=loopvarhash=... (for hash debugging)

loopvar=11,12 are for testing, benchmarking, and debugging.

If enabled,for loops of the form `for x,y := range thing`, if x and/or
y are addressed or captured by a closure, are transformed by renaming
x/y to a temporary and prepending an assignment to the body of the
loop x := tmp_x.  This changes the loop semantics by making each
iteration's instance of x be distinct from the others (currently they
are all aliased, and when this matters, it is almost always a bug).

3-range with captured iteration variables are also transformed,
though it is a more complex transformation.

"Optimized" to do a simpler transformation for
3-clause for where the increment is empty.

(Prior optimization of address-taking under Return disabled, because
it was incorrect; returns can have loops for children.  Restored in
a later CL.)

Includes support for -d=loopvarhash=<binary string> intended for use
with hash search and GOCOMPILEDEBUG=loopvarhash=<binary string>
(use `gossahash -e loopvarhash command-that-fails`).

Minor feature upgrades to hash-triggered features; clients can specify
that file-position hashes use only the most-inline position, and/or that
they use only the basenames of source files (not the full directory path).
Most-inlined is the right choice for debugging loop-iteration change
once the semantics are linked to the package across inlining; basename-only
makes it tractable to write tests (which, otherwise, depend on the full
pathname of the source file and thus vary).

Updates #57969.

Change-Id: I180a51a3f8d4173f6210c861f10de23de8a1b1db
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/411904
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Run-TryBot: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
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2023-03-06 18:34:24 +00:00
Keith Randall
ce2a609909 cmd/link: establish dependable package initialization order
As described here:

https://github.com/golang/go/issues/31636#issuecomment-493271830

"Find the lexically earliest package that is not initialized yet,
but has had all its dependencies initialized, initialize that package,
 and repeat."

Simplify the runtime a bit, by just computing the ordering required
in the linker and giving a list to the runtime.

Update #31636
Fixes #57411

RELNOTE=yes

Change-Id: I1e4d3878ebe6e8953527aedb730824971d722cac
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/462035
Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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2023-03-03 23:11:37 +00:00
Keith Randall
cbb9cd03f8 cmd/compile: ensure FuncForPC works on closures that start with NOPs
A 0-sized no-op shouldn't prevent us from detecting that the first
instruction is from an inlined callee.

Update #58300

Change-Id: Ic5f6ed108c54a32c05e9b2264b516f2cc17e4619
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/467977
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
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2023-03-03 16:35:00 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
37a2004b43 cmd/compile: relax overly strict assertion
The assertion here was to make sure the newly constructed and
typechecked expression selected the same receiver-qualified method,
but in the case of anonymous receiver types we can actually end up
with separate types.Field instances corresponding to each types.Type
instance. In that case, the assertion spuriously failed.

The fix here is to relax and assertion and just compare the method's
name and type (including receiver type).

Fixes #58563.

Change-Id: I67d51ddb020e6ed52671473c93fc08f283a40886
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/471676
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TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
2023-03-01 20:26:10 +00:00
ruinan
4d180f71dc cmd/compile: omit redundant sign/unsign extension on arm64
On Arm64, all 32-bit instructions will ignore the upper 32 bits and
clear them to zero for the result. No need to do an unsign extend before
a 32 bit op.

This CL removes the redundant unsign extension only for the existing
32-bit opcodes, and also omits the sign extension when the upper bit of
the result can be predicted.

Fixes #42162

Change-Id: I61e6670bfb8982572430e67a4fa61134a3ea240a
CustomizedGitHooks: yes
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/427454
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Eric Fang <eric.fang@arm.com>
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2023-02-28 03:16:44 +00:00
Dmitri Shuralyov
7a0799b2c0 cmd/dist, test: convert test/run.go runner to a cmd/go test
As motivated on the issue, we want to move the functionality of the
run.go program to happen via a normal go test. Each .go test case in
the GOROOT/test directory gets a subtest, and cmd/go's support for
parallel test execution replaces run.go's own implementation thereof.

The goal of this change is to have fairly minimal and readable diff
while making an atomic changeover. The working directory is modified
during the test execution to be GOROOT/test as it was with run.go,
and most of the test struct and its run method are kept unchanged.
The next CL in the stack applies further simplifications and cleanups
that become viable.

There's no noticeable difference in test execution time: it takes around
60-80 seconds both before and after on my machine. Test caching, which
the previous runner lacked, can shorten the time significantly.

For #37486.
Fixes #56844.

Change-Id: I209619dc9d90e7529624e49c01efeadfbeb5c9ae
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/463276
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2023-02-28 01:11:37 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
fa9efd9171 cmd/compile/internal/noder: correct positions for synthetic closures
When inlining functions that contain function literals, we need to be
careful about position information. The OCLOSURE node should use the
inline-adjusted position, but the ODCLFUNC and its body should use the
original positions.

However, the same problem can arise with certain generic constructs,
which require the compiler to synthesize function literals to insert
dictionary arguments.

go.dev/cl/425395 fixed the issue with user-written function literals
in a somewhat kludgy way; this CL extends the same solution to
synthetic function literals.

This is all quite subtle and the solutions aren't terribly robust, so
longer term it's probably desirable to revisit how we track inlining
context for positions. But for now, this seems to be the least bad
solution, esp. for backporting to 1.20.

Updates #54625.
Fixes #58513.

Change-Id: Icc43a70dbb11a0e665cbc9e6a64ef274ad8253d1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/468415
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Reviewed-by: Than McIntosh <thanm@google.com>
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2023-02-27 23:07:49 +00:00
Michael Munday
85d54a7667 cmd/compile: use zero constants in comparisons where possible
Some integer comparisons with 1 and -1 can be rewritten as comparisons
with 0. For example, x < 1 is equivalent to x <= 0. This is an
advantageous transformation on riscv64 because comparisons with zero
do not require a constant to be loaded into a register. Other
architectures will likely benefit too and the transformation is
relatively benign on architectures that do not benefit.

Change-Id: I2ce9821dd7605a660eb71d76e83a61f9bae1bf25
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/350831
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Knyszek <mknyszek@google.com>
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2023-02-27 21:38:30 +00:00
Lynn Boger
ebe49f98c8 cmd/compile: inline constant sized memclrNoHeapPointers calls on PPC64
Update the function isInlinableMemclr for ppc64 and ppc64le
to enable inlining for the constant sized cases < 512.

Larger cases can use dcbz which performs better but requires
alignment checking so it is best to continue using memclrNoHeapPointers
for those cases.

Results on p10:

MemclrKnownSize1         2.07ns ± 0%     0.57ns ± 0%   -72.59%
MemclrKnownSize2         2.56ns ± 5%     0.57ns ± 0%   -77.82%
MemclrKnownSize4         5.15ns ± 0%     0.57ns ± 0%   -89.00%
MemclrKnownSize8         2.23ns ± 0%     0.57ns ± 0%   -74.57%
MemclrKnownSize16        2.23ns ± 0%     0.50ns ± 0%   -77.74%
MemclrKnownSize32        2.28ns ± 0%     0.56ns ± 0%   -75.28%
MemclrKnownSize64        2.49ns ± 0%     0.72ns ± 0%   -70.95%
MemclrKnownSize112       2.97ns ± 2%     1.14ns ± 0%   -61.72%
MemclrKnownSize128       4.64ns ± 6%     2.45ns ± 1%   -47.17%
MemclrKnownSize192       5.45ns ± 5%     2.79ns ± 0%   -48.87%
MemclrKnownSize248       4.51ns ± 0%     2.83ns ± 0%   -37.12%
MemclrKnownSize256       6.34ns ± 1%     3.58ns ± 0%   -43.53%
MemclrKnownSize512       3.64ns ± 0%     3.64ns ± 0%    -0.03%
MemclrKnownSize1024      4.73ns ± 0%     4.73ns ± 0%    +0.01%
MemclrKnownSize4096      17.1ns ± 0%     17.1ns ± 0%    +0.07%
MemclrKnownSize512KiB    2.12µs ± 0%     2.12µs ± 0%      ~     (all equal)

Change-Id: If1abf5749f4802c64523a41fe0058bd144d0ea46
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/464340
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2023-02-23 18:57:27 +00:00
Matthew Dempsky
9f834a559c test: add regress test for #58572
Fixes #58572.

Change-Id: I75fa432afefc3e036ed9a6a9002a29d7b23105ee
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/468880
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
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2023-02-17 03:59:20 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
93f10b8829 cmd/compile: fix wrong escape analysis for go/defer generic calls
For go/defer calls like "defer f(x, y)", the compiler rewrites it to:

	x1, y1 := x, y
	defer func() { f(x1, y1) }()

However, if "f" needs runtime type information, the "RType" field will
refer to the outer ".dict" param, causing wrong liveness analysis.

To fix this, if "f" refers to outer ".dict", the dict param will be
copied to an autotmp, and "f" will refer to this autotmp instead.

Fixes #58341

Change-Id: I238b6e75441442b5540d39bc818205398e80c94d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/466035
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
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2023-02-13 21:28:54 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
b7736cbceb cmd/compile: disable inline static init optimization
There are a plenty of regression in 1.20 with this optimization. This CL
disable inline static init, so it's safer to backport to 1.20 branch.

The optimization will be enabled again during 1.21 cycle.

Updates #58293
Updates #58339
For #58293

Change-Id: If5916008597b46146b4dc7108c6b389d53f35e95
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/467015
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
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2023-02-09 19:49:12 +00:00
Sung Yoon Whang
3161081c12 cmd/compile/internal/staticinit: fix panic in interface conversion
This patch fixes a panic from incorrect interface conversion from
*ir.BasicLit to *ir.ConstExpr. This only occurs when nounified
GOEXPERIMENT is set, so ideally it should be backported to Go
1.20 and removed from master.

Fixes #58339

Change-Id: I357069d7ee1707d5cc6811bd2fbdd7b0456323ae
GitHub-Last-Rev: 641dedb5f9
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/go#58389
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/466175
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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2023-02-09 15:21:37 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
fd208c8850 cmd/compile: remove constant arithmetic overflows during typecheck
Since go1.19, these errors are already reported by types2 for any user's
Go code. Compiler generated code, which looks like constant expression
should be evaluated as non-constant semantic, which allows overflows.

Fixes #58293

Change-Id: I6f0049a69bdb0a8d0d7a0db49c7badaa92598ea2
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/465096
Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Tobias Klauser <tobias.klauser@gmail.com>
2023-02-09 09:33:47 +00:00
Jorropo
0d8d181bd5 cmd/compile: use MakeResult in empty MakeSlice elimination
This gets eliminated by thoses rules above:
  // for rewriting results of some late-expanded rewrites (below)
  (SelectN [0] (MakeResult x ___)) => x
  (SelectN [1] (MakeResult x y ___)) => y
  (SelectN [2] (MakeResult x y z ___)) => z

Fixes #58161

Change-Id: I4fbfd52c72c06b6b3db906bd9910b6dbb7fe8975
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/463846
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
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Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
2023-02-08 22:31:12 +00:00
Wayne Zuo
d7ac5d1480 cmd/compile: intrinsify math/bits/ReverseBytes{32|64} for 386
The BSWAPL instruction is supported in i486 and newer.
https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/MinimumRequirements#386 says we
support "All Pentium MMX or later". The Pentium is also referred to as
i586, so that we are safe with these instructions.

Change-Id: I6dea1f9d864a45bb07c8f8f35a81cfe16cca216c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/465515
Run-TryBot: Wayne Zuo <wdvxdr@golangcn.org>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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Reviewed-by: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
2023-02-08 03:43:23 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
abd55d8483 cmd/compile: fix inline static init arguments substitued tree
Blank node must be ignored when building arguments substitued tree.
Otherwise, it could be used to replace other blank node in left hand
side of an assignment, causing an invalid IR node.

Consider the following code:

	type S1 struct {
		s2 S2
	}

	type S2 struct{}

	func (S2) Make() S2 {
		return S2{}
	}

	func (S1) Make() S1 {
		return S1{s2: S2{}.Make()}
	}

	var _ = S1{}.Make()

After staticAssignInlinedCall, the assignment becomes:

	var _ = S1{s2: S2{}.Make()}

and the arg substitued tree is "map[*ir.Name]ir.Node{_: S1{}}". Now,
when doing static assignment, if there is any assignment to blank node,
for example:

	_ := S2{}

That blank node will be replaced with "S1{}":

	S1{} := S2{}

So constructing an invalid IR which causes the ICE.

Fixes #58325

Change-Id: I21b48357f669a7e02a7eb4325246aadc31f78fb9
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/465098
Run-TryBot: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Auto-Submit: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
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Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
2023-02-08 02:44:20 +00:00
Cuong Manh Le
1bd0405b8f test: add test for issue 58345
CL 458619 fixed the problem un-intentionally, so adding test to prevent
regression happening.

Updates #58345

Change-Id: I80cf60716ef85e142d769e8621fce19c826be03d
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/465455
Auto-Submit: Cuong Manh Le <cuong.manhle.vn@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@google.com>
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Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
2023-02-07 20:59:40 +00:00
Keith Randall
103f37497f cmd/compile: ensure first instruction in a function is not inlined
People are using this to get the name of the function from a function type:

runtime.FuncForPC(reflect.ValueOf(fn).Pointer()).Name()

Unfortunately, this technique falls down when the first instruction
of the function is from an inlined callee. Then the expression above
gets you the name of the inlined function instead of the function itself.

To fix this, ensure that the first instruction is never from an inlinee.
Normally functions have prologs so those are already fine. In just the
cases where a function is a leaf with no local variables, and an instruction
from an inlinee appears first in the prog list, add a nop at the start
of the function to hold a non-inlined position.

Consider the nop a "mini-prolog" for leaf functions.

Fixes #58300

Change-Id: Ie37092f4ac3167fe8e5ef4a2207b14abc1786897
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/465076
Run-TryBot: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
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2023-02-06 20:39:54 +00:00
Archana R
a432d89137 cmd/compile: add rules to emit SETBC/R instructions on power10
This CL adds rules that replaces instances of ISEL that produce
a boolean result based on a condition register by SETBC/SETBCR
operations. On Power10 these are convereted to SETBC/SETBCR
instructions that use one register instead of 3 registers
conventionally used by ISEL and hence reduces register pressure.
On loops written specifically to exercise such instances of ISEL
extensively, a performance improvement of 2.5% is seen on Power10.
Also added verification tests to verify correct generation of
SETBC/SETBCR instructions on Power10.

Change-Id: Ib719897f09d893de40324440a43052dca026e8fa
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/449795
Reviewed-by: Michael Knyszek <mknyszek@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
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2023-02-06 12:49:53 +00:00