For #58408Fixes#60211
Change-Id: I30f5678b46e15121865b19d1c0f82698493fad4e
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495079
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I think there is a theoretical possibility of a mistake before this CL.
pollCache.free would increment fdseq, but would not update atomicInfo.
The epoll code could compare to fdseq before the increment, but suspend
before calling setEventErr. The pollCache could get reallocated,
and pollOpen could clear eventErr. Then the setEventErr could continue
and set it again. Then pollOpen could call publishInfo.
Avoid this rather remote possibility by calling publishInfo after
incrementing fdseq. That ensures that delayed setEventErr will not
modify the eventErr flag.
Fixes#60133
Change-Id: I69e336535312544690821c9fd53f3023ff15b80c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495297
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these address comments on CLs in the large refactoring stack
recently submitted.
Change-Id: Ic9023c32aafe4dda953b42c9a36834d3ab3432eb
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495835
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This enables JSON output for all tests run by dist.
Most the complexity here is that, in order to disambiguate JSON
records from different package variants, we have to rewrite the JSON
stream on the fly to include variant information. We do this by
rewriting the Package field to be pkg:variant so existing CI systems
will naturally pick up the disambiguated test name.
Fixes#37486.
Change-Id: I0094e5e27b3a02ffc108534b8258c699ed8c3b87
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494958
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Currently, all uses of rtPreFunc are to print a message and skip a
test. When we move to JSON, the logic to just "print a message" is
going to be more complicated, so refactor this so the function returns
the skip message and we print it in just one place. We also rename the
option to rtSkipFunc to better represent what we use it for.
For #37486.
Change-Id: Ibd537064fa646a956a1c0f85a5d8c6febd098dde
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495856
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Many of the commands dist test executes are "background" commands run
by a work queue system. The work queue allows it to run commands in
parallel, but still serialize their output. Currently, the work queue
system assumes that exec.Cmd.Stdout and Stderr will be nil and that it
can take complete control over them.
We're about to inject output filters on many of these commands, so we
need a way to interpose on Stdout and Stderr. This CL rearranges
responsibilities in the work queue system to make that possible. Now,
the thing enqueuing the work item is responsible to constructing the
Cmd to write its output to work.out. There's only one place that
constructs work objects (there used to be many more), so that's
relatively easy, and sets us up to add filters.
For #37486.
Change-Id: I55ab71ddd456a12fdbf676bb49f698fc08a5689b
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There are no uses of addCmd, so delete it. The only use of bgDirCmd is
dirCmd, so inline it. Now the only function that interacts with the
work queue is registerTest and dist's "background commands" are used
exclusively in goTest.bgCommand and registerTest (which calls
goTest.bgCommand).
For #37486.
Change-Id: Iebbb24cf9dbee45f3975fe9504d858493e1cd947
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Pull in CL 492990. This teaches 'go mod tidy' and other go subcommands
that write go.mod files to use semantic sort for exclude blocks, gated
on said files declaring Go version 1.21 or higher.
go get golang.org/x/mod@e7bea8f1d64f # includes CL 492990
go mod tidy
go mod vendor
Fixes#60028.
Change-Id: Ia9342dcc23cd68de068a70657b59c25f69afa381
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494578
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This change wraps the errors from the CharsetReader function so the caller can distinguish different error conditions.
Context: I have an XML file with an unknown encoding which I like to handle separately. I like to use the CharsetReader for this but the error type has not been forwarded.
Change-Id: I6739a0dee04ec376cd20536be2806ce7f50c5213
GitHub-Last-Rev: ada9dd510f
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/go#60199
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494897
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sysBlockTraced is a subtle and confusing flag.
Currently, it's only used in one place: a condition around whether to
traceGoSysExit when a goroutine is about to start running. That condition
looks like "gp.syscallsp != 0 && gp.trace.sysBlockTraced".
In every case but one, "gp.syscallsp != 0" is equivalent to
"gp.trace.sysBlockTraced."
That one case is where a goroutine is running without a P and racing
with trace start (world is stopped). It switches itself back to
_Grunnable from _Gsyscall before the trace start goroutine notices, such
that the trace start goroutine fails to emit a EvGoInSyscall event for
it (EvGoInSyscall or EvGoSysBlock must precede any EvGoSysExit event).
sysBlockTraced is set unconditionally on every syscall entry and the
trace start goroutine clears it if there was no EvGoInSyscall event
emitted (i.e. did not observe _Gsyscall on the goroutine). That way when
the goroutine-without-a-P wakes up and gets scheduled, it only emits
EvGoSysExit if the flag is set, i.e. trace start didn't _clear_ the
flag.
What makes this confusing is the fact that the flag is set
unconditionally and the code relies on it being *cleared*. Really, all
it's trying to communicate is whether the tracer is aware of a
goroutine's syscall at the point where a goroutine that lost its P
during a syscall is trying to run again.
Therefore, we can replace this flag with a less subtle one:
tracedSyscallEnter. It is set when GoSysCall is traced, indicating on
the goroutine that the tracer is aware of the syscall. Later, if
traceGoSysExit is called, the tracer knows its safe to emit an event
because the tracer is aware of the syscall.
This flag is then also set at trace start, when it emits EvGoInSyscall,
which again, lets the goroutine know the tracer is aware of its syscall.
The flag is cleared by GoSysExit to indicate that the tracer is no
longer aware of any syscalls on the goroutine. It's also cleared by
trace start. This is necessary because a syscall may have been started
while a trace was stopping. If the GoSysExit isn't emitted (because it
races with the trace end STW) then the flag will be left set at the
start of the next trace period, which will result in an erroneous
GoSysExit. Instead, the flag is cleared in the same way sysBlockTraced
is today: if the tracer doesn't notice the goroutine is in a syscall, it
makes that explicit to the goroutine.
A more direct flag to use here would be one that explicitly indicates
whether EvGoInSyscall or EvGoSysBlock specifically were already emitted
for a goroutine. The reason why we don't just do this is because setting
the flag when EvGoSysBlock is emitted would be racy: EvGoSysBlock is
emitted by whatever thread is stealing the P out from under the
syscalling goroutine, so it would need to synchronize with the goroutine
its emitting the event for.
The end result of all this is that the new flag can be managed entirely
within trace.go, hiding another implementation detail about the tracer.
Tested with `stress ./trace.test -test.run="TestTraceStressStartStop"`
which was occasionally failing before the CL in which sysBlockTraced was
added (CL 9132). I also confirmed also that this test is still sensitive
to `EvGoSysExit` by removing the one use of sysBlockTraced. The result
is about a 5% error rate. If there is something very subtly wrong about
how this CL emits `EvGoSysExit`, I would expect to see it as a test
failure. Instead:
53m55s: 200434 runs so far, 0 failures
Change-Id: If1d24ee6b6926eec7e90cdb66039a5abac819d9b
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Just another step to hiding implementation details.
Change-Id: I71b7cc522d18c23f03a9bf32e428279e62b39a89
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494192
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In race mode (or other instrumentation mode), if the caller is in
a regular package and the callee is in a norace (or noinstrument)
package, don't inline. Otherwise, when the caller is instumented
it will also affect the inlined callee.
An example is sync.(*Mutex).Unlock, which is typically not inlined
but with PGO it can be inlined into a regular function, which is
then get instrumented. But the rest of the sync package, in
particular, the Lock function is not instrumented, causing the
race detector to signal false race.
Change-Id: Ia78bb602c6da63a34ec2909b9a82646bf20873f3
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More tightening up of the tracer's interface.
Change-Id: I992141c7f30e5c2d5d77d1fcd6817d35bc6e5f6d
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More tightening up of the tracer's interface.
While we're here, clarify why waittraceskip isn't included by explaining
what the wait* fields in the M are really for.
Change-Id: I0e7b4cac79fb77a7a0b3ca6b6cc267668e3610bc
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More tightening up of the tracer's interface.
This increases the size of each G very slightly, which isn't great, but
we stay within the same size class, so actually memory use will be
unchanged.
Change-Id: I7d1f5798edcf437c212beb1e1a2619eab833aafb
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Give the test a bit more wiggle room.
Previously the allowed range was about 46.5% to 53.5%. Now it is about 43% TO 57%.
Fixes#60170
Change-Id: Ieda471e0986c52edb9f6d31beb8e41917876d6c5
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In the interest of further cleaning up the trace.go API, move the trace
logic in oneNewExtraM into its own function.
Change-Id: I5cf478cb8cd0d301ee3b068347ed48ce768b8882
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method -> Method
For #59670
Change-Id: I78e0410f3d5094aa12b2f3ccd6735fec0d696190
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Prior to this change, 'go get' pulled in every version of each module
whose path is explicitly listed in the go.mod file. When graph pruning
is enabled (that is, when the main module is at 'go 1.17' or higher),
that pulled in transitive dependencies of older-than-selected versions
of dependencies, which are normally pruned out by other 'go' commands
(including 'go mod tidy' and 'go mod graph').
To make matters worse, different parts of `go get` were making
different assumptions about which kinds of conflicts would be
reported: the modget package assumed that any conflict is necessarily
due to some explicit constraint, but 'go get' was imposing an
additional constraint that modules could not be incidentally upgraded
in the course of a downgrade. When that additional constraint failed,
the modload package reported the failure as though it were a real
(caller-supplied) constraint, confusing the caller (which couldn't
identify any specific package or argument that caused the failure).
This change fixes both of those problems by replacing the
modload.EditRequirements algorithm with a different one.
The new algorithm is, roughly, as follows.
1. Propose a list of “root requirements” to be written to the updated
go.mod file.
2. Load the module graph from those requirements mostly as usual, but
if any root is upgraded due to transitive dependencies, retain the
original roots and the paths leading from those roots to the
upgrades. (This forms an “extended graph”, in which we can trace a
path from to each version that appears in the graph starting at one
or more of the original roots.)
3. Identify which roots caused any module path to be upgraded above
its passed-in version constraint. For each such root, either report
an unresolvable conflict (if the root itself is constrained to a
specific version) or identify an updated version to propose: either
a downgrade to the next-highest version, or an upgrade to the
actually-selected version of the root (if that version is allowed).
To avoid looping forever or devolving into an NP-complete search,
we never propose a version that was already rejected previously,
regardless of what other roots were present alongside it at the
time.
4. If the version of any root was changed, repeat from (1).
This algorithm is guaranteed to terminate, because there are finitely
many root versions and we permanently reject at least one each time we
downgrade its path to a lower version.
In addition, this change implements support for the '-v' flag to log
more information about version changes at each iteration.
Fixes#56494.
Fixes#55955.
Change-Id: Iebc17dd7586594d5732e228043c3c4c6da230f44
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Clean up and consolidate on a single consistent definition of fcntl,
which takes three int32 arguments and returns either a positive result
or a negative errno value.
Change-Id: Id9505492712db4b0aab469c6bd15e4fce3c9ff6e
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At least when we're inserting/replacing near the end of a slice, when
we have to grow it use the same multiplicative growth factor that the
runtime uses for append.
Before this CL, we would grow the slice one page (8192 bytes) at a time
for large slices. This would cause O(n^2) work when appending near the
end should only take O(n) work.
This doesn't fix the problem if you insert/replace near the start of the
array, but maybe that doesn't need fixing because it is O(n^2) anyway.
Fixes#60134
Change-Id: If05376bc512ab839769180e5ce4cb929f47363b1
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Handle cases where the inserted slice is actually part of the slice
that is being inserted into.
Requires a bit more work, but no more allocations. (Compare to #494536.)
Not entirely sure this is worth the complication.
Fixes#60138
Change-Id: Ia72c872b04309b99025e6ca5a4a326ebed2abb69
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This CL changes Checker.genericExprList such that it collects partially
instantiated generic functions together with their (partial) type
argument (and corresponding) expression lists, instead of trying to
infer the missing type arguments in place or to report an error.
Special care is being taken to explictly record expression types where
needed (because we can't use one of the usual expr evaluators which
takes care of that), or to track the correct instance expression for
later recording with Checker.arguments.
The resulting generic expression list is passed to Checker.arguments
which is changed to accept explicit partial type argument (and
corresponding) expression lists. The provided type arguments are fed
into type inference, matching up with their respective type parameters
(which were collected already, before this CL). If type inference is
successful, the instantiated functions are recorded as needed.
For now, the type argument expression lists are collected and passed
along but not yet used. We may use them eventually for better error
reporting.
Fixes#59958.
For #59338.
Change-Id: I26db47ef3546e64553da49d62b23cd3ef9e2b549
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494116
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There's only two places which call Checker.arguments: Checker.callExpr
and Checker.builtin. Both ensure that the passed argument list doesn't
contain type expressions, so we don't need that extra check at the start
of Checker.arguments.
The remaining check causes Checker.arguments to exit early if any of
the passed arguments is invalid. This reduces the number of reported
errors in rare cases but is executed all the time.
If the extra errors are a problem, it would be better to not call
Checker.arguments in the first place, or only do the extra check
before Checker.arguments reports an error.
Removing this code for now. Removes a long-standing TODO.
Change-Id: Ief654b680eb6b6a768bb1b4c621d3c8169953f17
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With the exception of the shortcircuit pass, removePhiArg is always unconditionally followed by phiElimValue.
Move the phiElimValue inside removePhiArg.
Resolves a TODO.
See CL 357964 for more info.
Change-Id: I8460b35864f4cd7301ba86fc3dce08ec8041da7f
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With CL 408826, CL 413474, etc. reflect.ValueOf no longer
unconditionally escapes its argument, allowing a Value's content
to be allocated on the stack.
Change-Id: I3a0af85c11e2fd0df42b056095565f0ce5548886
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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
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running on cmd/compile/internal/testdata/inlines now shows:
```
--- change set #1 (enabling changes causes failure)
b/b.go:16:6: loop variable i now per-iteration (loop inlined into b/b.go:10)
b/b.go:16:6: loop variable i now per-iteration
./b/b.go:16:6: loop variable b.i now per-iteration (loop inlined into a/a.go:18)
./b/b.go:16:6: loop variable b.i now per-iteration (loop inlined into ./main.go:37)
./b/b.go:16:6: loop variable b.i now per-iteration (loop inlined into ./main.go:38)
---
```
and
```
--- change set #2 (enabling changes causes failure)
./main.go:27:6: loop variable i now per-iteration
./main.go:27:6: loop variable i now per-iteration (loop inlined into ./main.go:35)
---
```
Still unsure about the utility of mentioning the inlined occurrence, but better
than mysteriously repeating the line over and over again.
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Run-TryBot: David Chase <drchase@google.com>
Specifically, objects built via cgo using CGO_CFLAGS="-O2 -g -mcpu=power10".
These use new relocations defined by ELFv2 1.5, and the R_PPC64_REL24_NOTOC
relocation. These objects contain functions which may not use a TOC
pointer requiring the insertion of trampolines to use correctly.
The relocation targets of these ELFv2 objects may also contain non-zero
values. Clear the relocated bits before setting them.
Extra care is taken if GOPPC64 < power10. The R_PPC64_REL24_NOTOC reloc
existed prior to ELFv2 1.5. The presence of this relocation itself does
not imply a power10 target. Generate power8 compatible stubs if
GOPPC64 < power10.
Updates #44549
Change-Id: I06ff8c4e47ed9af835a7dcfbafcfa4c538f75544
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/492617
Run-TryBot: Paul Murphy <murp@ibm.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Lynn Boger <laboger@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
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>
It's possible that the replacement for a built-in attribute is a Group.
That would cause a nil pointer exception because the handleState.prefix
field isn't set until later, in appendNonBuiltIns.
So create the prefix field earlier, at the start of commonHandler.handle.
Once we do this, we can simplify the code by creating and freeing the
prefix in newHandleState.
Along the way I discovered a line that wasn't being tested:
state.prefix.WriteString(h.groupPrefix)
so I modified an existing test case to cover it.
Change-Id: Ib385e3c13451017cb093389fd5a1647d53e610bf
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494037
Run-TryBot: Jonathan Amsterdam <jba@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alan Donovan <adonovan@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
This improves memclr for the last few bytes when
compiling for power9 or earlier.
Change-Id: I46940ebc7e98e27a2e48d4b319acb7d2106a6f29
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495035
Run-TryBot: Lynn Boger <laboger@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Murphy <murp@ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
This introduces the concept of test variants in dist, which are
different configurations of the same package. The variant of a test is
a short string summarizing the configuration.
The "variant name" of a test is either the package name if the variant
is empty, or package:variant if not. Currently this isn't used for
anything, but soon we'll use this as the Package field of the test
JSON output so that we can disambiguate output from differently
configured runs of the same test package, and naturally flow this
through to any test result viewer.
The long-term plan is to use variant names as dist's own test names
and eliminate the ad hoc names it has right now. Unfortunately, the
build coordinator is aware of many of the ad hoc dist test names, so
some more work is needed to get to that point. This CL keeps almost
all test names the same, with the exception of tests registered by
registerCgoTests, where we regularize test names a bit using variants
to avoid some unnecessary complexity (I believe nothing depends on the
names of these tests).
For #37486.
Change-Id: I119fec2872e40b12c1973cf2cddc7f413d62a48c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495016
Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Currently the cgo tests mostly use their package name as a heading,
which means we get a large number of test sections that each have a
single test package in them.
Unify them all under "Testing cgo" to reduce output noise.
This leaves just the cmd/api test without a heading, so we give it a
heading and require that all tests have a heading.
Change-Id: I24cd9a96eb35bbc3ff9335ca8a382ec2426306c1
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/494497
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Dmitri Shuralyov <dmitshur@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
Currently, there are four places that add distTests to the
tester.tests list. That means we're already missing a few name
uniqueness checks, and we're about to start enforcing some more
requirements on tests that would be nice to have in one place. Hence,
to prepare for this, this CL refactors the process of adding to the
tester.tests list into a method. That also means we can trivially use
a map to check name uniqueness rather than an n^2 slice search.
For #37486.
Change-Id: Ib7b64c7bbf65e5e870c4f4bfaca8c7f70983605c
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495015
Reviewed-by: Bryan Mills <bcmills@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
[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>
This edge case was accidentally broken by CL 219638.
Change-Id: I673b3b580fbe379a04f8650cf5969fe9bce83691
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/495036
Reviewed-by: Cherry Mui <cherryyz@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>
Auto-Submit: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>
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>
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Run-TryBot: Lynn Boger <laboger@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Murphy <murp@ibm.com>