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go/test/codegen
Pat Gavlin 359f44910f cmd/compile: fix long RMW bit operations on AMD64
Under certain circumstances, the existing rules for bit operations can
produce code that writes beyond its intended bounds. For example,
consider the following code:

    func repro(b []byte, addr, bit int32) {
	    _ = b[3]
	    v := uint32(b[0]) | uint32(b[1])<<8 | uint32(b[2])<<16 | uint32(b[3])<<24 | 1<<(bit&31)
	    b[0] = byte(v)
	    b[1] = byte(v >> 8)
	    b[2] = byte(v >> 16)
	    b[3] = byte(v >> 24)
    }

Roughly speaking:

1. The expression `1 << (bit & 31)` is rewritten into `(SHLL 1 bit)`
2. The expression `uint32(b[0]) | uint32(b[1])<<8 | uint32(b[2])<<16 |
   uint32(b[3])<<24` is rewritten into `(MOVLload &b[0])`
3. The statements `b[0] = byte(v) ... b[3] = byte(v >> 24)` are
   rewritten into `(MOVLstore &b[0], v)`
4. `(ORL (SHLL 1, bit) (MOVLload &b[0]))` is rewritten into
   `(BTSL (MOVLload &b[0]) bit)`. This is a valid transformation because
   the destination is a register: in this case, the bit offset is masked
   by the number of bits in the destination register. This is identical
   to the masking performed by `SHL`.
5. `(MOVLstore &b[0] (BTSL (MOVLload &b[0]) bit))` is rewritten into
   `(BTSLmodify &b[0] bit)`. This is an invalid transformation because
   the destination is memory: in this case, the bit offset is not
   masked, and the chosen instruction may write outside its intended
   32-bit location.

These changes fix the invalid rewrite performed in step (5) by
explicitly maksing the bit offset operand to `BT(S|R|C)(L|Q)modify`. In
the example above, the adjusted rules produce
`(BTSLmodify &b[0] (ANDLconst [31] bit))` in step (5).

These changes also add several new rules to rewrite bit sets, toggles,
and clears that are rooted at `(OR|XOR|AND)(L|Q)modify` operators into
appropriate `BT(S|R|C)(L|Q)modify` operators. These rules catch cases
where `MOV(L|Q)store ((OR|XOR|AND)(L|Q) ...)` is rewritten to
`(OR|XOR|AND)(L|Q)modify` before the `(OR|XOR|AND)(L|Q) ...` can be
rewritten to `BT(S|R|C)(L|Q) ...`.

Overall, compilecmp reports small improvements in code size on
darwin/amd64 when the changes to the compiler itself are exlcuded:

file                               before   after    Δ       %
runtime.s                          536464   536412   -52     -0.010%
bytes.s                            32629    32593    -36     -0.110%
strings.s                          44565    44529    -36     -0.081%
os/signal.s                        7967     7959     -8      -0.100%
cmd/vendor/golang.org/x/sys/unix.s 81686    81678    -8      -0.010%
math/big.s                         188235   188253   +18     +0.010%
cmd/link/internal/loader.s         89295    89056    -239    -0.268%
cmd/link/internal/ld.s             633551   633232   -319    -0.050%
cmd/link/internal/arm.s            18934    18928    -6      -0.032%
cmd/link/internal/arm64.s          31814    31801    -13     -0.041%
cmd/link/internal/riscv64.s        7347     7345     -2      -0.027%
cmd/compile/internal/ssa.s         4029173  4033066  +3893   +0.097%
total                              21298280 21301472 +3192   +0.015%

Change-Id: I2e560548b515865129e1724e150e30540e9d29ce
GitHub-Last-Rev: 9a42bd29a5
GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/go#45242
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/304869
Reviewed-by: Keith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Trust: Josh Bleecher Snyder <josharian@gmail.com>
2021-03-26 19:40:37 +00:00
..
addrcalc.go
alloc.go
arithmetic.go cmd/compile: use depth first topological sort algorithm for layout 2021-03-16 02:44:54 +00:00
bitfield.go cmd/compile: add arm64 rules to optimize go codes to constant 0 2021-03-26 01:57:35 +00:00
bits.go cmd/compile: fix long RMW bit operations on AMD64 2021-03-26 19:40:37 +00:00
bool.go
clobberdead.go cmd/compile: resurrect clobberdead mode 2021-03-17 17:50:50 +00:00
clobberdeadreg.go cmd/compile: add clobberdeadreg mode 2021-03-19 23:21:21 +00:00
compare_and_branch.go test/codegen: go fmt 2020-11-08 12:19:55 +00:00
comparisons.go cmd/compile: use depth first topological sort algorithm for layout 2021-03-16 02:44:54 +00:00
condmove.go cmd/compile: add rewrite rules for conditional instructions on arm64 2021-03-18 01:46:58 +00:00
copy.go
floats.go cmd/compile: ARM64 optimize []float64 and []float32 access 2021-02-24 19:49:08 +00:00
fuse.go
issue22703.go
issue25378.go
issue31618.go
issue33580.go
issue38554.go
issue42610.go cmd/compile: fix rules regression with shifts on PPC64 2020-11-17 13:20:20 +00:00
logic.go cmd/compile: don't rewrite (CMP (AND x y) 0) to TEST if AND has other uses 2020-08-17 22:00:44 +00:00
mapaccess.go
maps.go
math.go cmd/compile: optimize single-precision floating point square root 2021-03-02 06:38:07 +00:00
mathbits.go cmd/compile: optimize shift pairs and masks on s390x 2020-11-06 10:45:31 +00:00
memcombine.go cmd/compile: add rule to coalesce writes 2021-02-24 19:25:49 +00:00
memops.go cmd/compile: ARM64 optimize []float64 and []float32 access 2021-02-24 19:49:08 +00:00
noextend.go
race.go cmd/compile: remove racefuncenterfp when it is not needed 2020-11-02 03:03:16 +00:00
README
retpoline.go
rotate.go cmd/asm,cmd/compile: support 5 operand RLWNM/RLWMI on ppc64 2021-03-09 20:35:41 +00:00
select.go cmd/compile,runtime: skip zero'ing order array for select statements 2020-08-29 08:02:52 +00:00
shift.go cmd/compile: optimize multi-register shifts on amd64 2021-03-11 19:11:46 +00:00
shortcircuit.go
slices.go cmd/compile: generate subfic on ppc64 2020-08-27 20:10:15 +00:00
smallintiface.go
spectre.go [dev.regabi] cmd/compile: make ordering for InvertFlags more stable 2021-01-13 02:40:43 +00:00
stack.go
strings.go cmd/compile: loads from readonly globals into const for mips64x 2021-03-16 09:07:17 +00:00
structs.go [dev.regabi] cmd/compile: reserve X15 as zero register on AMD64 2021-02-03 22:44:53 +00:00
switch.go
zerosize.go

// Copyright 2018 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.

The codegen directory contains code generation tests for the gc
compiler.


- Introduction

The test harness compiles Go code inside files in this directory and
matches the generated assembly (the output of `go tool compile -S`)
against a set of regexps to be specified in comments that follow a
special syntax (described below). The test driver is implemented as a
step of the top-level test/run.go suite, called "asmcheck".

The codegen harness is part of the all.bash test suite, but for
performance reasons only the codegen tests for the host machine's
GOARCH are enabled by default, and only on GOOS=linux.

To perform comprehensive tests for all the supported architectures
(even on a non-Linux system), one can run the following command

  $ ../bin/go run run.go -all_codegen -v codegen

in the top-level test directory. This is recommended after any change
that affect the compiler's code.

The test harness compiles the tests with the same go toolchain that is
used to run run.go. After writing tests for a newly added codegen
transformation, it can be useful to first run the test harness with a
toolchain from a released Go version (and verify that the new tests
fail), and then re-runnig the tests using the devel toolchain.


- Regexps comments syntax

Instructions to match are specified inside plain comments that start
with an architecture tag, followed by a colon and a quoted Go-style
regexp to be matched. For example, the following test:

  func Sqrt(x float64) float64 {
  	   // amd64:"SQRTSD"
  	   // arm64:"FSQRTD"
  	   return math.Sqrt(x)
  }

verifies that math.Sqrt calls are intrinsified to a SQRTSD instruction
on amd64, and to a FSQRTD instruction on arm64.

It is possible to put multiple architectures checks into the same
line, as:

  // amd64:"SQRTSD" arm64:"FSQRTD"

although this form should be avoided when doing so would make the
regexps line excessively long and difficult to read.

Comments that are on their own line will be matched against the first
subsequent non-comment line. Inline comments are also supported; the
regexp will be matched against the code found on the same line:

  func Sqrt(x float64) float64 {
  	   return math.Sqrt(x) // arm:"SQRTD"
  }

It's possible to specify a comma-separated list of regexps to be
matched. For example, the following test:

  func TZ8(n uint8) int {
  	   // amd64:"BSFQ","ORQ\t\\$256"
  	   return bits.TrailingZeros8(n)
  }

verifies that the code generated for a bits.TrailingZeros8 call on
amd64 contains both a "BSFQ" instruction and an "ORQ $256".

Note how the ORQ regex includes a tab char (\t). In the Go assembly
syntax, operands are separated from opcodes by a tabulation.

Regexps can be quoted using either " or `. Special characters must be
escaped accordingly. Both of these are accepted, and equivalent:

  // amd64:"ADDQ\t\\$3"
  // amd64:`ADDQ\t\$3`

and they'll match this assembly line:

  ADDQ	$3

Negative matches can be specified using a - before the quoted regexp.
For example:

  func MoveSmall() {
  	   x := [...]byte{1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7}
  	   copy(x[1:], x[:]) // arm64:-".*memmove"
  }

verifies that NO memmove call is present in the assembly generated for
the copy() line.


- Architecture specifiers

There are three different ways to specify on which architecture a test
should be run:

* Specify only the architecture (eg: "amd64"). This indicates that the
  check should be run on all the supported architecture variants. For
  instance, arm checks will be run against all supported GOARM
  variations (5,6,7).
* Specify both the architecture and a variant, separated by a slash
  (eg: "arm/7"). This means that the check will be run only on that
  specific variant.
* Specify the operating system, the architecture and the variant,
  separated by slashes (eg: "plan9/386/sse2", "plan9/amd64/"). This is
  needed in the rare case that you need to do a codegen test affected
  by a specific operating system; by default, tests are compiled only
  targeting linux.


- Remarks, and Caveats

-- Write small test functions

As a general guideline, test functions should be small, to avoid
possible interactions between unrelated lines of code that may be
introduced, for example, by the compiler's optimization passes.

Any given line of Go code could get assigned more instructions than it
may appear from reading the source. In particular, matching all MOV
instructions should be avoided; the compiler may add them for
unrelated reasons and this may render the test ineffective.

-- Line matching logic

Regexps are always matched from the start of the instructions line.
This means, for example, that the "MULQ" regexp is equivalent to
"^MULQ" (^ representing the start of the line), and it will NOT match
the following assembly line:

  IMULQ	$99, AX

To force a match at any point of the line, ".*MULQ" should be used.

For the same reason, a negative regexp like -"memmove" is not enough
to make sure that no memmove call is included in the assembly. A
memmove call looks like this:

  CALL	runtime.memmove(SB)

To make sure that the "memmove" symbol does not appear anywhere in the
assembly, the negative regexp to be used is -".*memmove".