Cameron McInally
2012-Mar-02 16:17 UTC
[LLVMdev] Stack alignment on X86 AVX seems incorrect
> > At least for 32bit x86 reserving another register as alternative frame > pointer is very heavy. The above would allow normal spill logic to > decide when to keep a reference in register and when not. It also reuses > existing functionality as much as possible. >Hi Joerg, Yes, this was a problem in my implementation also. Empirically, for the chips I work on, reserving the extra frame register was shown to be a win. But, of course, I am sure this win is not universal. I did receive permission to share my work with the community. Although, without discovering a creative solution to the extra frame register problem, I doubt my patch would be wanted. If anyone is motivated to work out this issue, I would be happy to help. My current thinking is that an emergency spill slot could be set aside to hold the original, ABI conforming, frame pointer. Not an ideal solution, but in my situation where I must cover any code a user throws at me, breaking the ABI and playing with the stack is preferred. Thanks, Cameron -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20120302/27160242/attachment.html>
Evandro Menezes
2012-Mar-02 16:32 UTC
[LLVMdev] Stack alignment on X86 AVX seems incorrect
Cameron, Figure 3.3 on page 16 of www.x86-64.org/documentation/abi.pdf is not normative. See foot note 7 in the same page. Figure 3.4 on page 21 confirms that the use of a frame-pointer is optional. So, if one doesn't use ENTER in the prologue and uses RSP to access local variables, RBP may be used as a calee-saved GPR. -- Evandro Menezes Austin, TX emenezes at codeaurora.org Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc is a member of the Code Aurora Forum On 03/02/12 10:17, Cameron McInally wrote:> At least for 32bit x86 reserving another register as alternative frame > pointer is very heavy. The above would allow normal spill logic to > decide when to keep a reference in register and when not. It also reuses > existing functionality as much as possible. > > > Hi Joerg, > > Yes, this was a problem in my implementation also. Empirically, for the > chips I work on, reserving the extra frame register was shown to be a > win. But, of course, I am sure this win is not universal. > > I did receive permission to share my work with the community. Although, > without discovering a creative solution to the extra frame register > problem, I doubt my patch would be wanted. If anyone is motivated to > work out this issue, I would be happy to help. > > My current thinking is that an emergency spill slot could be set aside > to hold the original, ABI conforming, frame pointer. Not an ideal > solution, but in my situation where I must cover any code a user throws > at me, breaking the ABI and playing with the stack is preferred. > > Thanks, > Cameron > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev
Cameron McInally
2012-Mar-02 16:58 UTC
[LLVMdev] Stack alignment on X86 AVX seems incorrect
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 11:32 AM, Evandro Menezes <emenezes at codeaurora.org> wrote: ...> Figure 3.3 on page 16 of www.x86-64.org/documentation/abi.pdf is not > normative. See foot note 7 in the same page. Figure 3.4 on page 21 > confirms that the use of a frame-pointer is optional. > > So, if one doesn't use ENTER in the prologue and uses RSP to access local > variables, RBP may be used as a calee-saved GPR.I am not sure if I am completely following. The issue that required aligning the frame to 32 bytes is when there are variable sized objects on the stack (e.g. alloca). In that case, the RBP frame pointer is required to access the spill slots. If I'm not mistaken, calculating the address of spill slots off of RSP would be costly in this case. Are you suggesting that there is a way to base spill slots off of RSP when the stack size is unknown at compile time? This does bring up an interesting idea though. If we wanted to punt, it would be possible to check for variable sized objects on the stack and then only issue unaligned moves for 256b spills/reloads. Not ideal for performance, but it would work as a stopgap. -Cameron -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20120302/b604f045/attachment.html>
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