From 31427b974ed7b7dd54e28fec595e731bf6eea8ba Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Richard Sandiford Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2020 21:40:30 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] aarch64: Treat GNU and Advanced SIMD vectors as distinct [PR92789, PR95726] MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit PR95726 is about template look-up for things like: foo foo The immediate cause of the problem is that the hash function usually returns different hashes for these types, yet the equality function thinks they are equal. This then raises the question of how the types are supposed to be treated. I think the answer is that the GNU vector type should be treated as distinct from float32x4_t, not least because the two types mangle differently. However, each type should implicitly convert to the other. This would mean that, as far as the PR is concerned, the hashing function is right to (sometimes) treat the types differently and the equality function is wrong to treat them as the same. The most obvious way to enforce the type difference is to use a target-specific type attribute. That on its own is enough to fix the PR. The difficulty is deciding whether the knock-on effects are acceptable. One obvious effect is that GCC then rejects: typedef float vecf __attribute__((vector_size(16))); vecf x; float32x4_t &z = x; on the basis that the types are no longer reference-compatible. I think that's again the correct behaviour, and consistent with current Clang. A trickier question is whether: vecf x; float32x4_t y; … c ? x : y … should be valid, and if so, what its type should be [PR92789]. As explained in the comment in the testcase, GCC and Clang both accepted this, but GCC chose the “then” type while Clang chose the “else” type. This can lead to different mangling for (probably artificial) corner cases, as seen for “sel1” and “sel2” in the testcase. Adding the attribute makes GCC reject the conditional expression as ambiguous. I think that too is the correct behaviour, for the reasons described in the testcase. However, it does seem to have the potential to break existing code. It looks like aarch64_comp_type_attributes is missing cases for the SVE attributes, but I'll handle that in a separate patch. 2020-06-30 Richard Sandiford gcc/ PR target/92789 PR target/95726 * config/aarch64/aarch64.c (aarch64_attribute_table): Add "Advanced SIMD type". (aarch64_comp_type_attributes): Check that the "Advanced SIMD type" attributes are equal. * config/aarch64/aarch64-builtins.c: Include stringpool.h and attribs.h. (aarch64_mangle_builtin_vector_type): Use the mangling recorded in the "Advanced SIMD type" attribute. (aarch64_init_simd_builtin_types): Add an "Advanced SIMD type" attribute to each Advanced SIMD type, using the mangled type as the attribute's single argument. gcc/testsuite/ PR target/92789 PR target/95726 * g++.target/aarch64/pr95726.C: New test. --- gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64-builtins.c | 34 ++++++++-------- gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64.c | 15 ++++++- gcc/testsuite/g++.target/aarch64/pr95726.C | 46 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 77 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) create mode 100644 gcc/testsuite/g++.target/aarch64/pr95726.C diff --git a/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64-builtins.c b/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64-builtins.c index 95213cd70c8..e87a4559c36 100644 --- a/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64-builtins.c +++ b/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64-builtins.c @@ -43,6 +43,8 @@ #include "gimple-iterator.h" #include "case-cfn-macros.h" #include "emit-rtl.h" +#include "stringpool.h" +#include "attribs.h" #define v8qi_UP E_V8QImode #define v4hi_UP E_V4HImode @@ -639,18 +641,12 @@ aarch64_mangle_builtin_scalar_type (const_tree type) static const char * aarch64_mangle_builtin_vector_type (const_tree type) { - int i; - int nelts = sizeof (aarch64_simd_types) / sizeof (aarch64_simd_types[0]); - - for (i = 0; i < nelts; i++) - if (aarch64_simd_types[i].mode == TYPE_MODE (type) - && TYPE_NAME (type) - && TREE_CODE (TYPE_NAME (type)) == TYPE_DECL - && DECL_NAME (TYPE_NAME (type)) - && !strcmp - (IDENTIFIER_POINTER (DECL_NAME (TYPE_NAME (type))), - aarch64_simd_types[i].name)) - return aarch64_simd_types[i].mangle; + tree attrs = TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type); + if (tree attr = lookup_attribute ("Advanced SIMD type", attrs)) + { + tree mangled_name = TREE_VALUE (TREE_VALUE (attr)); + return IDENTIFIER_POINTER (mangled_name); + } return NULL; } @@ -802,10 +798,16 @@ aarch64_init_simd_builtin_types (void) if (aarch64_simd_types[i].itype == NULL) { - aarch64_simd_types[i].itype - = build_distinct_type_copy - (build_vector_type (eltype, GET_MODE_NUNITS (mode))); - SET_TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY (aarch64_simd_types[i].itype); + tree type = build_vector_type (eltype, GET_MODE_NUNITS (mode)); + type = build_distinct_type_copy (type); + SET_TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY (type); + + tree mangled_name = get_identifier (aarch64_simd_types[i].mangle); + tree value = tree_cons (NULL_TREE, mangled_name, NULL_TREE); + TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type) + = tree_cons (get_identifier ("Advanced SIMD type"), value, + TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type)); + aarch64_simd_types[i].itype = type; } tdecl = add_builtin_type (aarch64_simd_types[i].name, diff --git a/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64.c b/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64.c index f3551a73d87..57988f9330b 100644 --- a/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64.c +++ b/gcc/config/aarch64/aarch64.c @@ -1429,6 +1429,7 @@ static const struct attribute_spec aarch64_attribute_table[] = { "arm_sve_vector_bits", 1, 1, false, true, false, true, aarch64_sve::handle_arm_sve_vector_bits_attribute, NULL }, + { "Advanced SIMD type", 1, 1, false, true, false, true, NULL, NULL }, { "SVE type", 3, 3, false, true, false, true, NULL, NULL }, { "SVE sizeless type", 0, 0, false, true, false, true, NULL, NULL }, { NULL, 0, 0, false, false, false, false, NULL, NULL } @@ -22721,8 +22722,18 @@ aarch64_simd_clone_usable (struct cgraph_node *node) static int aarch64_comp_type_attributes (const_tree type1, const_tree type2) { - if (lookup_attribute ("aarch64_vector_pcs", TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type1)) - != lookup_attribute ("aarch64_vector_pcs", TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type2))) + auto check_attr = [&](const char *name) { + tree attr1 = lookup_attribute (name, TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type1)); + tree attr2 = lookup_attribute (name, TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type2)); + if (!attr1 && !attr2) + return true; + + return attr1 && attr2 && attribute_value_equal (attr1, attr2); + }; + + if (!check_attr ("aarch64_vector_pcs")) + return 0; + if (!check_attr ("Advanced SIMD type")) return 0; return 1; } diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/g++.target/aarch64/pr95726.C b/gcc/testsuite/g++.target/aarch64/pr95726.C new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..ddd69b8b0da --- /dev/null +++ b/gcc/testsuite/g++.target/aarch64/pr95726.C @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +#include + +typedef float vecf __attribute__((vector_size(16))); + +// This assertion must hold: vecf and float32x4_t have distinct identities +// and mangle differently, so they are not interchangeable. +template struct bar; +template<> struct bar { static const int x = 1; }; +template<> struct bar { static const int x = 2; }; +static_assert(bar::x + bar::x == 3, "boo"); + +// GCC 10.1 and earlier accepted this. However, the rule should be +// that GNU vectors and Advanced SIMD vectors are distinct types but +// that each one implicitly converts to the other. The types are not +// reference-compatible. +// +// The behavior tested below is consistent with Clang. +vecf x; +float32x4_t y; +float32x4_t &z = x; // { dg-error {cannot bind non-const lvalue reference} } + +// These assignment must be valid even in the strictest mode: vecf must +// implicitly convert to float32x4_t and vice versa. +void foo() { x = y; y = x; } + +// Previously GCC accepted this and took the type of "d" from the "then" arm. +// It therefore mangled the functions as: +// +// _Z4sel1bRDv4_f +// _Z4sel2bR13__Float32x4_t +// +// Clang currently also accepts it and takes the type of "d" from the +// "else" arm. It therefore mangles the functions as follows, which is +// inconsistent with the old GCC behavior: +// +// _Z4sel1b13__Float32x4_t +// _Z4sel2bDv4_f +// +// Given that the types have distinct identities and that each one +// implicitly converts to the other (see above), the expression ought +// to be rejected as invalid. This is consistent (by analogy) with the +// standard C++ handling of conditional expressions involving class types, +// in cases where the "then" value implicitly converts to the "else" type +// and the "else" value implicitly converts to the "then" type. +auto sel1(bool c, decltype(c ? x : y) d) { return d; } // { dg-error {operands to '\?:' have different types} } +auto sel2(bool c, decltype(c ? y : x) d) { return d; } // { dg-error {operands to '\?:' have different types} } -- 2.30.2