; RUN: opt -loop-vectorize -S < %s | FileCheck %s target datalayout = "e-m:e-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128-ni:1" target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu" ; PR34965/D39346 ; LV retains the original scalar loop intact as remainder loop. However, ; after this transformation, analysis information concerning the remainder ; loop may differ from the original scalar loop. This test is an example of ; that behaviour, where values inside the remainder loop which SCEV could ; originally analyze now require flow-sensitive analysis currently not ; supported in SCEV. In particular, during LV code generation, after turning ; the original scalar loop into the remainder loop, LV expected ; Legal->isConsecutivePtr() to be consistent and return the same output as ; during legal/cost model phases (original scalar loop). Unfortunately, that ; condition was not satisfied because of the aforementioned SCEV limitation. ; After D39346, LV code generation doesn't rely on Legal->isConsecutivePtr(), ; i.e., SCEV. This test verifies that LV is able to handle the described cases. ; ; TODO: The SCEV limitation described before may affect plans to further ; optimize the remainder loop of this particular test case. One tentative ; solution is to detect the problematic IVs in LV (%7 and %8) and perform an ; in-place IV optimization by replacing: ; %8 = phi i32 [ %.ph2, %.outer ], [ %7, %6 ] with ; with ; %8 = sub i32 %7, 1. ; Verify that store is vectorized as stride-1 memory access. ; CHECK-LABEL: @test_01( ; CHECK-NOT: vector.body: ; This test was originally vectorized, but now SCEV is smart enough to prove ; that its trip count is 1, so it gets ignored by vectorizer. ; Function Attrs: uwtable define void @test_01() { br label %.outer ; <label>:1: ; preds = %2 ret void ; <label>:2: ; preds = %._crit_edge.loopexit %3 = add nsw i32 %.ph, -2 br i1 undef, label %1, label %.outer .outer: ; preds = %2, %0 %.ph = phi i32 [ %3, %2 ], [ 336, %0 ] %.ph2 = phi i32 [ 62, %2 ], [ 110, %0 ] %4 = and i32 %.ph, 30 %5 = add i32 %.ph2, 1 br label %6 ; <label>:6: ; preds = %6, %.outer %7 = phi i32 [ %5, %.outer ], [ %13, %6 ] %8 = phi i32 [ %.ph2, %.outer ], [ %7, %6 ] %9 = add i32 %8, 2 %10 = zext i32 %9 to i64 %11 = getelementptr inbounds i32, i32 addrspace(1)* undef, i64 %10 %12 = ashr i32 undef, %4 store i32 %12, i32 addrspace(1)* %11, align 4 %13 = add i32 %7, 1 %14 = icmp sgt i32 %13, 61 br i1 %14, label %._crit_edge.loopexit, label %6 ._crit_edge.loopexit: ; preds = %._crit_edge.loopexit, %6 br i1 undef, label %2, label %._crit_edge.loopexit } ; After trip count is increased, the test gets vectorized. ; CHECK-LABEL: @test_02( ; CHECK: vector.body: ; CHECK: store <4 x i32> ; Function Attrs: uwtable define void @test_02() { br label %.outer ; <label>:1: ; preds = %2 ret void ; <label>:2: ; preds = %._crit_edge.loopexit %3 = add nsw i32 %.ph, -2 br i1 undef, label %1, label %.outer .outer: ; preds = %2, %0 %.ph = phi i32 [ %3, %2 ], [ 336, %0 ] %.ph2 = phi i32 [ 62, %2 ], [ 110, %0 ] %4 = and i32 %.ph, 30 %5 = add i32 %.ph2, 1 br label %6 ; <label>:6: ; preds = %6, %.outer %7 = phi i32 [ %5, %.outer ], [ %13, %6 ] %8 = phi i32 [ %.ph2, %.outer ], [ %7, %6 ] %9 = add i32 %8, 2 %10 = zext i32 %9 to i64 %11 = getelementptr inbounds i32, i32 addrspace(1)* undef, i64 %10 %12 = ashr i32 undef, %4 store i32 %12, i32 addrspace(1)* %11, align 4 %13 = add i32 %7, 1 %14 = icmp sgt i32 %13, 610 br i1 %14, label %._crit_edge.loopexit, label %6 ._crit_edge.loopexit: ; preds = %._crit_edge.loopexit, %6 br i1 undef, label %2, label %._crit_edge.loopexit }