intrinsics.fmuladdf{16,32,64,128}: expose llvm.fmuladd.* semantics

Add intrinsics `fmuladd{f16,f32,f64,f128}`. This computes `(a * b) +
c`, to be fused if the code generator determines that (i) the target
instruction set has support for a fused operation, and (ii) that the
fused operation is more efficient than the equivalent, separate pair
of `mul` and `add` instructions.

https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-fmuladd-intrinsic

MIRI support is included for f32 and f64.

The codegen_cranelift uses the `fma` function from libc, which is a
correct implementation, but without the desired performance semantic. I
think this requires an update to cranelift to expose a suitable
instruction in its IR.

I have not tested with codegen_gcc, but it should behave the same
way (using `fma` from libc).
This commit is contained in:
Jed Brown 2024-01-05 21:04:41 -07:00
parent 01e2fff90c
commit 0d8a978e8a
11 changed files with 222 additions and 1 deletions

View file

@ -66,6 +66,9 @@ fn get_simple_intrinsic<'gcc, 'tcx>(
sym::log2f64 => "log2",
sym::fmaf32 => "fmaf",
sym::fmaf64 => "fma",
// FIXME: calling `fma` from libc without FMA target feature uses expensive sofware emulation
sym::fmuladdf32 => "fmaf", // TODO: use gcc intrinsic analogous to llvm.fmuladd.f32
sym::fmuladdf64 => "fma", // TODO: use gcc intrinsic analogous to llvm.fmuladd.f64
sym::fabsf32 => "fabsf",
sym::fabsf64 => "fabs",
sym::minnumf32 => "fminf",