This make is obivious that a class was not intended to be derived from.
NPM analysis pass can unfortunately not marked as final because they are
derived from a llvm::Checker<T> template internally by the NPM.
Also normalize the use of classes/structs
* NPM passes are structs
* Legacy passes are classes
* structs that have methods and are not a visitor pattern are classes
* structs have public inheritance by default, remove "public" keyword
* Use typedef'ed type instead of inline forward declaration
As discussed in https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53020 / https://reviews.llvm.org/D116692,
SCEV is forbidden from reasoning about 'backedge taken count'
if the branch condition is a poison-safe logical operation,
which is conservatively correct, but is severely limiting.
Instead, we should have a way to express those
poison blocking properties in SCEV expressions.
The proposed semantics is:
```
Sequential/in-order min/max SCEV expressions are non-commutative variants
of commutative min/max SCEV expressions. If none of their operands
are poison, then they are functionally equivalent, otherwise,
if the operand that represents the saturation point* of given expression,
comes before the first poison operand, then the whole expression is not poison,
but is said saturation point.
```
* saturation point - the maximal/minimal possible integer value for the given type
The lowering is straight-forward:
```
compare each operand to the saturation point,
perform sequential in-order logical-or (poison-safe!) ordered reduction
over those checks, and if reduction returned true then return
saturation point else return the naive min/max reduction over the operands
```
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/Q7jxvH (2 ops)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/QCRrhk (3 ops)
Note that we don't need to check the last operand: https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/abvHQS
Note that this is not commutative: https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/FK9e97
That allows us to handle the patterns in question.
Reviewed By: nikic, reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116766
Compilation of the file insn-attrtab.c of the SPEC CPU 2017 502.gcc_r
benchmark takes excessive time (> 30min) with Polly enabled. Most time
is spent in the isErrorBlock function querying the DominatorTree.
The isErrorBlock is invoked redundantly over the course of ScopDetection
and ScopBuilder. This patch introduces a caching mechanism for its
result.
Instead of a free function, isErrorBlock is moved to ScopDetection where
its cache map resides. This also means that many functions directly or
indirectly calling isErrorBlock are not "const" anymore. The
DetectionContextMap was marked as "mutable", but IMHO it never should
have been since it stores the detection result.
502.gcc_r only takes excessive time with the new pass manager. The
reason seeams to be that it invalidates the ScopDetection analysis more
often than the legacy pass manager, for unknown reasons.
We previously had a different interpretation of unroll transformation
attributes than how LoopUnroll interpreted it. In particular,
llvm.loop.unroll.enable was needed explicitly to enable it and disabling
metadata was ignored.
Additionally, it required that either full unrolling or an unroll factor
to be specified or fail otherwise. An unroll factor is still required,
but the transformation is ignored with the hope that LoopUnroll is going
to apply the unrolling, since Polly currently does not implement an
heuristic.
Fixes llvm.org/PR50109
Make Polly look for unrolling metadata (https://llvm.org/docs/TransformMetadata.html#loop-unrolling) that is usually only interpreted by the LoopUnroll pass and apply it to the SCoP's schedule.
While not that useful by itself (there already is an unroll pass), it introduces mechanism to apply arbitrary loop transformation directives in arbitrary order to the schedule. Transformations are applied until no more directives are found. Since ISL's rescheduling would discard the manual transformations and it is assumed that when the user specifies the sequence of transformations, they do not want any other transformations to apply. Applying user-directed transformations can be controlled using the `-polly-pragma-based-opts` switch and is enabled by default.
This does not influence the SCoP detection heuristic. As a consequence, loop that do not fulfill SCoP requirements or the initial profitability heuristic will be ignored. `-polly-process-unprofitable` can be used to disable the latter.
Other than manually editing the IR, there is currently no way for the user to add loop transformations in an order other than the order in the default pipeline, or transformations other than the one supported by clang's LoopHint. See the `unroll_double.ll` test as example that clang currently is unable to emit. My own extension of `#pragma clang loop` allowing an arbitrary order and additional transformations is available here: https://github.com/meinersbur/llvm-project/tree/pragma-clang-loop. An effort to upstream this functionality as `#pragma clang transform` (because `#pragma clang loop` has an implicit transformation order defined by the loop pipeline) is D69088.
Additional transformations from my downstream pragma-clang-loop branch are tiling, interchange, reversal, unroll-and-jam, thread-parallelization and array packing. Unroll was chosen because it uses already-defined metadata and does not require correctness checks.
Reviewed By: sebastiankreutzer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97977
ZoneAlgorithms's computePHI relies on being provided with consistent a
schedule to compute the statement prodecessors of a statement containing
PHINodes. Otherwise unexpected results such as PHI nodes with multiple
predecessors can occur which would result in problems in the
algorithms expecting consistent data.
In the added test case, statement instances are scrubbed from the
SCoP their execution would result in undefined behavior (Due to a nsw
overflow). As already being undefined behavior in LLVM-IR, neither
AssumedContext nor InvalidContext are updated, giving computePHI no
means to avoid these cases.
Intoduce a new SCoP property, the DefinedBehaviorContext, that among
the runtime-checked conditions, also tracks the assumptions not needing
a runtime check, in particular those affecting the assumed control flow.
This replaces the manual combination of the 3 other contexts that was
already done in computePHI and setNewAccessRelation. Currently, the only
additional assumption is that loop induction variables will nsw flag for
not wrap, but potentially more can be added. Use in
hasFeasibleRuntimeContext, isl::ast_build and gisting are other
potential uses.
To limit computational complexity, the DefinedBehaviorContext is not
availabe if it grows too large (atm hardcoded to 8 disjuncts).
Possible other fixes include bailing out in computePHI when
inconsistencies are detected, choose an arbitrary value for inconsistent
cases (since it is undefined behavior anyways), or make the code
receiving the result from ComputePHI handle inconsistent data. All of
them reduce the quality of implementation having to bail out more often
and disabling the ability to assert on actually wrong results.
This fixes llvm.org/PR48783.
And use it to model LLVM IR's `ptrtoint` cast.
This is essentially an alternative to D88806, but with no chance for
all the problems it caused due to having the cast as implicit there.
(see rG7ee6c402474a2f5fd21c403e7529f97f6362fdb3)
As we've established by now, there are at least two reasons why we want this:
* It will allow SCEV to actually model the `ptrtoint` casts
and their operands, instead of treating them as `SCEVUnknown`
* It should help with initial problem of PR46786 - this should eventually allow us
to not loose pointer-ness of an expression in more cases
As discussed in [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46786 | PR46786 ]], in principle,
we could just extend `SCEVUnknown` with a `is ptrtoint` cast, because `ScalarEvolution::getPtrToIntExpr()`
should sink the cast as far down into the expression as possible,
so in the end we should always end up with `SCEVPtrToIntExpr` of `SCEVUnknown`.
But i think that it isn't the best solution, because it doesn't really matter
from memory consumption side - there probably won't be *that* many `SCEVPtrToIntExpr`s
for it to matter, and it allows for much better discoverability.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89456
This reverts the revert commit dc28675768.
It includes a fix for Polly, which uses SCEVExpander on IR that is not
in LCSSA form. Set PreserveLCSSA = false in that case, to ensure we do
not introduce LCSSA phis where there were none before.
Summary:
This patch moves the getIndexExpressionsFromGEP function from polly
into ScalarEvolution so that both polly and DependenceAnalysis can
use it for the purpose of subscript delinearization when the array
sizes are not parametric.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, sebpop, fhahn, dmgreen, grosser, etiotto, bollu
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: hiraditya, arphaman, Whitney, ppc-slack, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73995
Simply dropping the createPollyIRBuilder() function here, because
it doesn't do much. Also directly initialize Expander in
ScopExpander instead of going through the copy-constructor.
Scope of changes:
1) Moved RecordedAssumptions vector to ScopBuilder. RecordedAssumptions are used only for Scop constructions.
2) Moved definition of RecordedAssumptionsTy to ScopHelper. It is required both by ScopBuilder and SCEVAffinator.
3) Add new function recordAssumption to ScopHelper. One of its argument is a reference to RecordedAssumption vector. This function is used by ScopBuilder and SCEVAffinator.
4) All RecordedAssumptions are created by ScopBuilder. isl::pw_aff
objects for corresponding SCEVs are created inside ScopBuilder. Scop
functions do not record any assumptions. Scop can use isl::pw_aff
objects which were created by ScopBuilder.
5) Removed functions for handling RecordedAssumptions from Scop class.
6) Removed constness from getScopArrayInfo functions.
7) Replaced SCEVVisitor struct from SCEVAffinator with taylored version, which allow to pass pointer to RecordedAssumptions as function argument.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68056
Scope of changes:
1. Moved buildSchedule functions to ScopBuilder.
2. Moved combineInSequence function to ScopBuilder.
3. Moved mapToDimension function to ScopBuilder.
4. Moved LoopStackTy to ScopBuilder.
5. Moved getLoopSurroundingScop to ScopHelper.
6. Moved getNumBlocksInLoop to ScopHelper.
7. Moved getNumBlocksInRegionNode to ScopHelper.
8. Moved getRegionNodeLoop to ScopHelper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64223
llvm-svn: 366377
This removes unused includes (and forward declarations) as
suggested by include-what-you-use. If a transitive include of a removed
include is required to compile a file, I added the required header (or
forward declaration if suggested by include-what-you-use).
This should reduce compilation time and reduce the number of iterative
recompilations when a header was changed.
llvm-svn: 357209
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
This removes the primary remaining API producing `TerminatorInst` which
will reduce the rate at which code is introduced trying to use it and
generally make it much easier to remove the remaining APIs across the
codebase.
Also clean up some of the stragglers that the previous mechanical update
of variables missed.
Users of LLVM and out-of-tree code generally will need to update any
explicit variable types to handle this. Replacing `TerminatorInst` with
`Instruction` (or `auto`) almost always works. Most of these edits were
made in prior commits using the perl one-liner:
```
perl -i -ple 's/TerminatorInst(\b.* = .*getTerminator\(\))/Instruction\1/g'
```
This also my break some rare use cases where people overload for both
`Instruction` and `TerminatorInst`, but these should be easily fixed by
removing the `TerminatorInst` overload.
llvm-svn: 344504
Summary: This patch aims to provide support for detecting load patterns which are collectively invariant but right now `isHoistableLoad()` is checking each load instruction individually which cannot detect the load pattern as a whole.
Patch by: Sahil Girish Yerawar
Reviewers: bollu, philip.pfaffe, Meinersbur
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe, Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48026
llvm-svn: 335949
The number of SCEV expressions is usually linear in the number of IR
instructions being modeled. However, a naive SCEV visitor is not. For
an expression like x*x, "x" will be visited twice. If x is itself an
expression like x*x, that will be visited twice, etc, and the overall
runtime is O(2^N) in the number of SCEV expressions.
To prevent this from happening, add a cache, so we only visit each SCEV
expression once.
Not sure this is the best solution. Maybe we can instead check whether
the SCEV is scop-invariant (in which case we never need to map the
value). But we don't have a utility for that at the moment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47087
llvm-svn: 335783
Add the switch -polly-debug-func to define the name of a debug
function. This function is ignored for any validity check.
Its purpose is to allow to observe a value after transformation by a
SCoP, and to follow which statements are executed in which order. For
instance, consider the following code:
static void dbg_printf(int sum, int i) {
fprintf(stderr, "The value of sum is %d, i=%d\n", sum, i);
fflush(stderr);
}
void func(int n) {
int sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 16; i+=1) {
sum += i;
dbg_printf(sum, i);
}
}
Executing this after Polly's codegen with -polly-debug-func=dbg_printf
reveals the new execution order and the assumed values at that point of
execution.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45728
llvm-svn: 330466
This patch removes the heuristic in
- Polly :: lib/Support/ScopHelper.cpp
The heuristic forces blocks that directly follow a loop header to not to be considered error blocks.
It was introduced in r249611 with the following commit message:
> This replaces the support for user defined error functions by a
> heuristic that tries to determine if a call to a non-pure function
> should be considered "an error". If so the block is assumed not to be
> executed at runtime. While treating all non-pure function calls as
> errors will allow a lot more regions to be analyzed, it will also
> cause us to dismiss a lot again due to an infeasible runtime context.
> This patch tries to limit that effect. A non-pure function call is
> considered an error if it is executed only in conditionally with
> regards to a cheap but simple heuristic.
In the code below `CCK_Abort2()` would be considered as an error block, but not `CCK_Abort1()` due to this heuristic.
```
for (int i = 0; i < n; i+=1) {
if (ErrorCondition1)
CCK_Abort1(); // No __attribute__((noreturn))
if (ErrorCondition2)
CCK_Abort2(); // No __attribute__((noreturn))
}
```
This does not seem useful. Checking error conditions in the beginning of some work is quite common. It causes a switch default-case to be not considered an error block in SPEC's cactuBSSN. The comment justifying the heuristic mentions a "load", which does not seem to be applicable here. It has been proposed to remove the heuristic.
In addition, the patch fixes the following test cases:
- Polly :: ScopDetect/mod_ref_read_pointer.ll
- Polly :: ScopInfo/max-loop-depth.ll
- Polly :: ScopInfo/mod_ref_access_pointee_arguments.ll
- Polly :: ScopInfo/mod_ref_read_pointee_arguments.ll
- Polly :: ScopInfo/mod_ref_read_pointer.ll
- Polly :: ScopInfo/mod_ref_read_pointers.ll
The test cases failed after removing the heuristic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45274
Contributed-by: Lorenzo Chelini <l.chelini@icloud.com>
llvm-svn: 329548
Summary:
This can be seen as a follow-up on my previous differential [D33411](https://reviews.llvm.org/D33411).
We received a bug report where this error was triggered. I have tried my best to recreate the issue in a minimal lit testcase which is also part of this differential.
I only handle return instructions as predecessors to a virtual TLR-exit right now. From inspecting the codebase, it seems `unreachable` instructions may also be of interest here. If requested, I can extend my patches to consider them as well. I would also apply this on `ScopHelper.cpp::isErrorBlock` (see D33411), of course.
Reviewers: philip.pfaffe, bollu
Reviewed By: bollu
Subscribers: Meinersbur, pollydev, llvm-commits
Tags: #polly
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40492
llvm-svn: 319431
The intrinsics memset, memcopy and memmove do have their memory accesses
modeled by ScopBuilder. Do not consider them error-case behavior.
Test case will come with a future patch that requires memory intrinsics
outside of error blocks.
llvm-svn: 312021
Commit r252725 introduced a "return false" if an ignored intrinsics was
found. The consequence of this was that the mere existence of an ignored
intrinsic (such as llvm.dbg.value) before a call that would have
qualified the block to be an error block, to not be an error block.
The obvious goal was to just skip ignored intrinsics, not changing the
meaning of what an error block is.
llvm-svn: 312020
Summary:
This patch is a first attempt at registering Polly passes with the LLVM tools. Tool plugins are still unsupported, but this registration is usable from the tools if Polly is linked into them (albeit requiring minimal patches to those tools). Registration requires a small amount of machinery (the owning analysis proxies), necessary for injecting ScopAnalysisManager objects into the calling tools.
This patch is marked WIP because the registration is incomplete. Parsing manual pipelines is fully supported, but default pass injection into the O3 pipeline is lacking, mostly because there is opportunity for some redesign here, I believe. The first point of order would be insertion points. I think it makes sense to run before the vectorizers. Running Polly Early, however, is weird. Mostly because it actually is the default (which to me is unexpected), and because Polly runs it's own O1 pipeline. Why not instead insert it at an appropriate place somewhere after simplification happend? Running after the loop optimizers seems intuitive, but it also seems wasteful, since multiple consecutive loops might well be a single scop, and we don't need to run for all of them.
My second request for comments would be regarding all those smallish helper passes we have, like PollyViewer, PollyPrinter, PollyImportJScop. Right now these are controlled by command line options, deciding whether they should be part of the Polly pipeline. What is your opinion on treating them like real passes, and have the user write an appropriate pipeline if they want to use any of them?
Reviewers: grosser, Meinersbur, bollu
Reviewed By: grosser
Subscribers: llvm-commits, pollydev
Tags: #polly
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35458
llvm-svn: 309826
We need to relax constraints on invariant loads so that they do not
create fake RAW dependences. So, we do not consider invariant loads as
scalar dependences in a region.
During these changes, it turned out that we do not consider `llvm::Value`
replacements correctly within `PPCGCodeGeneration` and `ISLNodeBuilder`.
The replacements dictated by `ValueMap` were not being followed in all
places. This was fixed in this commit. There is no clean way to decouple
this change because this bug only seems to arise when the relaxed
version of invariant load hoisting was enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35120
llvm-svn: 307907
ScopStmts were being used in the computation of the Domain of the SCoPs
in ScopInfo. Once statements are split, there will not be a 1-to-1
correspondence between Stmts and Basic blocks. Thus this patch avoids
the use of getStmtFor() by creating a map of BB to InvalidDomain and
using it to compute the domain of the statements.
Contributed-by: Nanidini Singhal <cs15mtech01004@iith.ac.in>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33942
llvm-svn: 306667
Summary:
My goal is to make the newly added `AllowWholeFunctions` options more usable/powerful.
The changes to ScopBuilder.cpp are exclusively checks to prevent `Region.getExit()` from being dereferenced, since Top Level Regions (TLRs) don't have an exit block.
In ScopDetection's `isValidCFG`, I removed a check that disallowed ReturnInstructions to have return values. This might of course have been intentional, so I would welcome your feedback on this and maybe a small explanation why return values are forbidden. Maybe it can be done but needs more changes elsewhere?
The remaining changes in ScopDetection are simply to consider the AllowWholeFunctions option in more places, i.e. allow TLRs when it is set and once again avoid derefererncing `getExit()` if it doesn't exist.
Finally, in ScopHelper.cpp I extended `polly::isErrorBlock` to handle regions without exit blocks as well: The original check was if a given BasicBlock dominates all predecessors of the exit block. Therefore I do the same for TLRs by regarding all BasicBlocks terminating with a ReturnInst as predecessors of a "virtual" function exit block.
Patch by: Lukas Boehm
Reviewers: philip.pfaffe, grosser, Meinersbur
Reviewed By: grosser
Subscribers: pollydev, llvm-commits, bollu
Tags: #polly
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33411
llvm-svn: 303790
At the time of code generation, an instruction with an llvm intrinsic is ignored
in copyBB. However, if the value of the instruction is used later in the
program, the value needs to be synthesized. However, this is causing some issues
with the instructions being generated in a hoisted basic block.
Removing llvm.expect from the list of ignored intrinsics fixes this bug.
This resolves http://llvm.org/PR32324.
Contributed-by: Annanay Agarwal <cs14btech11001@iith.ac.in>
Tags: #polly
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32992
llvm-svn: 303006
Introduce ScopStmt::getSurroundingLoop() to replace getFirstNonBoxedLoopFor.
getSurroundingLoop() returns the precomputed surrounding/first non-boxed
loop. Except in ScopDetection, the list of boxed loops is only used to
get the surrounding loop. getFirstNonBoxedLoopFor also requires LoopInfo
at every use which is not necessarily available everywhere where we may
want to use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30985
llvm-svn: 297899
Move the function getFirstNonBoxedLoopFor which is used in ScopBuilder
and in ScopInfo to Support/ScopHelpers to make it reusable in other
locations. No functionality change.
Patch by Sameer Abu Asal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28754
llvm-svn: 292168
Do not assume a load to be hoistable/invariant if the pointer is used by
another instruction in the SCoP that might write to memory and that is
always executed.
llvm-svn: 287272
The declaration as an "error block" is currently aggressive and not very
smart. This patch allows to disable error blocks completely. This might
be useful to prevent SCoP expansion to a point where the assumed context
becomes infeasible, thus the SCoP has to be discarded.
llvm-svn: 287271
This makes polly generate a CFG which is closer to what we want
in LLVM IR, with a loop preheader for the original loop. This is
just a cleanup, but it exposes some fragile assumptions.
I'm not completely happy with the changes related to expandCodeFor;
RTCBB->getTerminator() is basically a random insertion point which
happens to work due to the way we generate runtime checks. I'm not
sure what the right answer looks like, though.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26053
llvm-svn: 285864
This function is used by both ScopInfo and ScopBuilder. A common
location for this function is required when ScopInfo and ScopBuilder are
separated into separate files in the next commit.
llvm-svn: 273981
IntToPtr and PtrToInt instructions are basically no-ops that we can handle as
such. In order to generate them properly as parameters we had to improve the
ScopExpander, though the change is the first in the direction of a more
aggressive scalar synthetization.
This patch was originally contributed by Johannes Doerfert in r271888, but was
in conflict with the revert in r272483. This is a recommit with some minor
adjustment to the test cases to take care of differing instruction names.
llvm-svn: 272485
The recent expression type changes still need more discussion, which will happen
on phabricator or on the mailing list. The precise list of commits reverted are:
- "Refactor division generation code"
- "[NFC] Generate runtime checks after the SCoP"
- "[FIX] Determine insertion point during SCEV expansion"
- "Look through IntToPtr & PtrToInt instructions"
- "Use minimal types for generated expressions"
- "Temporarily promote values to i64 again"
- "[NFC] Avoid unnecessary comparison for min/max expressions"
- "[Polly] Fix -Wunused-variable warnings (NFC)"
- "[NFC] Simplify min/max expression generation"
- "Simplify the type adjustment in the IslExprBuilder"
Some of them are just reverted as we would otherwise get conflicts. I will try
to re-commit them if possible.
llvm-svn: 272483