According to report by @JojoR, the assertion error was hit hence we need
to have this check before the actual transformation.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur, #loopoptwg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136415
The LSR may suggest less profitable transformation to the loop. This
patch adds check to prevent LSR from generating worse code than what
we already have.
Since LSR affects nearly all targets, the patch is guarded by the
option 'lsr-drop-solution' and default as disable for now.
The next step should be extending an TTI interface to allow target(s)
to enable this enhancememnt.
Debug log is added to remind user of such choice to skip the LSR
solution.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur, #loopoptwg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126043
This stops reporting CostPerUse 1 for `R8`-`R15` and `XMM8`-`XMM31`.
This was previously done because instruction encoding require a REX
prefix when using them resulting in longer instruction encodings. I
found that this regresses the quality of the register allocation as the
costs impose an ordering on eviction candidates. I also feel that there
is a bit of an impedance mismatch as the actual costs occure when
encoding instructions using those registers, but the order of VReg
assignments is not primarily ordered by number of Defs+Uses.
I did extensive measurements with the llvm-test-suite wiht SPEC2006 +
SPEC2017 included, internal services showed similar patterns. Generally
there are a log of improvements but also a lot of regression. But on
average the allocation quality seems to improve at a small code size
regression.
Results for measuring static and dynamic instruction counts:
Dynamic Counts (scaled by execution frequency) / Optimization Remarks:
Spills+FoldedSpills -5.6%
Reloads+FoldedReloads -4.2%
Copies -0.1%
Static / LLVM Statistics:
regalloc.NumSpills mean -1.6%, geomean -2.8%
regalloc.NumReloads mean -1.7%, geomean -3.1%
size..text mean +0.4%, geomean +0.4%
Static / LLVM Statistics:
mean -2.2%, geomean -3.1%) regalloc.NumSpills
mean -2.6%, geomean -3.9%) regalloc.NumReloads
mean +0.6%, geomean +0.6%) size..text
Static / LLVM Statistics:
regalloc.NumSpills mean -3.0%
regalloc.NumReloads mean -3.3%
size..text mean +0.3%, geomean +0.3%
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133902
When the IV is only used by the terminating condition (say IV-A) and the loop
has a predictable back-edge count and we have another IV (say IV-B) that is an
affine add recursion, we will be able to calculate the terminating value of
IV-B in the loop pre-header. This patch adds attempts to replace IV-B as the
new terminating condition and remove IV-A. It is safe to do so since IV-A is
only used as the terminating condition.
This transformation is suitable to be appended after LSR as it may optimize the
loop into the situation mentioned above. The transformation can reduce number of
IV-s in the loop by one.
A cli option `lsr-term-fold` is added and default disabled.
Reviewed By: mcberg2021, craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132443
Changes since initial commit:
* Wrapping a pointer in an SCEV unknown hides the base, and SCEV is only able to compute a subtraction when the bases are known to be equal. This results in a SCEVCouldNotCompute flowing forward and triggering asserts. Test case added in d767b392.
* isLoopInvariant returns true for instructions outside the loop, but not necessarily *above* the loop. Since this code is allowed to visit uses of an IV outside of a loop, we have to make sure the operands of the compare are both invariant and dominating the header. Test case added in 2aed3cdb.
Original commit message follows...
The ICmpZero matching is checking to see if the expression is loop invariant per SCEV and expandable. This allows expressions inside the loop which can be made loop invariant to be seamlessly expanded, but is overly conservative for expressions which already *are* loop invariant.
As a simple justification for why this is correct, consider a loop invariant urem as RHS vs an alternate function with that same urem wrapped inside a helper call. Why would it be legal to match the later, but not the former?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129793
The ICmpZero matching is checking to see if the expression is loop invariant per SCEV and expandable. This allows expressions inside the loop which can be made loop invariant to be seamlessly expanded, but is overly conservative for expressions which already *are* loop invariant.
As a simple justification for why this is correct, consider a loop invariant urem as RHS vs an alternate function with that same urem wrapped inside a helper call. Why would it be legal to match the later, but not the former?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129793
Following some recent discussions, this changes the representation
of callbrs in IR. The current blockaddress arguments are replaced
with `!` label constraints that refer directly to callbr indirect
destinations:
; Before:
%res = callbr i8* asm "", "=r,r,i"(i8* %x, i8* blockaddress(@test8, %foo))
to label %asm.fallthrough [label %foo]
; After:
%res = callbr i8* asm "", "=r,r,!i"(i8* %x)
to label %asm.fallthrough [label %foo]
The benefit of this is that we can easily update the successors of
a callbr, without having to worry about also updating blockaddress
references. This should allow us to remove some limitations:
* Allow unrolling/peeling/rotation of callbr, or any other
clone-based optimizations
(https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/41834)
* Allow duplicate successors
(https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/45248)
This is just the IR representation change though, I will follow up
with patches to remove limtations in various transformation passes
that are no longer needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129288
Follow up to 3bc09c7da5 - remove a fixme I forgot to remove, and add test cases showing remaining work.
Note that scaled vscales show up in vectorized code from a couple of sources:
* Element types smaller than vector block size (i.e. everything under i64)
* Unrolling
* LMUL > 1
The largest scaling we can currently have is 256 (e8 in every possible vector register). More practically useful scales are in the 2-16 range.
Motivation here is to unblock LSRs ability to use ICmpZero uses - the major effect of which is to enable count down IVs. The test changes reflect this goal, but the potential impact is much broader since this isn't a change in LSR at all.
SCEVExpander needs(*) to prove that expanding the expression is safe anywhere the SCEV expression is valid. In general, we can't expand any node which might fault (or exhibit UB) unless we can either a) prove it won't fault, or b) guard the faulting case. We'd been allowing non-zero constants here; this change extends it to non-zero values.
vscale is never zero. This is already implemented in ValueTracking, and this change just adds the same logic in SCEV's range computation (which in turn drives isKnownNonZero). We should common up some logic here, but let's do that in separate changes.
(*) As an aside, "needs" is such an interesting word here. First, we don't actually need to guard this at all; we could choose to emit a select for the RHS of ever udiv and remove this code entirely. Secondly, the property being checked here is way too strong. What the client actually needs is to expand the SCEV at some particular point in some particular loop. In the examples, the original urem dominates that loop and yet we completely ignore that information when analyzing legality. I don't plan to actively pursue either direction, just noting it for future reference.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129710
For the moment, we're pretty conservative here. My motivating case is the vscale one (as that is idiomatic for scalable vectorized loops on RISCV). There are two obvious approaches to fixing this, and I tried to add reasonable coverage for both even though I'll likely only fix one.
After D129205, we support SplitBlockPredecessors() for predecessors
with callbr terminators. This means that it is now also safe to
invoke critical edge splitting for an edge coming from a callbr
terminator. Remove checks in various passes that were protecting
against that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129256
Fix bug exposed by https://reviews.llvm.org/D125990
rewriteLoopExitValues calls InductionDescriptor::isInductionPHI which requires
the PHI node to have an incoming edge from the loop preheader. This adds checks
before calling InductionDescriptor::isInductionPHI to see that the loop has a
preheader. Also did some refactoring.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129297
Scale reg should never be zero, so when the quotient is zero, we
cannot assign it there. Limit this transform to avoid this situation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128339
Reviewed By: eopXD
This reverts commit 1fbdbb5595.
All known issues surfaced by this patch should have been fixed now.
The fixes included fixing issues with SCEV expansion in LV and DA's
reliance on LCSSA phis.
Now that SimpleLoopUnswitch and other transforms no longer introduce
branch on poison, enable the -branch-on-poison-as-ub option by
default. The practical impact of this is mostly better flag
preservation in SCEV, and some freeze instructions no longer being
necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125299
This relands commit 8f550368b1.
The test is amended with REQUIRES: x86-registered-target, in line with
the other debuginfo-scev-salvage tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120169
Second of two patches to extend SCEV-based salvaging to dbg.value
intrinsics that have multiple location ops pre-LSR. This second patch
adds the core implementation.
Reviewers: @StephenTozer, @djtodoro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120169
Loop Strength Reduce sometimes optimizes away all uses of an induction variable
from a loop but leaves the IV increments. When the only remaining use of the IV
is the PHI in the exit block, this patch will call rewriteLoopExitValues to
replace the exit block PHI with the final value of the IV to skip the updates
in each loop iteration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118808
According to definition of canonical form, it is a canonical
if scale reg does not contain addrec for loop L then none of bases
should contain addrec for this loop.
The critical word here is "contains".
Current checker of canonical form checks not "containing" property
but "is". So it does not check whether it contains but whether it is.
Fix the checker and canonicalizing utility to follow definition.
Without this fix in the test attached the base formula looking as
reg((-1 * {0,+,8}<nuw><nsw><%bb2>)<nsw>) + 1*reg((8 * (%arg /u 8))<nuw>)
is considered as conanocial while base contains an addrec.
And modified formula we want to insert
reg({0,+,8}<nuw><nsw><%bb2>) + 1*reg((-8 * (%arg /u 8)))
is considered as not canonical.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122457
This fixes a crash I observed in issue #48708 where the LSR
pass tries to insert an instruction in a basic block with only a
catchswitch statement in there. This happens because the Phi node
being evaluated assumes the same value for different basic blocks.
If the basic block associated with the incoming value of the operand
being evaluated has an EHPad terminator LSR skips optimizing it.
But if that incoming value can come from multiple different blocks
there can be some incoming basic blocks which are terminated in
an EHPad. If these are then rewritten in RewriteForPhi the ones
containing an EHPad terminator will hit the "Insertion point must
be a normal instruction" assert in AdjustInsertPositionForExpand.
This fix makes CollectLoopInvariantFixupsAndFormulae also ignore
cases where the same value has another incoming basic block with an
EHPad, same as it already does in case the primary value has one.
Patch by Lorenz Brun <lorenz@brun.one>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98378
In D115311, we're looking to modify clang to emit i constraints rather
than X constraints for callbr's indirect destinations. Prior to doing
so, update all of the existing tests in llvm/ to match.
Reviewed By: void, jyknight
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115410
This adjusts all the MVE and CDE intrinsics now that v2i1 is a legal
type, to use a <2 x i1> as opposed to emulating the predicate with a
<4 x i1>. The v4i1 workarounds have been removed leaving the natural
v2i1 types, notably in vctp64 which now generates a v2i1 type.
AutoUpgrade code has been added to upgrade old IR, which needs to
convert the old v4i1 to a v2i1 be converting it back and forth to an
integer with arm.mve.v2i and arm.mve.i2v intrinsics. These should be
optimized away in the final assembly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114455
Relative to the previous landing attempt, this introduces an additional
flag on forgetMemoizedResults() to not remove SCEVUnknown phis from
the value map. The invalidation after BECount calculation wants to
leave these alone and skips them in its own use-def walk, but we can
still end up invalidating them via forgetMemoizedResults() if there
is another IR value with the same SCEV. This is intended as a temporary
workaround only, and the need for this should go away once the
getBackedgeTakenInfo() invalidation is refactored in the spirit of
D114263.
-----
This adds validation for consistency of ValueExprMap and
ExprValueMap, and fixes identified issues:
* Addrec construction directly wrote to ValueExprMap in a few places,
without updating ExprValueMap. Add a helper to ensures they stay
consistent. The adjustment in forgetSymbolicName() explicitly
drops the old value from the map, so that we don't rely on it
being overwritten.
* forgetMemoizedResultsImpl() was dropping the SCEV from
ExprValueMap, but not dropping the corresponding entries from
ValueExprMap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113349
Relative to the previous landing attempt, this makes
insertValueToMap() resilient against the value already being
present in the map -- previously I only checked this for the
createSimpleAffineAddRec() case, but the same issue can also
occur for the general createNodeForPHI(). In both cases, the
addrec may be constructed and added to the map in a recursive
query trying to create said addrec. In this case, this happens
due to the invalidation when the BE count is computed, which
ends up clearing out the symbolic name as well.
-----
This adds validation for consistency of ValueExprMap and
ExprValueMap, and fixes identified issues:
* Addrec construction directly wrote to ValueExprMap in a few places,
without updating ExprValueMap. Add a helper to ensures they stay
consistent. The adjustment in forgetSymbolicName() explicitly
drops the old value from the map, so that we don't rely on it
being overwritten.
* forgetMemoizedResultsImpl() was dropping the SCEV from
ExprValueMap, but not dropping the corresponding entries from
ValueExprMap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113349