Really it should be named print<alias-sets>, but for the sake of
changing fewer tests, added a TODO to rename after NPM switch and test
cleanup.
Reviewed By: ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87713
'require<globals-aa>' is needed to make globals-aa work in NPM, since
globals-aa is a module analysis but function passes cannot run module
analyses on demand.
So don't skip translating alias analyses to 'require<>'.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87743
D65060 was reverted because it introduced non-determinism by using BFI counts from already freed blocks. The parent of this revision fixes that by using a VH callback on blocks to prevent this from happening and makes sure BFI data is passed correctly in LoopStandardAnalysisResults.
This re-introduces the previous optimization of using BFI data to prevent LICM from hoisting/sinking if the instruction will end up moving to a colder block.
Internally at Facebook this change results in a ~7% win in a CPU related metric in one of our big services by preventing hoisting cold code into a hot pre-header like the added test case demonstrates.
Testing:
ninja check
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87551
~~D65060 uncovered that trying to use BFI in loop passes can lead to non-deterministic behavior when blocks are re-used while retaining old BFI data.~~
~~To make sure BFI is preserved through loop passes a Value Handle (VH) callback is registered on blocks themselves. When a block is freed it now also wipes out the accompanying BFI entry such that stale BFI data can no longer persist resolving the determinism issue. ~~
~~An optimistic approach would be to incrementally update BFI information throughout the loop passes rather than only invalidating them on removed blocks. The issues with that are:~~
~~1. It is not clear how BFI information should be incrementally updated: If a block is duplicated does its BFI information come with? How about if it's split/modified/moved around? ~~
~~2. Assuming we can address these problems the implementation here will be a massive undertaking. ~~
~~There's a known need of BFI in LICM analysis which requires correct but not incrementally updated BFI data. A follow-up change can register BFI in all loop passes so this preserved but potentially lossy data is available to any loop pass that wants it.~~
See: D75341 for an identical implementation of preserving BFI via VH callbacks. The previous statements do still apply but this change no longer has to be in this diff because it's already upstream 😄 .
This diff also moves BFI to be a part of LoopStandardAnalysisResults since the previous method using getCachedResults now (correctly!) statically asserts (D72893) that this data isn't static through the loop passes.
Testing
Ninja check
Reviewed By: asbirlea, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86156
Was missing MODULE_ALIAS_ANALYSIS, previously only FUNCTION_ALIAS_ANALYSIS was taken into account.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87664
As to not conflict with the legacy PM example passes under
llvm/lib/Transforms/Hello, this is under HelloNew. This makes the
CMakeLists.txt and general directory structure less confusing for people
following the example.
Much of the doc structure was taken from WritinAnLLVMPass.rst.
This adds a HelloWorld pass which simply prints out each function name.
More will follow after this, e.g. passes over different units of IR, analyses.
https://llvm.org/docs/WritingAnLLVMPass.html contains a lot more.
Relanded with missing "Support" dependency in LLVMBuild.txt.
Reviewed By: ychen, asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86979
As to not conflict with the legacy PM example passes under
llvm/lib/Transforms/Hello, this is under HelloNew. This makes the
CMakeLists.txt and general directory structure less confusing for people
following the example.
Much of the doc structure was taken from WritinAnLLVMPass.rst.
This adds a HelloWorld pass which simply prints out each function name.
More will follow after this, e.g. passes over different units of IR, analyses.
https://llvm.org/docs/WritingAnLLVMPass.html contains a lot more.
Reviewed By: ychen, asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86979
This is consistent with the clang option added in
7ed8124d46, and the comments on the
runtime patch in D87120.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87622
This patch enables inserting freeze when JumpThreading converts a select to
a conditional branch when it is run in LTO.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85534
This was reverted in 503deec218
because it caused gigantic increase (3x) in branch mispredictions
in certain benchmarks on certain CPU's,
see https://reviews.llvm.org/D84108#2227365.
It has since been investigated and here are the results:
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20200907/827578.html
> It's an amazingly severe regression, but it's also all due to branch
> mispredicts (about 3x without this). The code layout looks ok so there's
> probably something else to deal with. I'm not sure there's anything we can
> reasonably do so we'll just have to take the hit for now and wait for
> another code reorganization to make the branch predictor a bit more happy :)
>
> Thanks for giving us some time to investigate and feel free to recommit
> whenever you'd like.
>
> -eric
So let's just reland this.
Original commit message:
I've been looking at missed vectorizations in one codebase.
One particular thing that stands out is that some of the loops
reach vectorizer in a rather mangled form, with weird PHI's,
and some of the loops aren't even in a rotated form.
After taking a more detailed look, that happened because
the loop's headers were too big by then. It is evident that
SimplifyCFG's common code hoisting transform is at fault there,
because the pattern it handles is precisely the unrotated
loop basic block structure.
Surprizingly, `SimplifyCFGOpt::HoistThenElseCodeToIf()` is enabled
by default, and is always run, unlike it's friend, common code sinking
transform, `SinkCommonCodeFromPredecessors()`, which is not enabled
by default and is only run once very late in the pipeline.
I'm proposing to harmonize this, and disable common code hoisting
until //late// in pipeline. Definition of //late// may vary,
here currently i've picked the same one as for code sinking,
but i suppose we could enable it as soon as right after
loop rotation happens.
Experimentation shows that this does indeed unsurprizingly help,
more loops got rotated, although other issues remain elsewhere.
Now, this undoubtedly seriously shakes phase ordering.
This will undoubtedly be a mixed bag in terms of both compile- and
run- time performance, codesize. Since we no longer aggressively
hoist+deduplicate common code, we don't pay the price of said hoisting
(which wasn't big). That may allow more loops to be rotated,
so we pay that price. That, in turn, that may enable all the transforms
that require canonical (rotated) loop form, including but not limited to
vectorization, so we pay that too. And in general, no deduplication means
more [duplicate] instructions going through the optimizations. But there's still
late hoisting, some of them will be caught late.
As per benchmarks i've run {F12360204}, this is mostly within the noise,
there are some small improvements, some small regressions.
One big regression i saw i fixed in rG8d487668d09fb0e4e54f36207f07c1480ffabbfd, but i'm sure
this will expose many more pre-existing missed optimizations, as usual :S
llvm-compile-time-tracker.com thoughts on this:
http://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=e40315d2b4ed1e38962a8f33ff151693ed4ada63&to=c8289c0ecbf235da9fb0e3bc052e3c0d6bff5cf9&stat=instructions
* this does regress compile-time by +0.5% geomean (unsurprizingly)
* size impact varies; for ThinLTO it's actually an improvement
The largest fallout appears to be in GVN's load partial redundancy
elimination, it spends *much* more time in
`MemoryDependenceResults::getNonLocalPointerDependency()`.
Non-local `MemoryDependenceResults` is widely-known to be, uh, costly.
There does not appear to be a proper solution to this issue,
other than silencing the compile-time performance regression
by tuning cut-off thresholds in `MemoryDependenceResults`,
at the cost of potentially regressing run-time performance.
D84609 attempts to move in that direction, but the path is unclear
and is going to take some time.
If we look at stats before/after diffs, some excerpts:
* RawSpeed (the target) {F12360200}
* -14 (-73.68%) loops not rotated due to the header size (yay)
* -272 (-0.67%) `"Number of live out of a loop variables"` - good for vectorizer
* -3937 (-64.19%) common instructions hoisted
* +561 (+0.06%) x86 asm instructions
* -2 basic blocks
* +2418 (+0.11%) IR instructions
* vanilla test-suite + RawSpeed + darktable {F12360201}
* -36396 (-65.29%) common instructions hoisted
* +1676 (+0.02%) x86 asm instructions
* +662 (+0.06%) basic blocks
* +4395 (+0.04%) IR instructions
It is likely to be sub-optimal for when optimizing for code size,
so one might want to change tune pipeline by enabling sinking/hoisting
when optimizing for size.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84108
This reverts commit 503deec218.
This also changes -lint from an analysis to a pass. It's similar to
-verify, and that is a normal pass, and lives in llvm/IR.
Reviewed By: ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87057
This also changes -lint from an analysis to a pass. It's similar to
-verify, and that is a normal pass, and lives in llvm/IR.
Reviewed By: ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87057
Since doInitialization() in the legacy pass modifies the module, the NPM
pass is a Module pass.
Reviewed By: ahatanak, ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86178
See RFC for background:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-June/142744.html
Note that the runtime changes will be sent separately (hopefully this
week, need to add some tests).
This patch includes the LLVM pass to instrument memory accesses with
either inline sequences to increment the access count in the shadow
location, or alternatively to call into the runtime. It also changes
calls to memset/memcpy/memmove to the equivalent runtime version.
The pass is modeled on the address sanitizer pass.
The clang changes add the driver option to invoke the new pass, and to
link with the upcoming heap profiling runtime libraries.
Currently there is no attempt to optimize the instrumentation, e.g. to
aggregate updates to the same memory allocation. That will be
implemented as follow on work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85948
As disscussed in post-commit review starting with
https://reviews.llvm.org/D84108#2227365
while this appears to be mostly a win overall, especially code-size-wise,
this appears to shake //certain// code pattens in a way that is extremely
unfavorable for performance (+30% runtime regression)
on certain CPU's (i personally can't reproduce).
So until the behaviour is better understood, and a path forward is mapped,
let's back this out for now.
This reverts commit 1d51dc38d8.
I've been looking at missed vectorizations in one codebase.
One particular thing that stands out is that some of the loops
reach vectorizer in a rather mangled form, with weird PHI's,
and some of the loops aren't even in a rotated form.
After taking a more detailed look, that happened because
the loop's headers were too big by then. It is evident that
SimplifyCFG's common code hoisting transform is at fault there,
because the pattern it handles is precisely the unrotated
loop basic block structure.
Surprizingly, `SimplifyCFGOpt::HoistThenElseCodeToIf()` is enabled
by default, and is always run, unlike it's friend, common code sinking
transform, `SinkCommonCodeFromPredecessors()`, which is not enabled
by default and is only run once very late in the pipeline.
I'm proposing to harmonize this, and disable common code hoisting
until //late// in pipeline. Definition of //late// may vary,
here currently i've picked the same one as for code sinking,
but i suppose we could enable it as soon as right after
loop rotation happens.
Experimentation shows that this does indeed unsurprizingly help,
more loops got rotated, although other issues remain elsewhere.
Now, this undoubtedly seriously shakes phase ordering.
This will undoubtedly be a mixed bag in terms of both compile- and
run- time performance, codesize. Since we no longer aggressively
hoist+deduplicate common code, we don't pay the price of said hoisting
(which wasn't big). That may allow more loops to be rotated,
so we pay that price. That, in turn, that may enable all the transforms
that require canonical (rotated) loop form, including but not limited to
vectorization, so we pay that too. And in general, no deduplication means
more [duplicate] instructions going through the optimizations. But there's still
late hoisting, some of them will be caught late.
As per benchmarks i've run {F12360204}, this is mostly within the noise,
there are some small improvements, some small regressions.
One big regression i saw i fixed in rG8d487668d09fb0e4e54f36207f07c1480ffabbfd, but i'm sure
this will expose many more pre-existing missed optimizations, as usual :S
llvm-compile-time-tracker.com thoughts on this:
http://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=e40315d2b4ed1e38962a8f33ff151693ed4ada63&to=c8289c0ecbf235da9fb0e3bc052e3c0d6bff5cf9&stat=instructions
* this does regress compile-time by +0.5% geomean (unsurprizingly)
* size impact varies; for ThinLTO it's actually an improvement
The largest fallout appears to be in GVN's load partial redundancy
elimination, it spends *much* more time in
`MemoryDependenceResults::getNonLocalPointerDependency()`.
Non-local `MemoryDependenceResults` is widely-known to be, uh, costly.
There does not appear to be a proper solution to this issue,
other than silencing the compile-time performance regression
by tuning cut-off thresholds in `MemoryDependenceResults`,
at the cost of potentially regressing run-time performance.
D84609 attempts to move in that direction, but the path is unclear
and is going to take some time.
If we look at stats before/after diffs, some excerpts:
* RawSpeed (the target) {F12360200}
* -14 (-73.68%) loops not rotated due to the header size (yay)
* -272 (-0.67%) `"Number of live out of a loop variables"` - good for vectorizer
* -3937 (-64.19%) common instructions hoisted
* +561 (+0.06%) x86 asm instructions
* -2 basic blocks
* +2418 (+0.11%) IR instructions
* vanilla test-suite + RawSpeed + darktable {F12360201}
* -36396 (-65.29%) common instructions hoisted
* +1676 (+0.02%) x86 asm instructions
* +662 (+0.06%) basic blocks
* +4395 (+0.04%) IR instructions
It is likely to be sub-optimal for when optimizing for code size,
so one might want to change tune pipeline by enabling sinking/hoisting
when optimizing for size.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84108
(This reverts commit a5e0194709, and
corrects author).
Rename the pass to be able to extend it to function properties other than inliner features.
Reviewed By: mtrofin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82044
Rename the pass to be able to extend it to function properties other than inliner features.
Reviewed By: mtrofin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82044
Pass LowerMatrixIntrinsics wasn't running yet running under the new pass
manager, and this adds LowerMatrixIntrinsics to the pipeline (to the
same place as where it is running in the old PM).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84180
Common code sinking is already guarded with a (with default-off!) flag,
so add a flag for hoisting, too.
D84108 will hopefully make hoisting off-by-default too.
Currently, when parsing text pipeline, different kinds of passes always
introduce nested pass managers. This makes it impossible to test the
adaptor-wrapped user passes from the text pipeline interface which is needed
by D82344 test cases. This also seems useful in general. See comments above
`parsePassPipeline`.
The syntax would be like mixing passes of different types, but it is
not the same as inferring the correct pass type and then adding the
matching nested pass managers. Strictly speaking, the resulted pipelines
are different.
Reviewed By: asbirlea, aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82698
This restores commit 80d0a137a5, and the
follow on fix in 873c0d0786, with a new
fix for test failures after a 2-stage clang bootstrap, and a more robust
fix for the Chromium build failure that an earlier version partially
fixed. See also discussion on D75201.
Reviewers: evgeny777
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, arphaman, davidxl, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73242
This reverts commit 9908a3b9f5.
The fix was to exclude the content of TFUtils.h (automatically
included in the LLVM_Analysis module, when LLVM_ENABLE_MODULES is enabled).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82817
Summary:
This is an experimental ML-based native size estimator, necessary for
computing partial rewards during -Oz inliner policy training. Data
extraction for model training will be provided in a separate patch.
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-April/140763.html
Reviewers: davidxl, jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, mgrang, arphaman, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82817
PassInfoMixin should be used for all NPM passes, rater than a custom
`name()`.
This caused ambiguous references in LegacyPassManager.cpp, so had to
remove "using namespace llvm::legacy" and move some things around.
Reviewed By: ychen, asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83498
PassInfoMixin should be used for all NPM passes, rater than a custom
`name()`.
This caused ambiguous references in LegacyPassManager.cpp, so had to
remove "using namespace llvm::legacy" and move some things around.
The passes had to be moved to the llvm namespace, or else they would get
printed as "(anonymous namespace)::FooPass".
Reviewed By: ychen, asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83498
Summary:
Old PM runs SpeculativeExecutionPass for targets that have divergent branches.
It uses `createSpeculativeExecutionIfHasBranchDivergencePass` that creates
the pass with `OnlyIfDivergentTarget=true`, whereas new PM just created the
pass with default `OnlyIfDivergentTarget=fase` so it unexpectedly runs and
causes buildbot test fails.
Reviewers: chandlerc, arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82735
Is teaching the LoopFullUnrollPass to preserve MemorySSA very hard or
just impossible?
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82618
Summary:
This somewhat matches the --aa-pipeline option, which separates out any
AA analyses to make sure they run before other passes.
Makes check-llvm failures under new PM go from 2356 -> 2303.
AA passes are not handled by PassBuilder::parsePassPipeline() but rather
PassBuilder::parseAAPipeline(), which is why this fixes some failures.
Reviewers: asbirlea, hans, ychen, leonardchan
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82488
The dependency was introduced in
5134020ea6. The only functional change
from this removal would be the new PM interface for the two codegen
passes. This is not necessary since we don't have codegen pipeline using
new PM yet. This removal is to break the potential circular dependency between
Passes and CodeGen once the codegen begins to gain new PM support.
Summary:
Extend StackLifetime with option to calculate liveliness
where alloca is only considered alive on basic block entry
if all non-dead predecessors had it alive at terminators.
Depends on D82043.
Reviewers: eugenis
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82124
The initial intent was to organize ML stuff in its own directory, but
it turns out that conflicts with llvm component layering policies: it
is not a component, because subsequent changes want to rely on other
analyses, which would create a cycle; and we don't have a reliable,
cross-platform mechanism to compile files in a subdirectory, and fit in
the existing LLVM build structure.
This change moves the files into Analysis, and subsequent changes will
leverage conditional compilation for those that have optional
dependencies.
Summary:
Experiments show that inline deferral past pre-inlining slightly
pessimizes the performance.
This patch introduces an option to control inline deferral during PGO.
The option defaults to true for now (that is, NFC).
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: eraman, hiraditya, haicheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80776
Last we looked at this and couldn't come up with a reason to change
it, but with a pragma for full loop unrolling we bypass every other
loop unroll and then fail to fully unroll a loop when the pragma is set.
Move the OnlyWhenForced out of the check and into the initialization
of the full unroll pass in the new pass manager. This doesn't show up
with the old pass manager.
Add a new option to opt so that we can turn off loop unrolling
manually since this is a difference between clang and opt.
Tested with check-clang and check-llvm.
Summary:
This was attempted once before in https://reviews.llvm.org/D79698, but
was reverted due to the coverage pass running in the wrong part of the
pipeline. This commit puts it in the same place as the other sanitizers.
This changes PassBuilder.OptimizerLastEPCallbacks to work on a
ModulePassManager instead of a FunctionPassManager. That is because
SanitizerCoverage cannot (easily) be split into a module pass and a
function pass like some of the other sanitizers since in its current
implementation it conditionally inserts module constructors based on
whether or not it successfully modified functions.
This fixes compiler-rt/test/msan/coverage-levels.cpp under the new pass
manager (last check-msan test).
Currently sanitizers + LTO don't work together under the new pass
manager, so I removed tests that checked that this combination works for
sancov.
Subscribers: hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80692
Summary:
This was attempted once before in https://reviews.llvm.org/D79698, but
was reverted due to the coverage pass running in the wrong part of the
pipeline. This commit puts it in the same place as the other sanitizers.
This changes PassBuilder.OptimizerLastEPCallbacks to work on a
ModulePassManager instead of a FunctionPassManager. That is because
SanitizerCoverage cannot (easily) be split into a module pass and a
function pass like some of the other sanitizers since in its current
implementation it conditionally inserts module constructors based on
whether or not it successfully modified functions.
This fixes compiler-rt/test/msan/coverage-levels.cpp under the new pass
manager (last check-msan test).
Subscribers: hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80692
EarlyCSE was added with D75145, but the motivating test is
not regressed by removing the extra pass now. That might be
because VectorCombine altered the way it processes instructions,
or it might be from (re)moving VectorCombine in the pipeline.
The extra round of EarlyCSE appears to cost approximately
0.26% in compile-time as discussed in D80236, so we need some
evidence to justify its inclusion here, but we do not have
that (yet).
I suspect that between SLP and VectorCombine, we are creating
patterns that InstCombine and/or codegen are not prepared for,
but we will need to reduce those examples and include them as
PhaseOrdering and/or test-suite benchmarks.
There are 2 known problem patterns shown in the test diffs here:
vector horizontal ops (an x86 specialization) and vector reductions.
SLP has greater ability to match and fold those than vector-combine,
so let SLP have first chance at that.
This is a quick fix while we continue to improve vector-combine and
possibly canonicalize to reduction intrinsics.
In the longer term, we should improve matching of these patterns
because if they were created in the "bad" forms shown here, then we
would miss optimizing them.
I'm not sure what is happening with alias analysis on the addsub test.
The old pass manager now shows an extra line for that, and we see an
improvement that comes from SLP vectorizing a store. I don't know
what's missing with the new pass manager to make that happen.
Strangely, I can't reproduce the behavior if I compile from C++ with
clang and invoke the new PM with "-fexperimental-new-pass-manager".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80236
Summary:
If an induction variable is frozen and used, SCEV yields imprecise result
because it doesn't say anything about frozen variables.
Due to this reason, performance degradation happened after
https://reviews.llvm.org/D76483 is merged, causing
SCEV yield imprecise result and preventing LSR to optimize a loop.
The suggested solution here is to add a pass which canonicalizes frozen variables
inside a loop. To be specific, it pushes freezes out of the loop by freezing
the initial value and step values instead & dropping nsw/nuw flags from instructions used by freeze.
This solution was also mentioned at https://reviews.llvm.org/D70623 .
Reviewers: spatel, efriedma, lebedev.ri, fhahn, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: nikic, mgorny, hiraditya, javed.absar, llvm-commits, sanwou01, nlopes
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77523
Summary:
This change introduces InliningAdvisor (and related APIs), the interface
that abstracts decision making away from the inlining pass. We will use
this interface to delegate decision making to a trained ML model,
subsequently (see referenced RFC).
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-April/140763.html
Reviewers: davidxl, eraman, dblaikie
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79042
Summary:
As commented in the code, ProfileSummaryAnalysis is required for inliner
pass to query, so this patch moved
RequireAnalysisPass<ProfileSummaryAnalysis> in the recently created
buildInlinerPipeline.
Reviewer: mtrofin, davidxl, tejohnson, dblaikie, jdoerfert, sstefan1
Reviewed By: mtrofin, davidxl, jdoerfert
Subscribers: hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, wuzish, llvm-commits,
jsji
Tag: LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79696
don't span their entire scope.
The previous commit (6d1c40c171) is an older version of the test.
Reviewed By: aprantl, vsk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79573
Summary:
This simplifies testing in scenarios where we want to set up module-wide
analyses for inlining. The patch enables treating inlining and its
function cleanups, as a module pass. The alternative would be for tests
to describe the pipeline, which is tedious and adds maintenance
overhead.
Reviewers: davidxl, dblaikie, jdoerfert, sstefan1
Subscribers: hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78512
The old command line option `-attributor-disable` was too coarse grained
as we want to measure the effects of the module or cgscc pass without
the other as well.
Since `none` is the default there is no real functional change.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78571
Summary:
Currently, the internal options -vectorize-loops, -vectorize-slp, and
-interleave-loops do not have much practical effect. This is because
they are used to initialize the corresponding flags in the pass
managers, and those flags are then unconditionally overwritten when
compiling via clang or via LTO from the linkers. The only exception was
-vectorize-loops via opt because of some special hackery there.
While vectorization could still be disabled when compiling via clang,
using -fno-[slp-]vectorize, this meant that there was no way to disable
it when compiling in LTO mode via the linkers. This only affected
ThinLTO, since for regular LTO vectorization is done during the compile
step for scalability reasons. For ThinLTO it is invoked in the LTO
backends. See also the discussion on PR45434.
This patch makes it so the internal options can actually be used to
disable these optimizations. Ultimately, the best long term solution is
to mark the loops with metadata (similar to the approach used to fix
-fno-unroll-loops in D77058), but this enables a shorter term
workaround, and actually makes these internal options useful.
I constant propagated the initial values of these internal flags into
the pass manager flags (for some reasons vectorize-loops and
interleave-loops were initialized to true, while vectorize-slp was
initialized to false). As mentioned above, they are overwritten
unconditionally so this doesn't have any real impact, and these initial
values aren't particularly meaningful.
I then changed the passes to check the internl values and return without
performing the associated optimization when false (I changed the default
of -vectorize-slp to true so the options behave similarly). I was able
to remove the hackery in opt used to get -vectorize-loops=false to work,
as well as a special option there used to disable SLP vectorization.
Finally, I changed thinlto-slp-vectorize-pm.c to:
a) Only test SLP (moved the loop vectorization checking to a new test).
b) Use code that is slp vectorized when it is enabled, and check that
instead of whether the pass is enabled.
c) Test the new behavior of -vectorize-slp.
d) Test both pass managers.
The loop vectorization (and associated interleaving) testing I moved to
a new thinlto-loop-vectorize-pm.c test, with several changes:
a) Changed the flags on the interleaving testing so that it will
actually interleave, and check that.
b) Test the new behavior of -vectorize-loops and -interleave-loops.
c) Test both pass managers.
Reviewers: fhahn, wmi
Subscribers: hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, davezarzycki, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77989
ModuleSummaryAnalysis is the only file in libAnalysis that brings a
dependency on the CodeGen layer from libAnalysis, moving it breaks this
dependency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77994
This pass is created in d6de5f12d4 and tested
for new and legacy pass manager but never added to new pass manager pipeline.
I am adding it to new pass manager pipeline.
This pass is get used in Vector Function Database (VFDatabase) and without
this pass in new pass manager pipeline, none of the vector libraries are work
ing with new pass manager.
Related passes:
66c120f025https://reviews.llvm.org/D74944
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75354
The new and old pass managers (PassManagerBuilder.cpp and
PassBuilder.cpp) are exposed to an `extern` declaration of
`attributor-disable` option which will guard the addition of the
attributor passes to the pass pipelines.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76871
Summary:
Splitting Knowledge retention into Queries in Analysis and Builder into Transform/Utils
allows Queries and Transform/Utils to use Analysis.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, sstefan1
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77171
Summary:
CGProfilePass is run by default in certain new pass manager optimization pipeline. Assemblers other than llvm as (such as gnu as) cannot recognize the .cgprofile entries generated and emitted from this pass, causing build time error.
This patch adds new options in clang CodeGenOpts and PassBuilder options so that we can turn cgprofile off when not using integrated assembler.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, xur, george.burgess.iv, chandlerc, manojgupta
Reviewed By: manojgupta
Subscribers: manojgupta, void, hiraditya, dexonsmith, llvm-commits, tcwang, llozano
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62627
Summary:
Assume bundles need to be usable by Analysis and Transforms/Utils isn't.
so this commit moves utilities to deal with asusme bundles to IR.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75618
The initial placement of vector-combine in the opt pipeline revealed phase ordering bugs:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45015https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42022
This patch contains a few independent changes:
1. Move the pass up in the pipeline, so it happens just after loop-vectorization.
This is only to keep vectorization passes together in the pipeline at the moment.
I don't have evidence of interaction between these yet.
2. Add an -early-cse pass after -vector-combine to clean up redundant ops. This was
partly proposed as far back as rL219644 (which is why it's effectively being moved
in the old PM code). This is important because the subsequent -instcombine doesn't
work as well without EarlyCSE. With the CSE, -instcombine is able to squash
shuffles together in 1 of the tests (because those are simple "select" shuffles).
3. Remove the -vector-combine pass that was running after SLP. We may want to do that
eventually, but I don't have a test case to support it yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75145
Summary: This patch adds an analysis pass to collect loop nests and
summarize properties of the nest (e.g the nest depth, whether the nest
is perfect, what's the innermost loop, etc...).
The motivation for this patch was discussed at the latest meeting of the
LLVM loop group (https://ibm.box.com/v/llvm-loop-nest-analysis) where we
discussed
the unimodular loop transformation framework ( “A Loop Transformation
Theory and an Algorithm to Maximize Parallelism”, Michael E. Wolf and
Monica S. Lam, IEEE TPDS, October 1991). The unimodular framework
provides a convenient way to unify legality checking and code generation
for several loop nest transformations (e.g. loop reversal, loop
interchange, loop skewing) and their compositions. Given that the
unimodular framework is applicable to perfect loop nests this is one
property of interest we expose in this analysis. Several other utility
functions are also provided. In the future other properties of interest
can be added in a centralized place.
Authored By: etiotto
Reviewer: Meinersbur, bmahjour, kbarton, Whitney, dmgreen, fhahn,
reames, hfinkel, jdoerfert, ppc-slack
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: bryanpkc, ppc-slack, mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tag: LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68789
Summary: This patch adds an analysis pass to collect loop nests and
summarize properties of the nest (e.g the nest depth, whether the nest
is perfect, what's the innermost loop, etc...).
The motivation for this patch was discussed at the latest meeting of the
LLVM loop group (https://ibm.box.com/v/llvm-loop-nest-analysis) where we
discussed
the unimodular loop transformation framework ( “A Loop Transformation
Theory and an Algorithm to Maximize Parallelism”, Michael E. Wolf and
Monica S. Lam, IEEE TPDS, October 1991). The unimodular framework
provides a convenient way to unify legality checking and code generation
for several loop nest transformations (e.g. loop reversal, loop
interchange, loop skewing) and their compositions. Given that the
unimodular framework is applicable to perfect loop nests this is one
property of interest we expose in this analysis. Several other utility
functions are also provided. In the future other properties of interest
can be added in a centralized place.
Authored By: etiotto
Reviewer: Meinersbur, bmahjour, kbarton, Whitney, dmgreen, fhahn,
reames, hfinkel, jdoerfert, ppc-slack
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: bryanpkc, ppc-slack, mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tag: LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68789
This reverts commit 80d0a137a5, and the
follow on fix in 873c0d0786. It is
causing test failures after a multi-stage clang bootstrap. See
discussion on D73242 and D75201.
Summary:
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D71901.
The fifth in a series of patches that ports the LLVM coroutines passes
to the new pass manager infrastructure.
The first 4 patches allow users to run coroutine passes by invoking, for
example `opt -passes=coro-early`. However, most of LLVM's tests for
coroutines use an option, `opt -enable-coroutines`, which adds all 4
coroutine passes to the appropriate legacy pass manager extension points.
This patch does the same, but using the new pass manager: when
coroutine features are enabled and the new pass manager is being used,
this adds the new-pass-manager-compliant coroutine passes to the pass
builder's pipeline.
This allows us to run all coroutine tests using the new pass manager
(besides those that use the coroutine retcon ABI used by the Swift
compiler, which is not yet supported in the new pass manager).
Reviewers: GorNishanov, lewissbaker, chandlerc, junparser, wenlei
Subscribers: wenlei, EricWF, Prazek, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71902
Summary:
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D71900.
The fourth in a series of patches that ports the LLVM coroutines passes
to the new pass manager infrastructure. This patch implements
'coro-cleanup'.
No existing regression tests check the behavior of coro-cleanup on its
own, so this patch adds one. (A test named 'coro-cleanup.ll' exists, but
it relies on the entire coroutines pipeline being run. It's updated to
test the new pass manager in the 5th patch of this series.)
Reviewers: GorNishanov, lewissbaker, chandlerc, junparser, deadalnix, wenlei
Reviewed By: wenlei
Subscribers: wenlei, EricWF, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71901
Summary:
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D71899.
The third in a series of patches that ports the LLVM coroutines passes
to the new pass manager infrastructure. This patch implements 'coro-elide'.
The new pass manager infrastructure does not implicitly repeat CGSCC
pass pipelines when a function is devirtualized, and so the tests
for the new pass manager that rely on that behavior now explicitly
specify `repeat<2>`.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, lewissbaker, chandlerc, jdoerfert, junparser, deadalnix, wenlei
Reviewed By: wenlei
Subscribers: wenlei, EricWF, Prazek, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71900
Summary:
This patch has four dependencies:
1. The first in this series of patches that implement coroutine passes in the
new pass manager: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71898.
2. A patch that introduces an API for CGSCC passes to add new reference
edges to a `LazyCallGraph`, `updateCGAndAnalysisManagerForCGSCCPass`:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D72025.
3. A patch that introduces a `CallGraphUpdater` helper class that is
capable of mutating internal `LazyCallGraph` state in order to insert
new function nodes into a specific SCC: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70927.
4. And finally, a small edge case fix for updating `LazyCallGraph` that
patch 3 above happens to run into: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72226.
This is the second in a series of patches that ports the LLVM coroutines
passes to the new pass manager infrastructure. This patch implements
'coro-split'.
Some notes:
* Using the new CGSCC pass manager resulted in IR being printed in the
reverse order in some tests. To prevent FileCheck checks from failing due
to these reversed orders, this patch splits up test files that test
multiple different coroutine functions: specifically
coro-alloc-with-param.ll, coro-split-eh.ll, and coro-eh-aware-edge-split.ll.
* CoroSplit.cpp contained 2 overloads of `splitCoroutine`, one of which
dispatched to the other based on the coroutine ABI being used (C++20
switch-based versus Swift returned-continuation-based). I found this
confusing, especially with the additional branching based on `CallGraph`
vs. `LazyCallGraph`, so I removed the ABI-checking overload of
`splitCoroutine`.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, lewissbaker, chandlerc, jdoerfert, junparser, deadalnix, wenlei
Reviewed By: wenlei
Subscribers: wenlei, qcolombet, EricWF, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71899
Summary:
The first in a series of patches that ports the LLVM coroutines passes
to the new pass manager infrastructure. This patch implements
'coro-early'.
NB: All coroutines passes begin by checking that coroutine intrinsics are
declared within the LLVM IR module they're operating on. To do so, they call
`coro::declaresIntrinsics`. The next 3 patches in this series, which add new
pass manager implementations of the 'coro-split', 'coro-elide', and
'coro-cleanup' passes, use a similar pattern as the one used here: a static
function is shared across both old and new passes to detect if relevant
coroutine intrinsics are delcared. To make this pattern easier to read, this
patch adds `const` keywords to the parameters of `coro::declaresIntrinsics`.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, lewissbaker, junparser, chandlerc, deadalnix, wenlei
Reviewed By: wenlei
Subscribers: ychen, wenlei, EricWF, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71898
This restores commit 748bb5a0f1, along
with a fix for a Chromium test suite build issue (and a new test for
that case).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73242
We have several bug reports that could be characterized as "reducing scalarization",
and this topic was also raised on llvm-dev recently:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-January/138157.html
...so I'm proposing that we deal with these patterns in a new, lightweight IR vector
pass that runs before/after other vectorization passes.
There are 4 alternate options that I can think of to deal with this kind of problem
(and we've seen various attempts at all of these), but they all have flaws:
InstCombine - can't happen without TTI, but we don't want target-specific
folds there.
SDAG - too late to assist other vectorization passes; TLI is not equipped
for these kind of cost queries; limited to a single basic block.
CGP - too late to assist other vectorization passes; would need to re-implement
basic cleanups like CSE/instcombine.
SLP - doesn't fit with existing transforms; limited to a single basic block.
This initial patch/transform is based on existing code in AggressiveInstCombine:
we walk backwards through the function looking for a pattern match. But we diverge
from that cost-independent IR canonicalization pass by using TTI to decide if the
vector alternative is profitable.
We probably have at least 10 similar bug reports/patterns (binops, constants,
inserts, cheap shuffles, etc) that would fit in this pass as follow-up enhancements.
It's possible that we could iterate on a worklist to fix-point like InstCombine does,
but it's safer to start with a most basic case and evolve from there, so I didn't
try to do anything fancy with this initial implementation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73480
In addition to the module pass, this patch introduces a CGSCC pass that
runs the Attributor on a strongly connected component of the call graph
(both old and new PM). The Attributor was always design to be used on a
subset of functions which makes this patch mostly mechanical.
The one change is that we give up `norecurse` deduction in the module
pass in favor of doing it during the CGSCC pass. This makes the
interfaces simpler but can be revisited if needed.
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70767
The OpenMPOpt pass is a CGSCC pass in which OpenMP specific
optimizations can reside.
The OpenMPOpt pass uses the OpenMPKinds.def file to identify runtime
calls and their uses. This allows targeted transformations and eases
their implementation.
This initial patch deduplicates `__kmpc_global_thread_num` and
`omp_get_thread_num` calls. We can also identify arguments that are
equivalent to such a call result and use it instead. Later we can
determine "gtid" arguments based on the use in kernel functions etc.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69930
Summary:
Currently type test assume sequences inserted for devirtualization are
removed during WPD. This patch delays their removal until later in the
optimization pipeline. This is an enabler for upcoming enhancements to
indirect call promotion, for example streamlined promotion guard
sequences that compare against vtable address instead of the target
function, when there are small number of possible vtables (either
determined via WPD or by in-progress type profiling). We need the type
tests to correlate the callsites with the address point offset needed in
the compare sequence, and optionally to associated type summary info
computed during WPD.
This depends on work in D71913 to enable invocation of LowerTypeTests to
drop type test assume sequences, which will now be invoked following ICP
in the ThinLTO post-LTO link pipelines, and also after the existing
export phase LowerTypeTests invocation in regular LTO (which is already
after ICP). We cannot simply move the existing import phase
LowerTypeTests pass later in the ThinLTO post link pipelines, as the
comment in PassBuilder.cpp notes (it must run early because when
performing CFI other passes may disturb the sequences it looks for).
This necessitated adding a new type test resolution "Unknown" that we
can use on the type test assume sequences previously removed by WPD,
that we now want LTT to ignore.
Depends on D71913.
Reviewers: pcc, evgeny777
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, arphaman, davidxl, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73242
Fix attempt
this is part of the implementation of http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html
this patch gives the basis of building an assume to preserve all information from an instruction and add support for building an assume that preserve the information from a call.
Summary:
this is part of the implementation of http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html
this patch gives the basis of building an assume to preserve all information from an instruction and add support for building an assume that preserve the information from a call.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgrang, fhahn, mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72475
Summary:
this is part of the implementation of http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html
this patch gives the basis of building an assume to preserve all information from an instruction and add support for building an assume that preserve the information from a call.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgrang, fhahn, mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72475
Summary:
this is part of the implementation of http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html
this patch gives the basis of building an assume to preserve all information from an instruction and add support for building an assume that preserve the information from a call.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgrang, fhahn, mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72475
Summary:
this is part of the implementation of http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html
this patch gives the basis of building an assume to preserve all information from an instruction and add support for building an assume that preserve the information from a call.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgrang, fhahn, mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72475
Introduce parsing, add a few instances of parameter use into GVN-PRE tests.
Reviewers: skatkov, asbirlea
Reviewed By: skatkov
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72752
Summary:
The old pass manager separated speed optimization and size optimization
levels into two unsigned values. Coallescing both in an enum in the new
pass manager may lead to unintentional casts and comparisons.
In particular, taking a look at how the loop unroll passes were constructed
previously, the Os/Oz are now (==new pass manager) treated just like O3,
likely unintentionally.
This change disallows raw comparisons between optimization levels, to
avoid such unintended effects. As an effect, the O{s|z} behavior changes
for loop unrolling and loop unroll and jam, matching O2 rather than O3.
The change also parameterizes the threshold values used for loop
unrolling, primarily to aid testing.
Reviewers: tejohnson, davidxl
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Subscribers: zzheng, ychen, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72547
This ports the MergeFunctions pass to the NewPM. This was rather
straightforward, as no analyses are used.
Additionally MergeFunctions needs to be conditionally enabled in
the PassBuilder, but I left that part out of this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72537
Summary:
This patch makes it easy to try out different preinlining thresholds
with a command-line switch just like -preinline-threshold for the
legacy pass manager.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72618
down to pass builder in ltobackend.
Currently CodeGenOpts like UnrollLoops/VectorizeLoop/VectorizeSLP in clang
are not passed down to pass builder in ltobackend when new pass manager is
used. This is inconsistent with the behavior when new pass manager is used
and thinlto is not used. Such inconsistency causes slp vectorization pass
not being enabled in ltobackend for O3 + thinlto right now. This patch
fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72386
pass.
Summary: This patch changes LoopUnrollAndJamPass to a function pass, and
keeps the loops traversal order same as defined in
FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor LoopPassManager.h.
The next patch will change the loop traversal to outer to inner order,
so more loops can be transform.
Discussion in llvm-dev mailing list:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/llvm-dev/LF4rUjkVI2g
Reviewer: dmgreen, jdoerfert, Meinersbur, kbarton, bmahjour, etiotto
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: hiraditya, zzheng, llvm-commits
Tag: LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72230
This is the first patch adding an initial set of matrix intrinsics and a
corresponding lowering pass. This has been discussed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-October/136240.html
The first patch introduces four new intrinsics (transpose, multiply,
columnwise load and store) and a LowerMatrixIntrinsics pass, that
lowers those intrinsics to vector operations.
Matrixes are embedded in a 'flat' vector (e.g. a 4 x 4 float matrix
embedded in a <16 x float> vector) and the intrinsics take the dimension
information as parameters. Those parameters need to be ConstantInt.
For the memory layout, we initially assume column-major, but in the RFC
we also described how to extend the intrinsics to support row-major as
well.
For the initial lowering, we split the input of the intrinsics into a
set of column vectors, transform those column vectors and concatenate
the result columns to a flat result vector.
This allows us to lower the intrinsics without any shape propagation, as
mentioned in the RFC. In follow-up patches, we plan to submit the
following improvements:
* Shape propagation to eliminate the embedding/splitting for each
intrinsic.
* Fused & tiled lowering of multiply and other operations.
* Optimization remarks highlighting matrix expressions and costs.
* Generate loops for operations on large matrixes.
* More general block processing for operation on large vectors,
exploiting shape information.
We would like to add dedicated transpose, columnwise load and store
intrinsics, even though they are not strictly necessary. For example, we
could instead emit a large shufflevector instruction instead of the
transpose. But we expect that to
(1) become unwieldy for larger matrixes (even for 16x16 matrixes,
the resulting shufflevector masks would be huge),
(2) risk instcombine making small changes, causing us to fail to
detect the transpose, preventing better lowerings
For the load/store, we are additionally planning on exploiting the
intrinsics for better alias analysis.
Reviewers: anemet, Gerolf, reames, hfinkel, andrew.w.kaylor, efriedma, rengolin
Reviewed By: anemet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70456
This reapplies: 8ff85ed905
Original commit message:
As a follow-up to my initial mail to llvm-dev here's a first pass at the O1 described there.
This change doesn't include any change to move from selection dag to fast isel
and that will come with other numbers that should help inform that decision.
There also haven't been any real debuggability studies with this pipeline yet,
this is just the initial start done so that people could see it and we could start
tweaking after.
Test updates: Outside of the newpm tests most of the updates are coming from either
optimization passes not run anymore (and without a compelling argument at the moment)
that were largely used for canonicalization in clang.
Original post:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-April/131494.html
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65410
This reverts commit c9ddb02659.
This change doesn't include any change to move from selection dag to fast isel
and that will come with other numbers that should help inform that decision.
There also haven't been any real debuggability studies with this pipeline yet,
this is just the initial start done so that people could see it and we could start
tweaking after.
Test updates: Outside of the newpm tests most of the updates are coming from either
optimization passes not run anymore (and without a compelling argument at the moment)
that were largely used for canonicalization in clang.
Original post:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-April/131494.html
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65410
This patch introduces a function pass to inject the scalar-to-vector
mappings stored in the TargetLIbraryInfo (TLI) into the Vector
Function ABI (VFABI) variants attribute.
The test is testing the injection for three vector libraries supported
by the TLI (Accelerate, SVML, MASSV).
The pass does not change any of the analysis associated to the
function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70107
If there is a small local array accessed in a loop, SROA can't handle memory
accesses with variant offset inside a loop, after the loop is fully unrolled,
all memory accesses to the array are with fixed offset, so now they can be
processed by SROA. But there is no more SROA passes after loop unroll. This
patch add an SROA pass after loop unroll to handle this pattern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68593
we will unroll loops. Also comment a few occasions where we need to
know whether or not we're forcing the unwinder or not.
The default before and after this patch is for LoopUnroll to be enabled,
and for it to use a cost model to determine whether to unroll the loop
(`OnlyWhenForced = false`). Before this patch, disabling loop unroll
would not run the LoopUnroll pass. After this patch, the LoopUnroll pass
is being run, but it restricts unrolling to only the loops marked by a
pragma (`OnlyWhenForced = true`).
In addition, this patch disables the UnrollAndJam pass when disabling unrolling.
Testcase is in clang because it's controlling how the loop optimizer
is being set up and there's no other way to trigger the behavior.
llvm-svn: 374838
Add a pass to lower is.constant and objectsize intrinsics
This pass lowers is.constant and objectsize intrinsics not simplified by
earlier constant folding, i.e. if the object given is not constant or if
not using the optimized pass chain. The result is recursively simplified
and constant conditionals are pruned, so that dead blocks are removed
even for -O0. This allows inline asm blocks with operand constraints to
work all the time.
The new pass replaces the existing lowering in the codegen-prepare pass
and fallbacks in SDAG/GlobalISEL and FastISel. The latter now assert
on the intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65280
llvm-svn: 374784
This pass lowers is.constant and objectsize intrinsics not simplified by
earlier constant folding, i.e. if the object given is not constant or if
not using the optimized pass chain. The result is recursively simplified
and constant conditionals are pruned, so that dead blocks are removed
even for -O0. This allows inline asm blocks with operand constraints to
work all the time.
The new pass replaces the existing lowering in the codegen-prepare pass
and fallbacks in SDAG/GlobalISEL and FastISel. The latter now assert
on the intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65280
llvm-svn: 374743
Existing clients are converted to use MachineModuleInfoWrapperPass. The
new interface is for defining a new pass manager API in CodeGen.
Reviewers: fedor.sergeev, philip.pfaffe, chandlerc, arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm, fedor.sergeev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64183
llvm-svn: 373240
Summary:
The Regex "match" and "sub" member functions were previously not "const"
because they wrote to the "error" member variable. This commit removes
those assignments, and instead assumes that the validity of the regex
is already known after the initial compilation of the regular
expression. As a result, these member functions were possible to make
"const". This makes it easier to do things like pre-compile Regexes
up-front, and makes "match" and "sub" thread-safe. The error status is
now returned as an optional output, which also makes the API of "match"
and "sub" more consistent with each other.
Also, some uses of Regex that could be refactored to be const were made const.
Patch by Nicolas Guillemot
Reviewers: jankratochvil, thopre
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67241
llvm-svn: 372764
Add an ability to specify the max full unroll count for LoopUnrollPass pass
in pass options.
Reviewers: fhahn, fedor.sergeev
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
Subscribers: hiraditya, zzheng, dmgreen, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67701
llvm-svn: 372305
Summary:
This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper:
D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS.
This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges.
The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored.
The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order:
1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph.
2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph.
3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto
Tag: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350
llvm-svn: 372238
Summary:
This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper:
D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS.
This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges.
The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored.
The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order:
1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph.
2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph.
3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it.
Authored By: bmahjour
Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu
Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto
Tag: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350
llvm-svn: 372162
If we have:
bb5:
br i1 %arg3, label %bb6, label %bb7
bb6:
%tmp = getelementptr inbounds i32, i32* %arg1, i64 2
store i32 3, i32* %tmp, align 4
br label %bb9
bb7:
%tmp8 = getelementptr inbounds i32, i32* %arg1, i64 2
store i32 3, i32* %tmp8, align 4
br label %bb9
bb9: ; preds = %bb4, %bb6, %bb7
...
We can't sink stores directly into bb9.
This patch creates new BB that is successor of %bb6 and %bb7
and sinks stores into that block.
SplitFooterBB is the parameter to the pass that controls
that behavior.
Change-Id: I7fdf50a772b84633e4b1b860e905bf7e3e29940f
Differential: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66234
llvm-svn: 371089
Summary:
Add a flag to the FunctionToLoopAdaptor that allows enabling MemorySSA only for the loop pass managers that are known to preserve it.
If an LPM is known to have only loop transforms that *all* preserve MemorySSA, then use MemorySSA if `EnableMSSALoopDependency` is set.
If an LPM has loop passes that do not preserve MemorySSA, then the flag passed is `false`, regardless of the value of `EnableMSSALoopDependency`.
When using a custom loop pass pipeline via `passes=...`, use keyword `loop` vs `loop-mssa` to use MemorySSA in that LPM. If a loop that does not preserve MemorySSA is added while using the `loop-mssa` keyword, that's an error.
Add the new `loop-mssa` keyword to a few tests where a difference occurs when enabling MemorySSA.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, george.burgess.iv, sanjoy.google, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66376
llvm-svn: 369548
Summary: Implement a new analysis to estimate the number of cache lines
required by a loop nest.
The analysis is largely based on the following paper:
Compiler Optimizations for Improving Data Locality
By: Steve Carr, Katherine S. McKinley, Chau-Wen Tseng
http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/mckinley/papers/asplos-1994.pdf
The analysis considers temporal reuse (accesses to the same memory
location) and spatial reuse (accesses to memory locations within a cache
line). For simplicity the analysis considers memory accesses in the
innermost loop in a loop nest, and thus determines the number of cache
lines used when the loop L in loop nest LN is placed in the innermost
position.
The result of the analysis can be used to drive several transformations.
As an example, loop interchange could use it determine which loops in a
perfect loop nest should be interchanged to maximize cache reuse.
Similarly, loop distribution could be enhanced to take into
consideration cache reuse between arrays when distributing a loop to
eliminate vectorization inhibiting dependencies.
The general approach taken to estimate the number of cache lines used by
the memory references in the inner loop of a loop nest is:
Partition memory references that exhibit temporal or spatial reuse into
reference groups.
For each loop L in the a loop nest LN: a. Compute the cost of the
reference group b. Compute the 'cache cost' of the loop nest by summing
up the reference groups costs
For further details of the algorithm please refer to the paper.
Authored By: etiotto
Reviewers: hfinkel, Meinersbur, jdoerfert, kbarton, bmahjour, anemet,
fhahn
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Subscribers: reames, nemanjai, MaskRay, wuzish, Hahnfeld, xusx595,
venkataramanan.kumar.llvm, greened, dmgreen, steleman, fhahn, xblvaOO,
Whitney, mgorny, hiraditya, mgrang, jsji, llvm-commits
Tag: LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63459
llvm-svn: 368439
This patch adds an ability to disable profile based peeling
causing the peeling of all iterations and as a result prohibits
further unroll/peeling attempts on that loop.
The motivation to get an ability to separate peeling usage in
pipeline where in the first part we peel only separate iterations if needed
and later in pipeline we apply the full peeling which will prohibit further peeling.
Reviewers: reames, fhahn
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: hiraditya, zzheng, dmgreen, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64983
llvm-svn: 367668
Add PGO support at -O0 in the experimental new pass manager to sync the
behavior of the legacy pass manager.
Also change the test of gcc-flag-compatibility.c for more complete test:
(1) change the match string to "profc" and "profd" to ensure the
instrumentation is happening.
(2) add IR format proftext so that PGO use compilation is tested.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64029
llvm-svn: 367628
changes were made to the patch since then.
--------
[NewPM] Port Sancov
This patch contains a port of SanitizerCoverage to the new pass manager. This one's a bit hefty.
Changes:
- Split SanitizerCoverageModule into 2 SanitizerCoverage for passing over
functions and ModuleSanitizerCoverage for passing over modules.
- ModuleSanitizerCoverage exists for adding 2 module level calls to initialization
functions but only if there's a function that was instrumented by sancov.
- Added legacy and new PM wrapper classes that own instances of the 2 new classes.
- Update llvm tests and add clang tests.
llvm-svn: 367053
This patch contains a port of SanitizerCoverage to the new pass manager. This one's a bit hefty.
Changes:
- Split SanitizerCoverageModule into 2 SanitizerCoverage for passing over
functions and ModuleSanitizerCoverage for passing over modules.
- ModuleSanitizerCoverage exists for adding 2 module level calls to initialization
functions but only if there's a function that was instrumented by sancov.
- Added legacy and new PM wrapper classes that own instances of the 2 new classes.
- Update llvm tests and add clang tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62888
llvm-svn: 365838
Implements a transform pass which instruments IR such that poison semantics are made explicit. That is, it provides a (possibly partial) executable semantics for every instruction w.r.t. poison as specified in the LLVM LangRef. There are obvious parallels to the sanitizer tools, but this pass is focused purely on the semantics of LLVM IR, not any particular source language.
The target audience for this tool is developers working on or targetting LLVM from a frontend. The idea is to be able to take arbitrary IR (with the assumption of known inputs), and evaluate it concretely after having made poison semantics explicit to detect cases where either a) the original code executes UB, or b) a transform pass introduces UB which didn't exist in the original program.
At the moment, this is mostly the framework and still needs to be fleshed out. By reusing existing code we have decent coverage, but there's a lot of cases not yet handled. What's here is good enough to handle interesting cases though; for instance, one of the recent LFTR bugs involved UB being triggered by integer induction variables with nsw/nuw flags would be reported by the current code.
(See comment in PoisonChecking.cpp for full explanation and context)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64215
llvm-svn: 365536
This fixes CodeGen/available-externally-suppress.c when the new pass manager is
turned on by default. available_externally was not emitted during -O2 -flto
runs when it should still be retained for link time inlining purposes. This can
be fixed by checking that we aren't LTOPrelinking when adding the
EliminateAvailableExternallyPass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63580
llvm-svn: 363971
NOTE: Note that no attributes are derived yet. This patch will not go in
alone but only with others that derive attributes. The framework is
split for review purposes.
This commit introduces the Attributor pass infrastructure and fixpoint
iteration framework. Further patches will introduce abstract attributes
into this framework.
In a nutshell, the Attributor will update instances of abstract
arguments until a fixpoint, or a "timeout", is reached. Communication
between the Attributor and the abstract attributes that are derived is
restricted to the AbstractState and AbstractAttribute interfaces.
Please see the file comment in Attributor.h for detailed information
including design decisions and typical use case. Also consider the class
documentation for Attributor, AbstractState, and AbstractAttribute.
Reviewers: chandlerc, homerdin, hfinkel, fedor.sergeev, sanjoy, spatel, nlopes, nicholas, reames
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mgorny, hiraditya, bollu, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59918
llvm-svn: 362578
Port hardware assisted address sanitizer to new PM following the same guidelines as msan and tsan.
Changes:
- Separate HWAddressSanitizer into a pass class and a sanitizer class.
- Create new PM wrapper pass for the sanitizer class.
- Use the getOrINsert pattern for some module level initialization declarations.
- Also enable kernel-kwasan in new PM
- Update llvm tests and add clang test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61709
llvm-svn: 360707
Summary:
The opt level was not being passed down to the ThinLTO backend when
invoked via clang (for distributed ThinLTO).
This exposed an issue where the new PM was asserting if the Thin or
regular LTO backend pipelines were invoked with -O0 (not a new issue,
could be provoked by invoking in-process *LTO backends via linker using
new PM and -O0). Fix this similar to the old PM where -O0 only does the
necessary lowering of type metadata (WPD and LowerTypeTest passes) and
then quits, rather than asserting.
Reviewers: xur
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits, pcc
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61022
llvm-svn: 359025
Summary:
Make the flags in LICM + MemorySSA tuning options in the old and new
pass managers.
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jlebar, Prazek, george.burgess.iv, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60490
llvm-svn: 358772
Summary:
Trying to add the plumbing necessary to add tuning options to the new pass manager.
Testing with the flags for loop vectorize.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: sanjoy, mehdi_amini, jlebar, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59723
llvm-svn: 358763
This patch adds a basic loop fusion pass. It will fuse loops that conform to the
following 4 conditions:
1. Adjacent (no code between them)
2. Control flow equivalent (if one loop executes, the other loop executes)
3. Identical bounds (both loops iterate the same number of iterations)
4. No negative distance dependencies between the loop bodies.
The pass does not make any changes to the IR to create opportunities for fusion.
Instead, it checks if the necessary conditions are met and if so it fuses two
loops together.
The pass has not been added to the pass pipeline yet, and thus is not enabled by
default. It can be run stand alone using the -loop-fusion option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55851
llvm-svn: 358607
As it's causing some bot failures (and per request from kbarton).
This reverts commit r358543/ab70da07286e618016e78247e4a24fcb84077fda.
llvm-svn: 358546
This patch adds a basic loop fusion pass. It will fuse loops that conform to the
following 4 conditions:
1. Adjacent (no code between them)
2. Control flow equivalent (if one loop executes, the other loop executes)
3. Identical bounds (both loops iterate the same number of iterations)
4. No negative distance dependencies between the loop bodies.
The pass does not make any changes to the IR to create opportunities for fusion.
Instead, it checks if the necessary conditions are met and if so it fuses two
loops together.
The pass has not been added to the pass pipeline yet, and thus is not enabled by
default. It can be run stand alone using the -loop-fusion option.
Phabricator: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55851
llvm-svn: 358543
Summary:
Enable some of the existing size optimizations for cold code under PGO.
A ~5% code size saving in big internal app under PGO.
The way it gets BFI/PSI is discussed in the RFC thread
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-March/130894.html
Note it doesn't currently touch loop passes.
Reviewers: davidxl, eraman
Reviewed By: eraman
Subscribers: mgorny, javed.absar, smeenai, mehdi_amini, eraman, zzheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59514
llvm-svn: 358422
Straightforward port of StatepointIRVerifier pass to new Pass Manager framework.
Fix By: skatkov
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59825
This is a re-land of r357147/r357148 with LLVM_ENABLE_MODULES build fixed.
Adding IR/SafepointIRVerifier.h into its own module.
llvm-svn: 357361
to unbreak the modular bots and its follow-up commit.
This reverts commit https://reviews.llvm.org/D59825
because it introduced a
fatal error: cyclic dependency in module 'LLVM_intrinsic_gen': LLVM_intrinsic_gen -> LLVM_IR -> LLVM_intrinsic_gen
llvm-svn: 357201
LTO provides additional opportunities for tailcall elimination due to
link-time inlining and visibility of nocapture attribute. Testing showed
negligible impact on compilation times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58391
llvm-svn: 356511
The basic idea of the pass is to use a circular buffer to log the execution ordering of the functions. We only log the function when it is first executed. We use a 8-byte hash to log the function symbol name.
In this pass, we add three global variables:
(1) an order file buffer: a circular buffer at its own llvm section.
(2) a bitmap for each module: one byte for each function to say if the function is already executed.
(3) a global index to the order file buffer.
At the function prologue, if the function has not been executed (by checking the bitmap), log the function hash, then atomically increase the index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57463
llvm-svn: 355133
Current PGO profile counts are not context sensitive. The branch probabilities
for the inlined functions are kept the same for all call-sites, and they might
be very different from the actual branch probabilities. These suboptimal
profiles can greatly affect some downstream optimizations, in particular for
the machine basic block placement optimization.
In this patch, we propose to have a post-inline PGO instrumentation/use pass,
which we called Context Sensitive PGO (CSPGO). For the users who want the best
possible performance, they can perform a second round of PGO instrument/use on
the top of the regular PGO. They will have two sets of profile counts. The
first pass profile will be manly for inline, indirect-call promotion, and
CGSCC simplification pass optimizations. The second pass profile is for
post-inline optimizations and code-gen optimizations.
A typical usage:
// Regular PGO instrumentation and generate pass1 profile.
> clang -O2 -fprofile-generate source.c -o gen
> ./gen
> llvm-profdata merge default.*profraw -o pass1.profdata
// CSPGO instrumentation.
> clang -O2 -fprofile-use=pass1.profdata -fcs-profile-generate -o gen2
> ./gen2
// Merge two sets of profiles
> llvm-profdata merge default.*profraw pass1.profdata -o profile.profdata
// Use the combined profile. Pass manager will invoke two PGO use passes.
> clang -O2 -fprofile-use=profile.profdata -o use
This change touches many components in the compiler. The reviewed patch
(D54175) will committed in phrases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54175
llvm-svn: 354930
With or without PGO data applied, splitting early in the pipeline
(either before the inliner or shortly after it) regresses performance
across SPEC variants. The cause appears to be that splitting hides
context for subsequent optimizations.
Schedule splitting late again, in effect reversing r352080, which
scheduled the splitting pass early for code size benefits (documented in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D57082).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58258
llvm-svn: 354158
This is the second attempt to port ASan to new PM after D52739. This takes the
initialization requried by ASan from the Module by moving it into a separate
class with it's own analysis that the new PM ASan can use.
Changes:
- Split AddressSanitizer into 2 passes: 1 for the instrumentation on the
function, and 1 for the pass itself which creates an instance of the first
during it's run. The same is done for AddressSanitizerModule.
- Add new PM AddressSanitizer and AddressSanitizerModule.
- Add legacy and new PM analyses for reading data needed to initialize ASan with.
- Removed DominatorTree dependency from ASan since it was unused.
- Move GlobalsMetadata and ShadowMapping out of anonymous namespace since the
new PM analysis holds these 2 classes and will need to expose them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56470
llvm-svn: 353985
Summary:
Follow up to D57082 which moved splitting earlier in the pipeline, in
order to perform it before inlining. However, it was moved too early,
before the IR is annotated with instrumented PGO data. This caused the
splitting to incorrectly determine cold functions.
Move it to just after PGO annotation (still before inlining), in both
pass managers.
Reviewers: vsk, hiraditya, sebpop
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57805
llvm-svn: 353270
Summary:
Follow on to D54819/r351476.
We also don't need to perform extra InstCombine pass when we aren't
loading the sample profile in the ThinLTO backend because we have a
flattened sample profile.
Additionally, for consistency and clarity, when we aren't reloading the
sample profile, perform ICP in the same location as non-sample PGO
backends. To this end I have moved the ICP invocation for non-SamplePGO
ThinLTO down into buildModuleSimplificationPipeline (partly addresses
the FIXME where we were previously setting this up).
Reviewers: wmi
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57705
llvm-svn: 353135
Introduces a pass that provides default lowering strategy for the
`experimental.widenable.condition` intrinsic, replacing all its uses with
`i1 true`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56096
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 352739
Performing splitting early has several advantages:
- Inhibiting inlining of cold code early improves code size. Compared
to scheduling splitting at the end of the pipeline, this cuts code
size growth in half within the iOS shared cache (0.69% to 0.34%).
- Inhibiting inlining of cold code improves compile time. There's no
need to inline split cold functions, or to inline as much *within*
those split functions as they are marked `minsize`.
- During LTO, extra work is only done in the pre-link step. Less code
must be inlined during cross-module inlining.
An additional motivation here is that the most common cold regions
identified by the static/conservative splitting heuristic can (a) be
found before inlining and (b) do not grow after inlining. E.g.
__assert_fail, os_log_error.
The disadvantages are:
- Some opportunities for splitting out cold code may be missed. This
gap can potentially be narrowed by adding a worklist algorithm to the
splitting pass.
- Some opportunities to reduce code size may be lost (e.g. store
sinking, when one side of the CFG diamond is split). This does not
outweigh the code size benefits of splitting earlier.
On net, splitting early in the pipeline has substantial code size
benefits, and no major effects on memory locality or performance. We
measured memory locality using ktrace data, and consistently found that
10% fewer pages were needed to capture 95% of text page faults in key
iOS benchmarks. We measured performance on frequency-stabilized iOS
devices using LNT+externals.
This reverses course on the decision made to schedule splitting late in
r344869 (D53437).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57082
llvm-svn: 352080
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
If the sample profile has no inlining hierachy information included, we call
the sample profile is flattened. For flattened profile, in ThinLTO postlink
phase, SampleProfileLoader's hot function inlining and profile annotation will
do nothing, so it is better to save the effort to read in the profile and run
the sample profile loader pass. It is helpful for reducing compile time when
the flattened profile is huge.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54819
llvm-svn: 351476
Summary:
Second iteration of D56433 which got reverted in rL350719. The problem
in the previous version was that we dropped the thunk calling the tsan init
function. The new version keeps the thunk which should appease dyld, but is not
actually OK wrt. the current semantics of function passes. Hence, add a
helper to insert the functions only on the first time. The helper
allows hooking into the insertion to be able to append them to the
global ctors list.
Reviewers: chandlerc, vitalybuka, fedor.sergeev, leonardchan
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56538
llvm-svn: 351314
Allow to specify loop-unrolling with optional parameters explicitly
spelled out in -passes pipeline specification.
Introducing somewhat generic way of specifying parameters parsing via
FUNCTION_PASS_PARAMETRIZED pass registration.
Syntax of parametrized unroll pass name is as follows:
'unroll<' parameter-list '>'
Where parameter-list is ';'-separate list of parameter names and optlevel
optlevel: 'O[0-3]'
parameter: { 'partial' | 'peeling' | 'runtime' | 'upperbound' }
negated: 'no-' parameter
Example:
-passes=loop(unroll<O3;runtime;no-upperbound>)
this invokes LoopUnrollPass configured with OptLevel=3,
Runtime, no UpperBound, everything else by default.
llvm-svn: 350808
A straightforward port of tsan to the new PM, following the same path
as D55647.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56433
llvm-svn: 350647
At -O0, globalopt is not run during the compile step, and we can have a
chain of an alias having an immediate aliasee of another alias. The
summaries are constructed assuming aliases in a canonical form
(flattened chains), and as a result only the base object but no
intermediate aliases were preserved.
Fix by adding a pass that canonicalize aliases, which ensures each
alias is a direct alias of the base object.
Reviewers: pcc, davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, arphaman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54507
llvm-svn: 350423
Summary:
Keeping msan a function pass requires replacing the module level initialization:
That means, don't define a ctor function which calls __msan_init, instead just
declare the init function at the first access, and add that to the global ctors
list.
Changes:
- Pull the actual sanitizer and the wrapper pass apart.
- Add a newpm msan pass. The function pass inserts calls to runtime
library functions, for which it inserts declarations as necessary.
- Update tests.
Caveats:
- There is one test that I dropped, because it specifically tested the
definition of the ctor.
Reviewers: chandlerc, fedor.sergeev, leonardchan, vitalybuka
Subscribers: sdardis, nemanjai, javed.absar, hiraditya, kbarton, bollu, atanasyan, jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55647
llvm-svn: 350305
When multiple loop transformation are defined in a loop's metadata, their order of execution is defined by the order of their respective passes in the pass pipeline. For instance, e.g.
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
is the same as
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
and will try to loop-distribute before Unroll-And-Jam because the LoopDistribute pass is scheduled after UnrollAndJam pass. UnrollAndJamPass only supports one inner loop, i.e. it will necessarily fail after loop distribution. It is not possible to specify another execution order. Also,t the order of passes in the pipeline is subject to change between versions of LLVM, optimization options and which pass manager is used.
This patch adds 'followup' attributes to various loop transformation passes. These attributes define which attributes the resulting loop of a transformation should have. For instance,
!0 = !{!0, !1, !2}
!1 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.enable"}
!2 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.followup_inner", !3}
!3 = !{!"llvm.loop.distribute.enable"}
defines a loop ID (!0) to be unrolled-and-jammed (!1) and then the attribute !3 to be added to the jammed inner loop, which contains the instruction to distribute the inner loop.
Currently, in both pass managers, pass execution is in a fixed order and UnrollAndJamPass will not execute again after LoopDistribute. We hope to fix this in the future by allowing pass managers to run passes until a fixpoint is reached, use Polly to perform these transformations, or add a loop transformation pass which takes the order issue into account.
For mandatory/forced transformations (e.g. by having been declared by #pragma omp simd), the user must be notified when a transformation could not be performed. It is not possible that the responsible pass emits such a warning because the transformation might be 'hidden' in a followup attribute when it is executed, or it is not present in the pipeline at all. For this reason, this patche introduces a WarnMissedTransformations pass, to warn about orphaned transformations.
Since this changes the user-visible diagnostic message when a transformation is applied, two test cases in the clang repository need to be updated.
To ensure that no other transformation is executed before the intended one, the attribute `llvm.loop.disable_nonforced` can be added which should disable transformation heuristics before the intended transformation is applied. E.g. it would be surprising if a loop is distributed before a #pragma unroll_and_jam is applied.
With more supported code transformations (loop fusion, interchange, stripmining, offloading, etc.), transformations can be used as building blocks for more complex transformations (e.g. stripmining+stripmining+interchange -> tiling).
Reviewed By: hfinkel, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49281
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55288
llvm-svn: 348944
This patch introduces a new instinsic `@llvm.experimental.widenable_condition`
that allows explicit representation for guards. It is an alternative to using
`@llvm.experimental.guard` intrinsic that does not contain implicit control flow.
We keep finding places where `@llvm.experimental.guard` is not supported or
treated too conservatively, and there are 2 reasons to that:
- `@llvm.experimental.guard` has memory write side effect to model implicit control flow,
and this sometimes confuses passes and analyzes that work with memory;
- Not all passes and analysis are aware of the semantics of guards. These passes treat them
as regular throwing call and have no idea that the condition of guard may be used to prove
something. One well-known place which had caused us troubles in the past is explicit loop
iteration count calculation in SCEV. Another example is new loop unswitching which is not
aware of guards. Whenever a new pass appears, we potentially have this problem there.
Rather than go and fix all these places (and commit to keep track of them and add support
in future), it seems more reasonable to leverage the existing optimizer's logic as much as possible.
The only significant difference between guards and regular explicit branches is that guard's condition
can be widened. It means that a guard contains (explicitly or implicitly) a `deopt` block successor,
and it is always legal to go there no matter what the guard condition is. The other successor is
a guarded block, and it is only legal to go there if the condition is true.
This patch introduces a new explicit form of guards alternative to `@llvm.experimental.guard`
intrinsic. Now a widenable guard can be represented in the CFG explicitly like this:
%widenable_condition = call i1 @llvm.experimental.widenable.condition()
%new_condition = and i1 %cond, %widenable_condition
br i1 %new_condition, label %guarded, label %deopt
guarded:
; Guarded instructions
deopt:
call type @llvm.experimental.deoptimize(<args...>) [ "deopt"(<deopt_args...>) ]
The new intrinsic `@llvm.experimental.widenable.condition` has semantics of an
`undef`, but the intrinsic prevents the optimizer from folding it early. This form
should exploit all optimization boons provided to `br` instuction, and it still can be
widened by replacing the result of `@llvm.experimental.widenable.condition()`
with `and` with any arbitrary boolean value (as long as the branch that is taken when
it is `false` has a deopt and has no side-effects).
For more motivation, please check llvm-dev discussion "[llvm-dev] Giving up using
implicit control flow in guards".
This patch introduces this new intrinsic with respective LangRef changes and a pass
that converts old-style guards (expressed as intrinsics) into the new form.
The naming discussion is still ungoing. Merging this to unblock further items. We can
later change the name of this intrinsic.
Reviewed By: reames, fedor.sergeev, sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51207
llvm-svn: 348593
Summary:
It turns out that we need an OptimizerLast PassBuilder extension point
after all. I missed the relevance of this EP the first time. By legacy PM magic,
function passes added at this EP get added to the last _Function_ PM, which is a
feature we lost when dropping this EP for the new PM.
A key difference between this and the legacy PassManager's OptimizerLast
callback is that this extension point is not triggered at O0. Extensions
to the O0 pipeline should append their passes to the end of the overall
pipeline.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54374
llvm-svn: 346645
Unlike its legacy counterpart new pass manager's LoopUnrollPass does
not provide any means to select which flavors of unroll to run
(runtime, peeling, partial), relying on global defaults.
In some cases having ability to run a restricted LoopUnroll that
does more than LoopFullUnroll is needed.
Introduced LoopUnrollOptions to select optional unroll behaviors.
Added 'unroll<peeling>' to PassRegistry mainly for the sake of testing.
Reviewers: chandlerc, tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53440
llvm-svn: 345723
This reverts commit 8d6af840396f2da2e4ed6aab669214ae25443204 and commit
b78d19c287b6e4a9abc9fb0545de9a3106d38d3d which causes slower build times
by initializing the AddressSanitizer on every function run.
The corresponding revisions are https://reviews.llvm.org/D52814 and
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52739.
llvm-svn: 345433
Summary:
Fix the new PM to only perform hot cold splitting once during ThinLTO,
by skipping it in the pre-link phase.
This was already fixed in the old PM by the move of the hot cold split
pass later (after the early return when PrepareForThinLTO) by r344869.
Reviewers: vsk, sebpop, hiraditya
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53611
llvm-svn: 345096
Summary:
In the new+old pass manager, hot cold splitting was schedule too early.
Thanks to Vedant for pointing this out.
Reviewers: sebpop, vsk
Reviewed By: sebpop, vsk
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53437
llvm-svn: 344869
All the PassBuilder::parse interfaces now return descriptive StringError
instead of a plain bool. It allows to make -passes/aa-pipeline parsing
errors context-specific and thus less confusing.
TODO: ideally we should also make suggestions for misspelled pass names,
but that requires some extensions to PassBuilder.
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe, chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53246
llvm-svn: 344685
Summary:
All the PassBuilder::parse interfaces now return descriptive StringError
instead of a plain bool. It allows to make -passes/aa-pipeline parsing
errors context-specific and thus less confusing.
TODO: ideally we should also make suggestions for misspelled pass names,
but that requires some extensions to PassBuilder.
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe, chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53246
llvm-svn: 344519
This patch ports the legacy pass manager to the new one to take advantage of
the benefits of the new PM. This involved moving a lot of the declarations for
`AddressSantizer` to a header so that it can be publicly used via
PassRegistry.def which I believe contains all the passes managed by the new PM.
This patch essentially decouples the instrumentation from the legacy PM such
hat it can be used by both legacy and new PM infrastructure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52739
llvm-svn: 344274
This can be used to preserve profiling information across codebase
changes that have widespread impact on mangled names, but across which
most profiling data should still be usable. For example, when switching
from libstdc++ to libc++, or from the old libstdc++ ABI to the new ABI,
or even from a 32-bit to a 64-bit build.
The user can provide a remapping file specifying parts of mangled names
that should be treated as equivalent (eg, std::__1 should be treated as
equivalent to std::__cxx11), and profile data will be treated as
applying to a particular function if its name is equivalent to the name
of a function in the profile data under the provided equivalences. See
the documentation change for a description of how this is configured.
Remapping is supported for both sample-based profiling and instruction
profiling. We do not support remapping indirect branch target
information, but all other profile data should be remapped
appropriately.
Support is only added for the new pass manager. If someone wants to also
add support for this for the old pass manager, doing so should be
straightforward.
This is the LLVM side of Clang r344199.
Reviewers: davidxl, tejohnson, dlj, erik.pilkington
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51249
llvm-svn: 344200
Modified the testcases to use both pass managers
Use single commandline flag for both pass managers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52708
Reviewers: sebpop, tejohnson, brzycki, SirishP
Reviewed By: tejohnson, brzycki
llvm-svn: 343662
This reverts commit r342387 as it's showing significant performance
regressions in a number of benchmarks. Followed up with the
committer and original thread with an example and will get performance
numbers before recommitting.
llvm-svn: 343522
Rebase rL341954 since https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38912
has been fixed by rL342055.
Precommit testing performed:
* Overnight runs of csmith comparing the output between programs
compiled with gvn-hoist enabled/disabled.
* Bootstrap builds of clang with UbSan/ASan configurations.
llvm-svn: 342387
This reverts rL341954.
The builder `sanitizer-x86_64-linux-bootstrap-ubsan` has been
failing with timeouts at stage2 clang/ubsan:
[3065/3073] Linking CXX executable bin/lld
command timed out: 1200 seconds without output running python
../sanitizer_buildbot/sanitizers/buildbot_selector.py,
attempting to kill
llvm-svn: 342001
Summary:
Control height reduction merges conditional blocks of code and reduces the
number of conditional branches in the hot path based on profiles.
if (hot_cond1) { // Likely true.
do_stg_hot1();
}
if (hot_cond2) { // Likely true.
do_stg_hot2();
}
->
if (hot_cond1 && hot_cond2) { // Hot path.
do_stg_hot1();
do_stg_hot2();
} else { // Cold path.
if (hot_cond1) {
do_stg_hot1();
}
if (hot_cond2) {
do_stg_hot2();
}
}
This speeds up some internal benchmarks up to ~30%.
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: xbolva00, dmgreen, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50591
llvm-svn: 341386
Rebase rL338240 since the excessive memory usage observed when using
GVNHoist with UBSan has been fixed by rL340818.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49858
llvm-svn: 340922
Summary:
Enable these passes for CFI and WPD in ThinLTO and LTO with the new pass
manager. Add a couple of tests for both PMs based on the clang tests
tools/clang/test/CodeGen/thinlto-distributed-cfi*.ll, but just test
through llvm-lto2 and not with distributed ThinLTO.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49429
llvm-svn: 337461
This is a simple implementation of the unroll-and-jam classical loop
optimisation.
The basic idea is that we take an outer loop of the form:
for i..
ForeBlocks(i)
for j..
SubLoopBlocks(i, j)
AftBlocks(i)
Instead of doing normal inner or outer unrolling, we unroll as follows:
for i... i+=2
ForeBlocks(i)
ForeBlocks(i+1)
for j..
SubLoopBlocks(i, j)
SubLoopBlocks(i+1, j)
AftBlocks(i)
AftBlocks(i+1)
Remainder Loop
So we have unrolled the outer loop, then jammed the two inner loops into
one. This can lead to a simpler inner loop if memory accesses can be shared
between the now jammed loops.
To do this we have to prove that this is all safe, both for the memory
accesses (using dependence analysis) and that ForeBlocks(i+1) can move before
AftBlocks(i) and SubLoopBlocks(i, j).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41953
llvm-svn: 336062
and diretory.
Also cleans up all the associated naming to be consistent and removes
the public access to the pass ID which was unused in LLVM.
Also runs clang-format over parts that changed, which generally cleans
up a bunch of formatting.
This is in preparation for doing some internal cleanups to the pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47352
llvm-svn: 336028
This pass is being added in order to make the information available to BasicAA,
which can't do caching of this information itself, but possibly this information
may be useful for other passes.
Incorporates code based on Daniel Berlin's implementation of Tarjan's algorithm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47893
llvm-svn: 335857
=== Generating the CG Profile ===
The CGProfile module pass simply gets the block profile count for each BB and scans for call instructions. For each call instruction it adds an edge from the current function to the called function with the current BB block profile count as the weight.
After scanning all the functions, it generates an appending module flag containing the data. The format looks like:
```
!llvm.module.flags = !{!0}
!0 = !{i32 5, !"CG Profile", !1}
!1 = !{!2, !3, !4} ; List of edges
!2 = !{void ()* @a, void ()* @b, i64 32} ; Edge from a to b with a weight of 32
!3 = !{void (i1)* @freq, void ()* @a, i64 11}
!4 = !{void (i1)* @freq, void ()* @b, i64 20}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48105
llvm-svn: 335794
loop-cleanup passes at the beginning of the loop pass pipeline, and
re-enqueue loops after even trivial unswitching.
This will allow us to much more consistently avoid simplifying code
while doing trivial unswitching. I've also added a test case that
specifically shows effective iteration using this technique.
I've unconditionally updated the new PM as that is always using the
SimpleLoopUnswitch pass, and I've made the pipeline changes for the old
PM conditional on using this new unswitch pass. I added a bunch of
comments to the loop pass pipeline in the old PM to make it more clear
what is going on when reviewing.
Hopefully this will unblock doing *partial* unswitching instead of just
full unswitching.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47408
llvm-svn: 333493
This is a simple implementation of the unroll-and-jam classical loop
optimisation.
The basic idea is that we take an outer loop of the form:
for i..
ForeBlocks(i)
for j..
SubLoopBlocks(i, j)
AftBlocks(i)
Instead of doing normal inner or outer unrolling, we unroll as follows:
for i... i+=2
ForeBlocks(i)
ForeBlocks(i+1)
for j..
SubLoopBlocks(i, j)
SubLoopBlocks(i+1, j)
AftBlocks(i)
AftBlocks(i+1)
Remainder
So we have unrolled the outer loop, then jammed the two inner loops into
one. This can lead to a simpler inner loop if memory accesses can be shared
between the now-jammed loops.
To do this we have to prove that this is all safe, both for the memory
accesses (using dependence analysis) and that ForeBlocks(i+1) can move before
AftBlocks(i) and SubLoopBlocks(i, j).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41953
llvm-svn: 333358
The plan had always been to move towards using this rather than so much
in-pass simplification within the loop pipeline, but we never got around
to it.... until only a couple months after it was removed due to disuse.
=/
This commit is just a pure revert of the removal. I will add tests and
do some basic cleanup in follow-up commits. Then I'll wire it into the
loop pass pipeline.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47353
llvm-svn: 333250
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
There are two nontrivial details here:
* Loop structure update interface is quite different with new pass manager,
so the code to add new loops was factored out
* BranchProbabilityInfo is not a loop analysis, so it can not be just getResult'ed from
within the loop pass. It cant even be queried through getCachedResult as LoopCanonicalization
sequence (e.g. LoopSimplify) might invalidate BPI results.
Complete solution for BPI will likely take some time to discuss and figure out,
so for now this was partially solved by making BPI optional in IRCE
(skipping a couple of profitability checks if it is absent).
Most of the IRCE tests got their corresponding new-pass-manager variant enabled.
Only two of them depend on BPI, both marked with TODO, to be turned on when BPI
starts being available for loop passes.
Reviewers: chandlerc, mkazantsev, sanjoy, asbirlea
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43795
llvm-svn: 327619
LoopInstSimplify is unused and untested. Reading through the commit
history the pass also seems to have a high maintenance burden.
It would be best to retire the pass for now. It should be easy to
recover if we need something similar in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44053
llvm-svn: 327329
Combine expression patterns to form expressions with fewer, simple instructions.
This pass does not modify the CFG.
For example, this pass reduce width of expressions post-dominated by TruncInst
into smaller width when applicable.
It differs from instcombine pass in that it contains pattern optimization that
requires higher complexity than the O(1), thus, it should run fewer times than
instcombine pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38313
llvm-svn: 323321
This applies to most pipelines except the LTO and ThinLTO backend
actions - it is for use at the beginning of the overall pipeline.
This extension point will be used to add the GCOV pass when enabled in
Clang.
llvm-svn: 323166
Summary:
This pass synthesizes function entry counts by traversing the callgraph
and using the relative block frequencies of the callsites. The intended
use of these counts is in inlining to determine hot/cold callsites in
the absence of profile information.
The pass is split into two files with the code that propagates the
counts in a callgraph in a Utils file. I plan to add support for
propagation in the thinlto link phase and the propagation code will be
shared and hence this split. I did not add support to the old PM since
hot callsite determination in inlining is not possible in old PM
(although we could use hot callee heuristic with synthetic counts in the
old PM it is not worth the effort tuning it)
Reviewers: davidxl, silvas
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41604
llvm-svn: 322110
Summary:
New pass manager driver passes DebugPM (-debug-pass-manager) flag into
individual PassManager constructors in order to enable debug logging.
FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor has its own internal LoopCanonicalizationPM
which never gets its debug logging enabled and that means canonicalization
passes like LoopSimplify are never present in -debug-pass-manager output.
Extending FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor's constructor and
createFunctionToLoopPassAdaptor wrapper with an optional
boolean DebugLogging argument.
Passing debug-logging flags there as appropriate.
Reviewers: chandlerc, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, eraman, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41586
llvm-svn: 321548
Summary:
The port is nearly straightforward.
The only complication is related to the analyses handling,
since one of the analyses used in this module pass is domtree,
which is a function analysis. That requires asking for the results
of each function and disallows a single interface for run-on-module
pass action.
Decided to copy-paste the main body of this pass.
Most of its code is requesting analyses anyway, so not that much
of a copy-paste.
The rest of the code movement is to transform all the implementation
helper functions like stripNonValidData into non-member statics.
Extended all the related LLVM tests with new-pass-manager use.
No failures.
Reviewers: sanjoy, anna, reames
Reviewed By: anna
Subscribers: skatkov, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41162
llvm-svn: 320796
This should solve:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34603
...by preventing SimplifyCFG from altering redundant instructions before early-cse has a chance to run.
It changes the default (canonical-forming) behavior of SimplifyCFG, so we're only doing the
sinking transform later in the optimization pipeline.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38566
llvm-svn: 320749
The core idea is to (re-)introduce some redundancies where their cost is
hidden by the cost of materializing immediates for constant operands of
PHI nodes. When the cost of the redundancies is covered by this,
avoiding materializing the immediate has numerous benefits:
1) Less register pressure
2) Potential for further folding / combining
3) Potential for more efficient instructions due to immediate operand
As a motivating example, consider the remarkably different cost on x86
of a SHL instruction with an immediate operand versus a register
operand.
This pattern turns up surprisingly frequently, but is somewhat rarely
obvious as a significant performance problem.
The pass is entirely target independent, but it does rely on the target
cost model in TTI to decide when to speculate things around the PHI
node. I've included x86-focused tests, but any target that sets up its
immediate cost model should benefit from this pass.
There is probably more that can be done in this space, but the pass
as-is is enough to get some important performance on our internal
benchmarks, and should be generally performance neutral, but help with
more extensive benchmarking is always welcome.
One awkward part is that this pass has to be scheduled after
*everything* that can eliminate these kinds of redundancies. This
includes SimplifyCFG, GVN, etc. I'm open to suggestions about better
places to put this. We could in theory make it part of the codegen pass
pipeline, but there doesn't really seem to be a good reason for that --
it isn't "lowering" in any sense and only relies on pretty standard cost
model based TTI queries, so it seems to fit well with the "optimization"
pipeline model. Still, further thoughts on the pipeline position are
welcome.
I've also only implemented this in the new pass manager. If folks are
very interested, I can try to add it to the old PM as well, but I didn't
really see much point (my use case is already switched over to the new
PM).
I've tested this pretty heavily without issue. A wide range of
benchmarks internally show no change outside the noise, and I don't see
any significant changes in SPEC either. However, the size class
computation in tcmalloc is substantially improved by this, which turns
into a 2% to 4% win on the hottest path through tcmalloc for us, so
there are definitely important cases where this is going to make
a substantial difference.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37467
llvm-svn: 319164
This is a recommit of r316869 which was speculatively reverted with r317444 and
subsequently shown to not be the cause of PR35210. That crash should be fixed
after r318237.
Original commit message:
The old PM sets the options of what used to be known as "latesimplifycfg" on the
instantiation after the vectorizers have run, so that's what we'redoing here.
FWIW, there's a later SimplifyCFGPass instantiation in both PMs where we do not
set the "late" options. I'm not sure if that's intentional or not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39407
llvm-svn: 318299
Clang implements the -finstrument-functions flag inherited from GCC, which
inserts calls to __cyg_profile_func_{enter,exit} on function entry and exit.
This is useful for getting a trace of how the functions in a program are
executed. Normally, the calls remain even if a function is inlined into another
function, but it is useful to be able to turn this off for users who are
interested in a lower-level trace, i.e. one that reflects what functions are
called post-inlining. (We use this to generate link order files for Chromium.)
LLVM already has a pass for inserting similar instrumentation calls to
mcount(), which it does after inlining. This patch renames and extends that
pass to handle calls both to mcount and the cygprofile functions, before and/or
after inlining as controlled by function attributes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39287
llvm-svn: 318195
Registers it and everything, updates all the references, etc.
Next patch will add support to Clang's `-fexperimental-new-pass-manager`
path to actually enable BoundsChecking correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39084
llvm-svn: 318128
This recommit r317351 after fixing a buildbot failure.
Original commit message:
Summary:
This change add a pass which tries to split a call-site to pass
more constrained arguments if its argument is predicated in the control flow
so that we can expose better context to the later passes (e.g, inliner, jump
threading, or IPA-CP based function cloning, etc.).
As of now we support two cases :
1) If a call site is dominated by an OR condition and if any of its arguments
are predicated on this OR condition, try to split the condition with more
constrained arguments. For example, in the code below, we try to split the
call site since we can predicate the argument (ptr) based on the OR condition.
Split from :
if (!ptr || c)
callee(ptr);
to :
if (!ptr)
callee(null ptr) // set the known constant value
else if (c)
callee(nonnull ptr) // set non-null attribute in the argument
2) We can also split a call-site based on constant incoming values of a PHI
For example,
from :
BB0:
%c = icmp eq i32 %i1, %i2
br i1 %c, label %BB2, label %BB1
BB1:
br label %BB2
BB2:
%p = phi i32 [ 0, %BB0 ], [ 1, %BB1 ]
call void @bar(i32 %p)
to
BB0:
%c = icmp eq i32 %i1, %i2
br i1 %c, label %BB2-split0, label %BB1
BB1:
br label %BB2-split1
BB2-split0:
call void @bar(i32 0)
br label %BB2
BB2-split1:
call void @bar(i32 1)
br label %BB2
BB2:
%p = phi i32 [ 0, %BB2-split0 ], [ 1, %BB2-split1 ]
llvm-svn: 317362
Summary:
This change add a pass which tries to split a call-site to pass
more constrained arguments if its argument is predicated in the control flow
so that we can expose better context to the later passes (e.g, inliner, jump
threading, or IPA-CP based function cloning, etc.).
As of now we support two cases :
1) If a call site is dominated by an OR condition and if any of its arguments
are predicated on this OR condition, try to split the condition with more
constrained arguments. For example, in the code below, we try to split the
call site since we can predicate the argument (ptr) based on the OR condition.
Split from :
if (!ptr || c)
callee(ptr);
to :
if (!ptr)
callee(null ptr) // set the known constant value
else if (c)
callee(nonnull ptr) // set non-null attribute in the argument
2) We can also split a call-site based on constant incoming values of a PHI
For example,
from :
BB0:
%c = icmp eq i32 %i1, %i2
br i1 %c, label %BB2, label %BB1
BB1:
br label %BB2
BB2:
%p = phi i32 [ 0, %BB0 ], [ 1, %BB1 ]
call void @bar(i32 %p)
to
BB0:
%c = icmp eq i32 %i1, %i2
br i1 %c, label %BB2-split0, label %BB1
BB1:
br label %BB2-split1
BB2-split0:
call void @bar(i32 0)
br label %BB2
BB2-split1:
call void @bar(i32 1)
br label %BB2
BB2:
%p = phi i32 [ 0, %BB2-split0 ], [ 1, %BB2-split1 ]
Reviewers: davidxl, huntergr, chandlerc, mcrosier, eraman, davide
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: sdesmalen, ashutosh.nema, fhahn, mssimpso, aemerson, mgorny, mehdi_amini, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39137
llvm-svn: 317351
The old PM sets the options of what used to be known as "latesimplifycfg" on the
instantiation after the vectorizers have run, so that's what we'redoing here.
FWIW, there's a later SimplifyCFGPass instantiation in both PMs where we do not
set the "late" options. I'm not sure if that's intentional or not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39407
llvm-svn: 316869
This patch adds a new pass for attaching !callees metadata to indirect call
sites. The pass propagates values to call sites by performing an IPSCCP-like
analysis using the generic sparse propagation solver. For indirect call sites
having a small set of possible callees, the attached metadata indicates what
those callees are. The metadata can be used to facilitate optimizations like
intersecting the function attributes of the possible callees, refining the call
graph, performing indirect call promotion, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37355
llvm-svn: 316576
This pass adds pgo-memop-opt pass to the new pass manager.
It is in the old pass manager but somehow left out in the new pass manager.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D39145
llvm-svn: 316384