Having a separate counting method runs the risk of a mismatch between
the actual reduction method and the counting method.
Instead, create an Oracle that always returns true for shouldKeep(), run
the reduction, and count how many times shouldKeep() was called. The
module should not be modified if shouldKeep() always returns true.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113537
The extractBasicBlocksFromModule, extractInstrFromModule, and other
similar functions previously performed very poorly when the number of
such elements in the program to reduce was very high. Previously, we
were creating the set which caches elements to keep by looping through
all elements in the module and adding them to the set. However, since
std::set is an ordered set, this introduces a massive amount of
rebalancing if the order of elements in the program and the order of
their pointers in memory are not the same.
The solution is straightforward: first put all the elements to be kept
in a vector, then use the constructor for std::set which takes a pair of
iterators over a collection. This constructor is optimized to avoid
doing unnecessary work when initializing large sets.
Also in this change, we pass BBsToKeep set to functions
replaceBranchTerminator and removeUninterestingBBsFromSwitch as a const
reference rather than passing it by value. This ought to prevent the
need to copy the collection each time these functions are called, which
is expensive if the collection is large.
Reviewed By: aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112757
Use Module& wherever possible.
Since every reduction immediately turns Chunks into an Oracle, directly pass Oracle instead.
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111122
The limitation of the current pass that it skips initializer-less GV's
seems arbitrary, in all the reduced cases i (personally) looked at,
the globals weren't needed, yet they were kept.
So let's do two things:
1. allow reducing initializer-less globals
2. before reducing globals, reduce their initializers, much like we do function bodies
Summary:
I think, this results in much more understandable/readable flow.
At least the original logic was perhaps the most hard thing for me to grasp when taking an initial look on the delta passes.
Reviewers: nickdesaulniers, dblaikie, diegotf, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83287
As it can be seen in newly-added (previously-crashing) test-case,
there can be a situation where multiple GV's are used in instr,
and we would schedule the same instruction to be deleted several times,
crashing when trying to delete it the second time.
We could either store WeakVH (done here), or use something set-like.
I think using WeakVH is prevalent in these cases elsewhere.
Summary:
This pass tries to remove Global Variables, as well as their derived uses. For example if a variable `@x` is used by `%call1` and `%call2`, both these uses and the definition of `@x` are deleted. Moreover if `%call1` or `%call2` are used elsewhere those uses are also deleted, and so on recursively.
I'm still uncertain if this pass should remove derived uses, I'm open to suggestions.
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64176
> llvm-svn: 368918
llvm-svn: 369061
Remove the @return to fix the warning: '@returns' command used in a
comment that is attached to a function returning void [-Wdocumentation]
llvm-svn: 368957
Summary:
This pass tries to remove Global Variables, as well as their derived uses. For example if a variable `@x` is used by `%call1` and `%call2`, both these uses and the definition of `@x` are deleted. Moreover if `%call1` or `%call2` are used elsewhere those uses are also deleted, and so on recursively.
I'm still uncertain if this pass should remove derived uses, I'm open to suggestions.
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64176
llvm-svn: 368918