This adds a strategy to split functions into a random number of
fragments at randomly chosen split points.
Reviewed By: rafauler
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130647
This patch adds a dedicated class to keep track of each function's
layout. It also lays the groundwork for splitting functions into
multiple fragments (as opposed to a strict hot/cold split).
Reviewed By: maksfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129518
It seems the earlier implementation does not follow the description
in LoopRotationPass.h: It rotates loops even if they are already laid out
correctly. The diff adjusts the behaviour.
Given that the impact of LoopInversionPass is minor, this change won't
yield significant perf differences. Tested on clang-10: there seems to be a
0.1%-0.3% cpu win and a small reduction of branch misses.
**Before:**
BOLT-INFO: 120 Functions were reordered by LoopInversionPass
**After:**
BOLT-INFO: 79 Functions were reordered by LoopInversionPass
Reviewed By: yota9
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121921
Summary:
Moves source files into separate components, and make explicit
component dependency on each other, so LLVM build system knows how to
build BOLT in BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON.
Please use the -c merge.renamelimit=230 git option when rebasing your
work on top of this change.
To achieve this, we create a new library to hold core IR files (most
classes beginning with Binary in their names), a new library to hold
Utils, some command line options shared across both RewriteInstance
and core IR files, a new library called Rewrite to hold most classes
concerned with running top-level functions coordinating the binary
rewriting process, and a new library called Profile to hold classes
dealing with profile reading and writing.
To remove the dependency from BinaryContext into X86-specific classes,
we do some refactoring on the BinaryContext constructor to receive a
reference to the specific backend directly from RewriteInstance. Then,
the dependency on X86 or AArch64-specific classes is transfered to the
Rewrite library. We can't have the Core library depend on targets
because targets depend on Core (which would create a cycle).
Files implementing the entry point of a tool are transferred to the
tools/ folder. All header files are transferred to the include/
folder. The src/ folder was renamed to lib/.
(cherry picked from FBD32746834)