Add an intrinsic type class to represent the
llvm.experimental.noalias.scope.decl intrinsic, to make code
working with it a bit nicer by hiding the metadata extraction
from view.
Just like llvm.assume, there are a lot of cases where we can just ignore llvm.experimental.noalias.scope.decl.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93042
This relates to the ongoing effort to support vectorization of multiple exit loops (see D93317).
The previous code assumed that LCSSA phis were always single entry before the vectorizer ran. This was correct, but only because the vectorizer allowed only a single exiting edge. There's nothing in the definition of LCSSA which requires single entry phis.
A common case where this comes up is with a loop with multiple exiting blocks which all reach a common exit block. (e.g. see the test updates)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93725
If DoExtraAnalysis is true (e.g. because remarks are enabled), we
continue with the analysis rather than exiting. Update code to
conditionally check if the ExitBB has phis or not a single predecessor.
Otherwise a nullptr is dereferenced with DoExtraAnalysis.
This reverts commit 4ffcd4fe9a thus restoring e4df6a40da.
The only change from the original patch is to add "llvm::" before the call to empty(iterator_range). This is a speculative fix for the ambiguity reported on some builders.
This patch is a major step towards supporting multiple exit loops in the vectorizer. This patch on it's own extends the loop forms allowed in two ways:
single exit loops which are not bottom tested
multiple exit loops w/ a single exit block reached from all exits and no phis in the exit block (because of LCSSA this implies no values defined in the loop used later)
The restrictions on multiple exit loop structures will be removed in follow up patches; disallowing cases for now makes the code changes smaller and more obvious. As before, we can only handle loops with entirely analyzable exits. Removing that restriction is much harder, and is not part of currently planned efforts.
The basic idea here is that we can force the last iteration to run in the scalar epilogue loop (if we have one). From the definition of SCEV's backedge taken count, we know that no earlier iteration can exit the vector body. As such, we can leave the decision on which exit to be taken to the scalar code and generate a bottom tested vector loop which runs all but the last iteration.
The existing code already had the notion of requiring one iteration in the scalar epilogue, this patch is mainly about generalizing that support slightly, making sure we don't try to use this mechanism when tail folding, and updating the code to reflect the difference between a single exit block and a unique exit block (very mechanical).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93317
In this patch I have added support for a new loop hint called
vectorize.scalable.enable that says whether we should enable scalable
vectorization or not. If a user wants to instruct the compiler to
vectorize a loop with scalable vectors they can now do this as
follows:
br i1 %exitcond, label %for.end, label %for.body, !llvm.loop !2
...
!2 = !{!2, !3, !4}
!3 = !{!"llvm.loop.vectorize.width", i32 8}
!4 = !{!"llvm.loop.vectorize.scalable.enable", i1 true}
Setting the hint to false simply reverts the behaviour back to the
default, using fixed width vectors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88962
The warning would fire when calling isDereferenceableAndAlignedInLoop
with a scalable load. Calling isDereferenceableAndAlignedInLoop with a
scalable load would result in the use of the now deprecated implicit
cast of TypeSize to uint64_t through the overloaded operator.
This patch fixes this issue by:
- no longer considering vector loads as candidates in
canVectorizeWithIfConvert. This doesn't make sense in the context of
identifying scalar loads to vectorize.
- making use of getFixedSize inside isDereferenceableAndAlignedInLoop --
this removes the dependency on the deprecated interface, and will
trigger an assertion error if the function is ever called with a
scalable type.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89798
This implements 2 different vectorisation fallback strategies if tail-folding
fails: 1) don't vectorise at all, or 2) vectorise using a scalar epilogue. This
can be controlled with option -prefer-predicate-over-epilogue, that has been
changed to take a numeric value corresponding to the tail-folding preference
and preferred fallback.
Patch by: Pierre van Houtryve, Sjoerd Meijer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79783
Move ScalarEvolution::forgetLoopDispositions implementation to ScalarEvolution.cpp to remove the dependency.
Add implicit header dependency to source files where necessary.
Now that load/store alignment is required, we no longer need most
of them. Also switch the getLoadStoreAlignment() helper to return
Align instead of MaybeAlign.
First-order recurrences require special treatment when they are live-out;
such treatment is provided by fixFirstOrderRecurrence(), so they should be
included in AllowedExit set.
(Should probably have been included originally in D16197.)
Fixes PR45526: AllowedExit set is used by prepareToFoldTailByMasking() to
check whether the treatment for live-outs also holds when folding the tail,
which is not (yet) the case for first-order recurrences.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78210
Introduce a new VPWidenCanonicalIVRecipe to generate a canonical vector
induction for use in fold-tail-with-masking, if a primary induction is absent.
The canonical scalar IV having start = 0 and step = VF*UF, created during code
-gen to control the vector loop, is widened into a canonical vector IV having
start = {<Part*VF, Part*VF+1, ..., Part*VF+VF-1> for 0 <= Part < UF} and
step = <VF*UF, VF*UF, ..., VF*UF>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77635
getReductionVars, getInductionVars and getFirstOrderRecurrences were all
being returned from LoopVectorizationLegality as pointers to lists. This
just changes them to be references, cleaning up the interface slightly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75448
Summary:
This commits is a rework of the patch in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D67572.
The rework was requested to prevent out-of-tree performance regression
when vectorizing out-of-tree IR intrinsics. The vectorization of such
intrinsics is enquired via the static function `isTLIScalarize`. For
detail see the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D67572.
Reviewers: uabelho, fhahn, sdesmalen
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72734
The assume intrinsic is intentionally marked as may reading/writing
memory, to avoid passes moving them around. When flattening the CFG
for predicated blocks, we have to drop the assume calls, as they
are control-flow dependent.
There are some cases where we can do better (when control flow is
preserved), but that is follow-up work.
Fixes PR43620.
Reviewers: hsaito, rengolin, dcaballe, Ayal
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68814
This reverts commit 0be81968a2.
The VFDatabase needs some rework to be able to handle vectorization
and subsequent scalarization of intrinsics in out-of-tree versions of
the compiler. For more details, see the discussion in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D67572.
This patch introduced the VFDatabase, the framework proposed in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-June/133484.html. [*]
In this patch the VFDatabase is used to bridge the TargetLibraryInfo
(TLI) calls that were previously used to query for the availability of
vector counterparts of scalar functions.
The VFISAKind field `ISA` of VFShape have been moved into into VFInfo,
under the assumption that different vector ISAs may provide the same
vector signature. At the moment, the vectorizer accepts any of the
available ISAs as long as the signature provided by the VFDatabase
matches the one expected in the vectorization process. For example,
when targeting AVX or AVX2, which both have 256-bit registers, the IR
signature of the two vector functions associated to the two ISAs is
the same. The `getVectorizedFunction` method at the moment returns the
first available match. We will need to add more heuristics to the
search system to decide which of the available version (TLI, AVX,
AVX2, ...) the system should prefer, when multiple versions with the
same VFShape are present.
Some of the code in this patch is based on the work done by Sumedh
Arani in https://reviews.llvm.org/D66025.
[*] Notice that in the proposal the VFDatabase was called SVFS. The
name VFDatabase is more in line with LLVM recommendations for
naming classes and variables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67572
This version contains 2 fixes for reported issues:
1. Make sure we do not try to sink terminator instructions.
2. Make sure we bail out, if we try to sink an instruction that needs to
stay in place for another recurrence.
Original message:
If the recurrence PHI node has a single user, we can sink any
instruction without side effects, given that all users are dominated by
the instruction computing the incoming value of the next iteration
('Previous'). We can sink instructions that may cause traps, because
that only causes the trap to occur later, but not on any new paths.
With the relaxed check, we also have to make sure that we do not have a
direct cycle (meaning PHI user == 'Previous), which indicates a
reduction relation, which potentially gets missed by
ReductionDescriptor.
As follow-ups, we can also sink stores, iff they do not alias with
other instructions we move them across and we could also support sinking
chains of instructions and multiple users of the PHI.
Fixes PR43398.
Reviewers: hsaito, dcaballe, Ayal, rengolin
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69228
The vectoriser queries TTI->preferPredicateOverEpilogue to determine if
tail-folding is preferred for a loop, but it was not respecting loop hint
'predicate' that can disable this, which has now been added. This showed that
we were incorrectly initialising loop hint 'vectorize.predicate.enable' with 0
(i.e. FK_Disabled) but this should have been FK_Undefined, which has been
fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70125
When optimising for size and SCEV runtime checks need to be emitted to check
overflow behaviour, the loop vectorizer can run in this assert:
LoopVectorize.cpp:2699: void llvm::InnerLoopVectorizer::emitSCEVChecks(
llvm::Loop *, llvm::BasicBlock *): Assertion `!BB->getParent()->hasOptSize()
&& "Cannot SCEV check stride or overflow when opt
We should not generate predicates while optimising for size because
code will be generated for predicates such as these SCEV overflow runtime
checks.
This should fix PR43371.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68082
llvm-svn: 374166
Expose a utility function so that all places which want to suppress speculation (when otherwise legal) due to ordering and/or sanitizer interaction can do so.
llvm-svn: 371556
If we're vectorizing a load in a predicated block, check to see if the load can be speculated rather than predicated. This allows us to generate a normal vector load instead of a masked.load.
To do so, we must prove that all bytes accessed on any iteration of the original loop are dereferenceable, and that all loads (across all iterations) are properly aligned. This is equivelent to proving that hoisting the load into the loop header in the original scalar loop is safe.
Note: There are a couple of code motion todos in the code. My intention is to wait about a day - to be sure this sticks - and then perform the NFC motion without furthe review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66688
llvm-svn: 371452
Summary:
Fold-tail currently supports reduction last-vector-value live-out's,
but has yet to support last-scalar-value live-outs, including
non-header phi's. As it relies on AllowedExit in order to detect
them and bail out we need to add the non-header PHI nodes to
AllowedExit, otherwise we end up with miscompiles.
Solves https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43166
Reviewers: fhahn, Ayal
Reviewed By: fhahn, Ayal
Subscribers: anna, hiraditya, rkruppe, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67074
llvm-svn: 370721
Allow vectorizing loops that have reductions when tail is folded by masking.
A select is introduced in VPlan, choosing between the last value carried by the
loop-exit/live-out instruction of the reduction, and the penultimate value
carried by the reduction phi, according to the "i < n" mask of fold-tail.
This select replaces the last value as the live-out value of the loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66720
llvm-svn: 370173
assume_safety implies that loads under "if's" can be safely executed
speculatively (unguarded, unmasked). However this assumption holds only for the
original user "if's", not those introduced by the compiler, such as the
fold-tail "if" that guards us from loading beyond the original loop trip-count.
Currently the combination of fold-tail and assume-safety pragmas results in
ignoring the fold-tail predicate that guards the loads, generating unmasked
loads. This patch fixes this behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66106
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, fhahn
llvm-svn: 368973
This allows folding of the scalar epilogue loop (the tail) into the main
vectorised loop body when the loop is annotated with a "vector predicate"
metadata hint. To fold the tail, instructions need to be predicated (masked),
enabling/disabling lanes for the remainder iterations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65197
llvm-svn: 367592
When considering a loop containing nontemporal stores or loads for
vectorization, suppress the vectorization if the corresponding
vectorized store or load with the aligment of the original scaler
memory op is not supported with the nontemporal hint on the target.
This adds two new functions:
bool isLegalNTStore(Type *DataType, unsigned Alignment) const;
bool isLegalNTLoad(Type *DataType, unsigned Alignment) const;
to TTI, leaving the target independent default implementation as
returning true, but with overriding implementations for X86 that
check the legality based on available Subtarget features.
This fixes https://llvm.org/PR40759
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61764
llvm-svn: 363581
A function for loop vectorization illegality reporting has been
introduced:
void LoopVectorizationLegality::reportVectorizationFailure(
const StringRef DebugMsg, const StringRef OREMsg,
const StringRef ORETag, Instruction * const I) const;
The function prints a debug message when the debug for the compilation
unit is enabled as well as invokes the optimization report emitter to
generate a message with a specified tag. The function doesn't cover any
complicated logic when a custom lambda should be passed to the emitter,
only generating a message with a tag is supported.
The function always prints the instruction `I` after the debug message
whenever the instruction is specified, otherwise the debug message
ends with a dot: 'LV: Not vectorizing: Disabled/already vectorized.'
Patch by Pavel Samolysov <samolisov@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 362736
Currently, only the following information is provided by LoopVectorizer
in the case when the CF of the loop is not legal for vectorization:
LV: Can't vectorize the instructions or CFG
LV: Not vectorizing: Cannot prove legality.
But this information is not enough for the root cause analysis; what is
exactly wrong with the loop should also be printed:
LV: Not vectorizing: The exiting block is not the loop latch.
Patch by Pavel Samolysov.
Reviewers: mkuper, hsaito, rengolin, fhahn
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62311
llvm-svn: 362056
This requires a couple of tweaks to existing vectorization functions as they were assuming that only the second call argument (ctlz/cttz/powi) could ever be the 'always scalar' argument, but for smul.fix + umul.fix its the third argument.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58616
llvm-svn: 354790
Loop::setAlreadyUnrolled() and
LoopVectorizeHints::setLoopAlreadyUnrolled() both add loop metadata that
stops the same loop from being transformed multiple times. This patch
merges both implementations.
In doing so we fix 3 potential issues:
* setLoopAlreadyUnrolled() kept the llvm.loop.vectorize/interleave.*
metadata even though it will not be used anymore. This already caused
problems such as http://llvm.org/PR40546. Change the behavior to the
one of setAlreadyUnrolled which deletes this loop metadata.
* setAlreadyUnrolled() used to create a new LoopID by calling
MDNode::get with nullptr as the first operand, then replacing it by
the returned references using replaceOperandWith. It is possible
that MDNode::get would instead return an existing node (due to
de-duplication) that then gets modified. To avoid, use a fresh
TempMDNode that does not get uniqued with anything else before
replacing it with replaceOperandWith.
* LoopVectorizeHints::matchesHintMetadataName() only compares the
suffix of the attribute to set the new value for. That is, when
called with "enable", would erase attributes such as
"llvm.loop.unroll.enable", "llvm.loop.vectorize.enable" and
"llvm.loop.distribute.enable" instead of the one to replace.
Fortunately, function was only called with "isvectorized".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57566
llvm-svn: 353738
VPlan-native path
Context: Patch Series #2 for outer loop vectorization support in LV
using VPlan. (RFC:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119523.html).
Patch series #2 checks that inner loops are still trivially lock-step
among all vector elements. Non-loop branches are blindly assumed as
divergent.
Changes here implement VPlan based predication algorithm to compute
predicates for blocks that need predication. Predicates are computed
for the VPLoop region in reverse post order. A block's predicate is
computed as OR of the masks of all incoming edges. The mask for an
incoming edge is computed as AND of predecessor block's predicate and
either predecessor's Condition bit or NOT(Condition bit) depending on
whether the edge from predecessor block to the current block is true
or false edge.
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, hsaito, dcaballe
Reviewed By: fhahn
Patch by Satish Guggilla, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53349
llvm-svn: 351990
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