Move the 2 classes out of LoopVectorize.cpp to make it easier to re-use
them for VPlan outside LoopVectorize.cpp
Reviewers: Ayal, mssimpso, rengolin, dcaballe, mkuper, hsaito, hfinkel, xbolva00
Reviewed By: rengolin, xbolva00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49488
llvm-svn: 342027
Summary:
Move InductionDescriptor::transform() routine from LoopUtils to its only uses in LoopVectorize.cpp.
Specifically, the function is renamed as InnerLoopVectorizer::emitTransformedIndex().
This is a child to D51153.
Reviewers: dmgreen, llvm-commits
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51837
llvm-svn: 341776
Fix a latent bug in loop vectorizer which generates incorrect code for
memory accesses that are executed conditionally. As pointed in review,
this bug definitely affects uniform loads and may affect conditional
stores that should have turned into scatters as well).
The code gen for conditionally executed uniform loads on architectures
that support masked gather instructions is broken.
Without this patch, we were unconditionally executing the *conditional*
load in the vectorized version.
This patch does the following:
1. Uniform conditional loads on architectures with gather support will
have correct code generated. In particular, the cost model
(setCostBasedWideningDecision) is fixed.
2. For the recipes which are handled after the widening decision is set,
we use the isScalarWithPredication(I, VF) form which is added in the
patch.
3. Fix the vectorization cost model for scalarization
(getMemInstScalarizationCost): implement and use isPredicatedInst to
identify *all* predicated instructions, not just scalar+predicated. So,
now the cost for scalarization will be increased for maskedloads/stores
and gather/scatter operations. In short, we should be choosing the
gather/scatter in place of scalarization on archs where it is
profitable.
4. We needed to weaken the assert in useEmulatedMaskMemRefHack.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, mkuper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51313
llvm-svn: 341673
This is fix for PR38786.
First order recurrence phis were incorrectly treated as uniform,
which caused them to be vectorized as uniform instructions.
Patch by Ayal Zaks and Orivej Desh!
Reviewed by: Anna
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51639
llvm-svn: 341416
Summary:
Avoid "count" if possible -> use "find" to check for the existence of keys.
Passed llvm test suite.
Reviewers: fhahn, dcaballe, mkuper, rengolin
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51054
llvm-svn: 340563
Summary:
Follow up change to rL339703, where we now vectorize loops with non-phi
instructions used outside the loop. Note that the cyclic dependency
identification occurs when identifying reduction/induction vars.
We also need to identify that we do not allow users where the PSCEV information
within and outside the loop are different. This was the fix added in rL307837
for PR33706.
Reviewers: Ayal, mkuper, fhahn
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50778
llvm-svn: 340278
Summary:
This patch teaches the loop vectorizer to vectorize loops with non
header phis that have have outside uses. This is because the iteration
dependence distance for these phis can be widened upto VF (similar to
how we do for induction/reduction) if they do not have a cyclic
dependence with header phis. When identifying reduction/induction/first
order recurrence header phis, we already identify if there are any cyclic
dependencies that prevents vectorization.
The vectorizer is taught to extract the last element from the vectorized
phi and update the scalar loop exit block phi to contain this extracted
element from the vector loop.
This patch can be extended to vectorize loops where instructions other
than phis have outside uses.
Reviewers: Ayal, mkuper, mssimpso, efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50579
llvm-svn: 339703
Summary:
Reworked the previously committed patch to insert shuffles for reused
extract element instructions in the correct position. Previous logic was
incorrect, and might lead to the crash with PHIs and EH instructions.
Reviewers: efriedma, javed.absar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50143
llvm-svn: 339166
Summary:
If the ExtractElement instructions can be optimized out during the
vectorization and we need to reshuffle the parent vector, this
ShuffleInstruction may be inserted in the wrong place causing compiler
to produce incorrect code.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, mkuper, hfinkel, javed.absar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49928
llvm-svn: 338380
The patch introduces loop analysis (VPLoopInfo/VPLoop) for VPBlockBases.
This analysis will be necessary to perform some H-CFG transformations and
detect and introduce regions representing a loop in the H-CFG.
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, mkuper, hfinkel, mssimpso
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48816
llvm-svn: 338346
The patch introduces dominator analysis for VPBlockBases and extend
VPlan's GraphTraits specialization with the required interfaces. Dominator
analysis will be necessary to perform some H-CFG transformations and
to introduce VPLoopInfo (LoopInfo analysis on top of the VPlan representation).
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, mkuper, hfinkel, mssimpso
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48815
llvm-svn: 338310
In some cases LSV sees (load/store _ (select _ <pointer expression>
<pointer expression>)) patterns in input IR, often due to sinking and
other forms of CFG simplification, sometimes interspersed with
bitcasts and all-constant-indices GEPs. With this
patch`areConsecutivePointers` method would attempt to handle select
instructions. This leads to an increased number of successful
vectorizations.
Technically, select instructions could appear in index arithmetic as
well, however, we don't see those in our test suites / benchmarks.
Also, there is a lot more freedom in IR shapes computing integral
indices in general than in what's common in pointer computations, and
it appears that it's quite unreliable to do anything short of making
select instructions first class citizens of Scalar Evolution, which
for the purposes of this patch is most definitely an overkill.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49428
llvm-svn: 337965
Summary: truncateToMinimalBitWidths() doesn't handle all Instructions and the worst case is compiler crash via llvm_unreachable(). Fix is to add a case to handle PHINode and changed the worst case to NO-OP (from compiler crash).
Reviewers: sbaranga, mssimpso, hsaito
Reviewed By: hsaito
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49461
llvm-svn: 337861
This reapplies commit r337489 reverted by r337541
Additionally, this commit contains a speculative fix to the issue reported in r337541
(the report does not contain an actionable reproducer, just a stack trace)
llvm-svn: 337606
This is mostly a preparation work for adding a limited support for
select instructions. It proved to be difficult to do due to size and
irregularity of Vectorizer::isConsecutiveAccess, this is fixed here I
believe.
It also turned out that these changes make it simpler to finish one of
the TODOs and fix a number of other small issues, namely:
1. Looking through bitcasts to a type of a different size (requires
careful tracking of the original load/store size and some math
converting sizes in bytes to expected differences in indices of GEPs).
2. Reusing partial analysis of pointers done by first attempt in proving
them consecutive instead of starting from scratch. This added limited
support for nested GEPs co-existing with difficult sext/zext
instructions. This also required a careful handling of negative
differences between constant parts of offsets.
3. Handing a case where the first pointer index is not an add, but
something else (a function parameter for instance).
I observe an increased number of successful vectorizations on a large
set of shader programs. Only few shaders are affected, but those that
are affected sport >5% less loads and stores than before the patch.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential-Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49342
llvm-svn: 337489
Summary: Currently, isConsecutiveAccess() detects two pointers(PtrA and PtrB) as consecutive by
comparing PtrB with BaseDelta+PtrA. This works when both pointers are factorized or
both of them are not factorized. But isConsecutiveAccess() fails if one of the
pointers is factorized but the other one is not.
Here is an example:
PtrA = 4 * (A + B)
PtrB = 4 + 4A + 4B
This patch uses getMinusSCEV() to compute the distance between two pointers.
getMinusSCEV() allows combining the expressions and computing the simplified distance.
Author: FarhanaAleen
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49516
llvm-svn: 337471
Pulled out from D49225, we have a lot of repeated scalar cost calculations, often with arguments that don't look the same but turn out to be.
llvm-svn: 337390
TTI::getMinMaxReductionCost typically can't handle pointer types - until this is changed its better to limit horizontal reduction to integer/float vector types only.
llvm-svn: 337280
We currently only support binary instructions in the alternate opcode shuffles.
This patch is an initial attempt at adding cast instructions as well, this raises several issues that we probably want to address as we continue to generalize the alternate mechanism:
1 - Duplication of cost determination - we should probably add scalar/vector costs helper functions and get BoUpSLP::getEntryCost to use them instead of determining costs directly.
2 - Support alternate instructions with the same opcode (e.g. casts with different src types) - alternate vectorization of calls with different IntrinsicIDs will require this.
3 - Allow alternates to be a different instruction type - mixing binary/cast/call etc.
4 - Allow passthrough of unsupported alternate instructions - related to PR30787/D28907 'copyable' elements.
Reapplied with fix to only accept 2 different casts if they come from the same source type (PR38154).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49135
llvm-svn: 336989
We currently only support binary instructions in the alternate opcode shuffles.
This patch is an initial attempt at adding cast instructions as well, this raises several issues that we probably want to address as we continue to generalize the alternate mechanism:
1 - Duplication of cost determination - we should probably add scalar/vector costs helper functions and get BoUpSLP::getEntryCost to use them instead of determining costs directly.
2 - Support alternate instructions with the same opcode (e.g. casts with different src types) - alternate vectorization of calls with different IntrinsicIDs will require this.
3 - Allow alternates to be a different instruction type - mixing binary/cast/call etc.
4 - Allow passthrough of unsupported alternate instructions - related to PR30787/D28907 'copyable' elements.
Reapplied with fix to only accept 2 different casts if they come from the same source type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49135
llvm-svn: 336812
We currently only support binary instructions in the alternate opcode shuffles.
This patch is an initial attempt at adding cast instructions as well, this raises several issues that we probably want to address as we continue to generalize the alternate mechanism:
1 - Duplication of cost determination - we should probably add scalar/vector costs helper functions and get BoUpSLP::getEntryCost to use them instead of determining costs directly.
2 - Support alternate instructions with the same opcode (e.g. casts with different src types) - alternate vectorization of calls with different IntrinsicIDs will require this.
3 - Allow alternates to be a different instruction type - mixing binary/cast/call etc.
4 - Allow passthrough of unsupported alternate instructions - related to PR30787/D28907 'copyable' elements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49135
llvm-svn: 336804
This patch introduces a VPValue in VPBlockBase to represent the condition
bit that is used as successor selector when a block has multiple successors.
This information wasn't necessary until now, when we are about to introduce
outer loop vectorization support in VPlan code gen.
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, mkuper, hfinkel, mssimpso
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48814
llvm-svn: 336554
This is an early step towards matching Instructions by attributes other than the opcode. This will be necessary for cast/call alternates which share the same opcode but have different types/intrinsicIDs etc. - which we could vectorize as long as we split them using the alternate mechanism.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48945
llvm-svn: 336344
When creating `phi` instructions to resume at the scalar part of the loop,
copy the DebugLoc from the original phi over to the new one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48769
llvm-svn: 336256
Summary: It is common to have the following min/max pattern during the intermediate stages of SLP since we only optimize at the end. This patch tries to catch such patterns and allow more vectorization.
%1 = extractelement <2 x i32> %a, i32 0
%2 = extractelement <2 x i32> %a, i32 1
%cond = icmp sgt i32 %1, %2
%3 = extractelement <2 x i32> %a, i32 0
%4 = extractelement <2 x i32> %a, i32 1
%select = select i1 %cond, i32 %3, i32 %4
Author: FarhanaAleen
Reviewed By: ABataev, RKSimon, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47608
llvm-svn: 336130
This code is only used by alternate opcodes so the InstructionsState has already confirmed that every Value is an Instruction, plus we use cast<Instruction> which will assert on failure.
llvm-svn: 336102
We were always using the opcodes of the first 2 scalars for the costs of the alternate opcode + shuffle. This made sense when we used SK_Alternate and opcodes were guaranteed to be alternating, but this fails for the more general SK_Select case.
This fix exposes an issue demonstrated by the fmul_fdiv_v4f32_const test - the SLM model has v4f32 fdiv costs which are more than twice those of the f32 scalar cost, meaning that the cost model determines that the vectorization is not performant. Unfortunately it completely ignores the fact that the fdiv by a constant will be changed into a fmul by InstCombine for a much lower cost vectorization. But at least we're seeing this now...
llvm-svn: 336095
Since D46637 we are better at handling uniform/non-uniform constant Pow2 detection; this patch tweaks the SLP argument handling to support them.
As SLP works with arrays of values I don't think we can easily use the pattern match helpers here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48214
llvm-svn: 335621
Enable tryToVectorizeList to support InstructionsState alternate opcode patterns at a root (build vector etc.) as well as further down the vectorization tree.
NOTE: This patch reduces some of the debug reporting if there are opcode mismatches - I can try to add it back if it proves a problem. But it could get rather messy trying to provide equivalent verbose debug strings via getSameOpcode etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48488
llvm-svn: 335364
SLP currently only accepts (F)Add/(F)Sub alternate counterpart ops to be merged into an alternate shuffle.
This patch relaxes this to accept any pair of BinaryOperator opcodes instead, assuming the target's cost model accepts the vectorization+shuffle.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48477
llvm-svn: 335349
As described in D48359, this patch pushes InstructionsState down the BoUpSLP call hierarchy instead of the corresponding raw OpValue. This makes it easier to track the alternate opcode etc. and avoids us having to call getAltOpcode which makes it difficult to support more than one alternate opcode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48382
llvm-svn: 335170
This is part of a move towards generalizing the alternate opcode mechanism and not just supporting (F)Add/(F)Sub counterparts.
The patch embeds the AltOpcode in the InstructionsState instead of calling getAltOpcode so often.
I'm hoping to eventually remove all uses of getAltOpcode and handle alternate opcode selection entirely within getSameOpcode, that will require us to use InstructionsState throughout the BoUpSLP call hierarchy (similar to some of the changes in D28907), which I will begin in future patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48359
llvm-svn: 335134
D47985 saw the old SK_Alternate 'alternating' shuffle mask replaced with the SK_Select mask which accepts either input operand for each lane, equivalent to a vector select with a constant condition operand.
This patch updates SLPVectorizer to make full use of this SK_Select shuffle pattern by removing the 'isOdd()' limitation.
The AArch64 regression will be fixed by D48172.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48174
llvm-svn: 335130
The getArithmeticInstrCost calls for shuffle vectors entry costs specify TargetTransformInfo::OperandValueKind arguments, but are just using the method's default values. This seems to be a copy + paste issue and doesn't affect the costs in anyway. The TargetTransformInfo::OperandValueProperties default arguments are already not being used.
Noticed while working on D47985.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48008
llvm-svn: 335045
This patch introduces a VPInstructionToVPRecipe transformation, which
allows us to generate code for a VPInstruction based VPlan re-using the
existing infrastructure.
Reviewers: dcaballe, hsaito, mssimpso, hfinkel, rengolin, mkuper, javed.absar, sguggill
Reviewed By: dcaballe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46827
llvm-svn: 334969
Ensure we keep track of the input vectors in all cases instead of just for SK_Select.
Ideally we'd reuse the shuffle mask pattern matching in TargetTransformInfo::getInstructionThroughput here to easily add support for all TargetTransformInfo::ShuffleKind without mass code duplication, I've added a TODO for now but D48236 should help us here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48023
llvm-svn: 334958
This is a minor fix for LV cost model, where the cost for VF=2 was
computed twice when the vectorization of the loop was forced without
specifying a VF.
Reviewers: xusx595, hsaito, fhahn, mkuper
Reviewed By: hsaito, xusx595
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48048
llvm-svn: 334840
This is part of the work to cleanup use of 'alternate' ops so we can use the more general SK_Select shuffle type.
Only getSameOpcode calls getMainOpcode and much of the logic is repeated in both functions. This will require some reworking of D28907 but that patch has hit trouble and is unlikely to be completed anytime soon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48120
llvm-svn: 334701
As discussed on PR33744, this patch relaxes ShuffleKind::SK_Alternate which requires shuffle masks to only match an alternating pattern from its 2 sources:
e.g. v4f32: <0,5,2,7> or <4,1,6,3>
This seems far too restrictive as most SIMD hardware which will implement it using a general blend/bit-select instruction, so replaces it with SK_Select, permitting elements from either source as long as they are inline:
e.g. v4f32: <0,5,2,7>, <4,1,6,3>, <0,1,6,7>, <4,1,2,3> etc.
This initial patch just updates the name and cost model shuffle mask analysis, later patch reviews will update SLP to better utilise this - it still limits itself to SK_Alternate style patterns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47985
llvm-svn: 334513
Currently SmallSet<PointerTy> inherits from SmallPtrSet<PointerTy>. This
patch replaces such types with SmallPtrSet, because IMO it is slightly
clearer and allows us to get rid of unnecessarily including SmallSet.h
Reviewers: dblaikie, craig.topper
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47836
llvm-svn: 334492
SmallSet forwards to SmallPtrSet for pointer types. SmallPtrSet supports iteration, but a normal SmallSet doesn't. So if it wasn't for the forwarding, this wouldn't work.
These places were found by hiding the begin/end methods in the SmallSet forwarding
llvm-svn: 334343
This patch moves the recipe-creation functions out of
LoopVectorizationPlanner, which should do the high-level
orchestration of the transformations.
Reviewers: dcaballe, rengolin, hsaito, Ayal
Reviewed By: dcaballe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47595
llvm-svn: 334305
This first step separates VPInstruction-based and VPRecipe-based
VPlan creation, which should make it easier to migrate to VPInstruction
based code-gen step by step.
Reviewers: Ayal, rengolin, dcaballe, hsaito, mkuper, mzolotukhin
Reviewed By: dcaballe
Subscribers: bollu, tschuett, rkruppe, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47477
llvm-svn: 334284
There could be more than one PHIs in exit block using same loop recurrence.
Don't assume there is only one and fix each user.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47788
llvm-svn: 334271
Review feedback from r328165. Split out just the one function from the
file that's used by Analysis. (As chandlerc pointed out, the original
change only moved the header and not the implementation anyway - which
was fine for the one function that was used (since it's a
template/inlined in the header) but not in general)
llvm-svn: 333954
Minor replacement. LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_USED was introduced to silence
a warning but using #ifndef NDEBUG makes more sense in this case.
Reviewers: dblaikie, fhahn, hsaito
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47498
llvm-svn: 333476
Summary: It was fully replaced back in 2014, and the implementation was removed 11 months ago by r306797.
Reviewers: hfinkel, chandlerc, whitequark, deadalnix
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47436
llvm-svn: 333378
Summary:
It's internal to the VPlanHCFGBuilder and should not be visible outside of its
translation unit.
Reviewers: dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: rengolin, bollu, tschuett, llvm-commits, rkruppe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47312
llvm-svn: 333187
Now that the LLVM_DEBUG() macro landed on the various sub-projects
the DEBUG macro can be removed.
Also change the new uses of DEBUG to LLVM_DEBUG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46952
llvm-svn: 333091
r332654 tried to fix an unused function warning with
a void cast. This approach worked for clang and gcc
but not for MSVC. This commit replaces the void cast
with the LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_USED approach.
llvm-svn: 332910
r332654 was reverted due to an unused function warning in
release build. This commit includes the same code with the
warning silenced.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44338
llvm-svn: 332860
The introduced problem is:
llvm.src/lib/Transforms/Vectorize/VPlanVerifier.cpp:29:13: error: unused function 'hasDuplicates' [-Werror,-Wunused-function]
static bool hasDuplicates(const SmallVectorImpl<VPBlockBase *> &VPBlockVec) {
^
llvm-svn: 332747
Patch #3 from VPlan Outer Loop Vectorization Patch Series #1
(RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119523.html).
Expected to be NFC for the current inner loop vectorization path. It
introduces the basic algorithm to build the VPlan plain CFG (single-level
CFG, no hierarchical CFG (H-CFG), yet) in the VPlan-native vectorization
path using VPInstructions. It includes:
- VPlanHCFGBuilder: Main class to build the VPlan H-CFG (plain CFG without nested regions, for now).
- VPlanVerifier: Main class with utilities to check the consistency of a H-CFG.
- VPlanBlockUtils: Main class with utilities to manipulate VPBlockBases in VPlan.
Reviewers: rengolin, fhahn, mkuper, mssimpso, a.elovikov, hfinkel, aprantl.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44338
llvm-svn: 332654
The DEBUG() macro is very generic so it might clash with other projects.
The renaming was done as follows:
- git grep -l 'DEBUG' | xargs sed -i 's/\bDEBUG\s\?(/LLVM_DEBUG(/g'
- git diff -U0 master | ../clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py -i -p1 -style LLVM
- Manual change to APInt
- Manually chage DOCS as regex doesn't match it.
In the transition period the DEBUG() macro is still present and aliased
to the LLVM_DEBUG() one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43624
llvm-svn: 332240
This commit adds a wrapper for std::distance() which works with ranges.
As it would be a common case to write `distance(predecessors(BB))`, this
also introduces `pred_size()` and `succ_size()` helpers to make that
easier to write.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46668
llvm-svn: 332057
Summary:
Broadcast code generation emitted instructions in pre-header, while the instruction they are dependent on in the vector loop body.
This resulted in an IL verification error ---- value used before defined.
Reviewers: rengolin, fhahn, hfinkel
Reviewed By: rengolin, fhahn
Subscribers: dcaballe, Ka-Ka, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46302
llvm-svn: 331799
Inspired by r331508, I did a grep and found these.
Mostly just change from dyn_cast to cast. Some cases also showed a dyn_cast result being converted to bool, so those I changed to isa.
llvm-svn: 331577
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
Summary:
This is a fix for PR23997.
The loop vectorizer is not preserving the inbounds property of GEPs that it creates.
This is inhibiting some optimizations. This patch preserves the inbounds property in
the case where a load/store is being fed by an inbounds GEP.
Reviewers: mkuper, javed.absar, hsaito
Reviewed By: hsaito
Subscribers: dcaballe, hsaito, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46191
llvm-svn: 331269
This patch updates some code responsible the skip debug info to use
BasicBlock::instructionsWithoutDebug. I think this makes things
slightly simpler and more direct.
Reviewers: mkuper, rengolin, dcaballe, aprantl, vsk
Reviewed By: rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46254
llvm-svn: 331174
Summary:
This is a follow up to D45420 (included here since it is still under review and this change is dependent on that) and D45072 (committed).
Actual change for this patch is LoopVectorize* and cmakefile. All others are all from D45420.
LoopVectorizationLegality is an analysis and thus really belongs to Analysis tree. It is modular enough and it is reusable enough ---- we can further improve those aspects once uses outside of LV picks up.
Hopefully, this will make it easier for people familiar with vectorization theory, but not necessarily LV itself to contribute, by lowering the volume of code they should deal with. We probably should start adding some code in LV to check its own capability (i.e., vectorization is legal but LV is not ready to handle it) and then bail out.
Reviewers: rengolin, fhahn, hfinkel, mkuper, aemerson, mssimpso, dcaballe, sguggill
Reviewed By: rengolin, dcaballe
Subscribers: egarcia, rogfer01, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45552
llvm-svn: 331139
Patch #2 from VPlan Outer Loop Vectorization Patch Series #1
(RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119523.html).
This patch introduces the basic infrastructure to detect, legality check
and process outer loops annotated with hints for explicit vectorization.
All these changes are protected under the feature flag
-enable-vplan-native-path. This should make this patch NFC for the existing
inner loop vectorizer.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mkuper, rengolin, fhahn, aemerson, mssimpso.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42447
llvm-svn: 330739
The memory location an invariant load is using can never be clobbered by
any store, so it's safe to move the load ahead of the store.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46011
llvm-svn: 330725
When we skip bitcasts while looking for GEP in LoadSoreVectorizer
we should also verify that the type is sized otherwise we assert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45709
llvm-svn: 330221
We use getExtractWithExtendCost to calculate the cost of extractelement and
s|zext together when computing the extract cost after vectorization, but we
calculate the cost of extractelement and s|zext separately when computing the
scalar cost which is larger than it should be.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45469
llvm-svn: 330143
The function getMinimumVF(ElemWidth) will return the minimum VF for
a vector with elements of size ElemWidth bits. This value will only
apply to targets for which TTI::shouldMaximizeVectorBandwidth returns
true. The value of 0 indicates that there is no minimum VF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45271
llvm-svn: 330062
Summary:
Another clean up, following D43208.
Interleaved memory access analysis/optimization has nothing to do with vectorization legality. It doesn't really belong there. On the other hand, cost model certainly has to know about it.
In principle, vectorization should proceed like Legality ==> Optimization ==> CostModel ==> CodeGen, and this change just does that,
by moving the interleaved access analysis/decision out of Legal, and run it just before CostModel object is created.
After this, I can move LoopVectorizationLegality and Hints/Requirements classes into it's own header file, making it shareable within Transform tree. I have the patch already but I don't want to mix with this change. Eventual goal is to move to Analysis tree, but I first need to move RecurrenceDescriptor/InductionDescriptor from Transform/Util/LoopUtil.* to Analysis.
Reviewers: rengolin, hfinkel, mkuper, dcaballe, sguggill, fhahn, aemerson
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45072
llvm-svn: 329645
Summary:
If the load/extractelement/extractvalue instructions are not originally
consecutive, the SLP vectorizer is unable to vectorize them. Patch
allows reordering of such instructions.
Patch does not support reordering of the repeated instruction, this must
be handled in the separate patch.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, hfinkel, mkuper, Ayal, ashahid
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43776
llvm-svn: 329085
The primary issue here is that using NDEBUG alone isn't enough to guard
debug printing -- instead the DEBUG() macro needs to be used so that the
specific pass debug logging check is employed. Without this, every
asserts-enabled build was printing out information when it hit this.
I also fixed another place where we had multiple statements in a DEBUG
macro to use {}s to be a bit cleaner. And I fixed a place that used
errs() rather than dbgs().
llvm-svn: 329082
The primary issue here is that using NDEBUG alone isn't enough to guard
debug printing -- instead the DEBUG() macro needs to be used so that the
specific pass debug logging check is employed. Without this, every
asserts-enabled build was printing out information when it hit this.
I also fixed another place where we had multiple statements in a DEBUG
macro to use {}s to be a bit cleaner. And I fixed a place that used
`errs()` rather than `dbgs()`.
llvm-svn: 329046
We use two approaches for determining the minimum bitwidth.
* Demanded bits
* Value tracking
If demanded bits doesn't result in a narrower type, we then try value tracking.
We need this if we want to root SLP trees with the indices of getelementptr
instructions since all the bits of the indices are demanded.
But there is a missing piece though. We need to be able to distinguish "demanded
and shrinkable" from "demanded and not shrinkable". For example, the bits of %i
in
%i = sext i32 %e1 to i64
%gep = getelementptr inbounds i64, i64* %p, i64 %i
are demanded, but we can shrink %i's type to i32 because it won't change the
result of the getelementptr. On the other hand, in
%tmp15 = sext i32 %tmp14 to i64
%tmp16 = insertvalue { i64, i64 } undef, i64 %tmp15, 0
it doesn't make sense to shrink %tmp15 and we can skip the value tracking.
Ideas are from Matthew Simpson!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44868
llvm-svn: 329035
Summary:
If the load/extractelement/extractvalue instructions are not originally
consecutive, the SLP vectorizer is unable to vectorize them. Patch
allows reordering of such instructions.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, hfinkel, mkuper, Ayal, ashahid
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43776
llvm-svn: 328980
When building the SLP tree, we look for reuse among the vectorized tree
entries. However, each gather sequence is represented by a unique tree entry,
even though the sequence may be identical to another one. This means, for
example, that a gather sequence with two uses will be counted twice when
computing the cost of the tree. We should only count the cost of the definition
of a gather sequence rather than its uses. During code generation, the
redundant gather sequences are emitted, but we optimize them away with CSE. So
it looks like this problem just affects the cost model.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44742
llvm-svn: 328316
Remove #include of Transforms/Scalar.h from Transform/Utils to fix layering.
Transforms depends on Transforms/Utils, not the other way around. So
remove the header and the "createStripGCRelocatesPass" function
declaration (& definition) that is unused and motivated this dependency.
Move Transforms/Utils/Local.h into Analysis because it's used by
Analysis/MemoryBuiltins.cpp.
llvm-svn: 328165
Summary:
It turned out to be error-prone to expect the callers to handle that - better to
leave the decision to this routine and make the required data to be explicitly
passed to the function.
This handles the case that was missed in the r322473 and fixes the assert
mentioned in PR36524.
Reviewers: dorit, mssimpso, Ayal, dcaballe
Reviewed By: dcaballe
Subscribers: Ka-Ka, hiraditya, dneilson, hsaito, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43812
llvm-svn: 327960
Summary:
This variable is largely going unused; aside from reporting number of instructions for in DEBUG builds.
The only use of NumInstructions is in debug output to represent the LoopSize. That value can be can be misleading as it also includes metadata instructions (e.g., DBG_VALUE) which have no real impact. If we do choose to keep this around, we probably should guard it by a DEBUG macro, as it's not used in production builds.
Reviewers: majnemer, congh, rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44495
llvm-svn: 327589
There are six separate instances of getPointerOperand() utility.
LoopVectorize.cpp has one of them,
and I don't want to create a 7th one while I'm trying to move
LoopVectorizationLegality into a separate file
(eventual objective is to move it to Analysis tree).
See http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-February/120999.html
for llvm-dev discussions
Closes D43323.
Patch by Hideki Saito <hideki.saito@intel.com>.
llvm-svn: 327173
Fixes PR36311.
See more detailed analysis in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36311.
isUniform() information is recomputed after LV started transforming the
underlying IR and that triggered an assert in SCEV.
From vectorizer's architectural perspective, such information, while
still useful in vector code gen, should not be recomputed after the
start of transforming the LLVM IR. Instead, we should collect and cache
such information during the analysis phase of LV and use the cached info
during code gen.
From the symptom perspective, this assert as it stands right now is not
very useful. Legality already rejected loops that would trigger the
assert. As such, commenting out the assert is NFC from vectorizer's
functionality perspective. On top of that, just above the assertion, we
check for unit-strided load/store or
gather scatter. Addresses can't be uniform below that check.
From vectorization theory point of view, we don't have to reject all
cases of stores to uniform addresses. Eventually, we should support
safe/profitable cases.
This patch resolves the issue by removing the useless assertion that is
invoking LAA's isUniform() that requires up-to-date DomTree ---- once
vector code gen starts modifying CFG, we don't have an up-to-date
DomTree.
Patch by Hideki Saito <hideki.saito@intel.com>.
llvm-svn: 327109
Summary: GCN ISA supports instructions that can read 16 consecutive dwords from memory through the scalar data cache;
loadstoreVectorizer should take advantage of the wider vector length and pack 16/8 elements of dwords/quadwords.
Author: FarhanaAleen
Reviewed By: rampitec
Subscribers: llvm-commits, AMDGPU
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44179
llvm-svn: 326910
The LoadStoreVectorizer thought that <1 x T> and T were the same types
when merging stores, leading to a crash later.
Patch by Erik Hogeman.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44014
llvm-svn: 326884
This patch adds support for detecting outer loops with irreducible control
flow in LV. Current detection uses SCCs and only works for innermost loops.
This patch adds a utility function that works on any CFG, given its RPO
traversal and its LoopInfoBase. This function is a generalization
of isIrreducibleCFG from lib/CodeGen/ShrinkWrap.cpp. The code in
lib/CodeGen/ShrinkWrap.cpp is also updated to use the new generic utility
function.
Patch by Diego Caballero <diego.caballero@intel.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40874
llvm-svn: 326568
Removes verifyDomTree, using assert(verify()) everywhere instead, and
changes verify a little to always run IsSameAsFreshTree first in order
to print good output when we find errors. Also adds verifyAnalysis for
PostDomTrees, which will allow checking of PostDomTrees it the same way
we check DomTrees and MachineDomTrees.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41298
llvm-svn: 326315
All SIMD architectures can emulate masked load/store/gather/scatter
through element-wise condition check, scalar load/store, and
insert/extract. Therefore, bailing out of vectorization as legality
failure, when they return false, is incorrect. We should proceed to cost
model and determine profitability.
This patch is to address the vectorizer's architectural limitation
described above. As such, I tried to keep the cost model and
vectorize/don't-vectorize behavior nearly unchanged. Cost model tuning
should be done separately.
Please see
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120164.html for
RFC and the discussions.
Closes D43208.
Patch by: Hideki Saito <hideki.saito@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 326079
Summary:
Reversed loads are handled as gathering. But we can just reshuffle
these values. Patch adds support for vectorization of reversed loads.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43022
llvm-svn: 325134
Making a width of GEP Index, which is used for address calculation, to be one of the pointer properties in the Data Layout.
p[address space]:size:memory_size:alignment:pref_alignment:index_size_in_bits.
The index size parameter is optional, if not specified, it is equal to the pointer size.
Till now, the InstCombiner normalized GEPs and extended the Index operand to the pointer width.
It works fine if you can convert pointer to integer for address calculation and all registered targets do this.
But some ISAs have very restricted instruction set for the pointer calculation. During discussions were desided to retrieve information for GEP index from the Data Layout.
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120416.html
I added an interface to the Data Layout and I changed the InstCombiner and some other passes to take the Index width into account.
This change does not affect any in-tree target. I added tests to cover data layouts with explicitly specified index size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42123
llvm-svn: 325102
Summary:
For better vectorization result we should take into consideration the
cost of the user insertelement instructions when we try to
vectorize sequences that build the whole vector. I.e. if we have the
following scalar code:
```
<Scalar code>
insertelement <ScalarCode>, ...
```
we should consider the cost of the last `insertelement ` instructions as
the cost of the scalar code.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, hfinkel, mkuper
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42657
llvm-svn: 324893
Summary:
If -pass-remarks=loop-vectorize, atomic ops will be seen by
analyzeInterleaving(), even though canVectorizeMemory() == false. This
is because we are requesting extra analysis instead of bailing out.
In such a case, we end up with a Group in both Load- and StoreGroups,
and then we'll try to access freed memory when traversing LoadGroups after having had released the Group when iterating over StoreGroups.
The fix is to include mayWriteToMemory() when validating that two
instructions are the same kind of memory operation.
Reviewers: mssimpso, davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: hsaito, fhahn, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43064
llvm-svn: 324786
Summary:
Loops with inequality comparers, such as:
// unsigned bound
for (unsigned i = 1; i < bound; ++i) {...}
have getSmallConstantMaxTripCount report a large maximum static
trip count - in this case, 0xffff fffe. However, profiling info
may show that the trip count is much smaller, and thus
counter-recommend vectorization.
This change:
- flips loop-vectorize-with-block-frequency on by default.
- validates profiled loop frequency data supports vectorization,
when static info appears to not counter-recommend it. Absence
of profile data means we rely on static data, just as we've
done so far.
Reviewers: twoh, mkuper, davidxl, tejohnson, Ayal
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: bkramer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42946
llvm-svn: 324543
The type-shrinking logic in reduction detection, although narrow in scope, is
also rather ad-hoc, which has led to bugs (e.g., PR35734). This patch modifies
the approach to rely on the demanded bits and value tracking analyses, if
available. We currently perform type-shrinking separately for reductions and
other instructions in the loop. Long-term, we should probably think about
computing minimal bit widths in a more complete way for the loops we want to
vectorize.
PR35734
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42309
llvm-svn: 324195
Summary:
If the same value is going to be vectorized several times in the same
tree entry, this entry is considered to be a gather entry and cost of
this gather is counter as cost of InsertElementInstrs for each gathered
value. But we can consider these elements as ShuffleInstr with
SK_PermuteSingle shuffle kind.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38697
llvm-svn: 323662
Summary:
If the same value is going to be vectorized several times in the same
tree entry, this entry is considered to be a gather entry and cost of
this gather is counter as cost of InsertElementInstrs for each gathered
value. But we can consider these elements as ShuffleInstr with
SK_PermuteSingle shuffle kind.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38697
llvm-svn: 323530
Summary:
If the same value is going to be vectorized several times in the same
tree entry, this entry is considered to be a gather entry and cost of
this gather is counter as cost of InsertElementInstrs for each gathered
value. But we can consider these elements as ShuffleInstr with
SK_PermuteSingle shuffle kind.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38697
llvm-svn: 323441
Summary:
If the same value is going to be vectorized several times in the same
tree entry, this entry is considered to be a gather entry and cost of
this gather is counter as cost of InsertElementInstrs for each gathered
value. But we can consider these elements as ShuffleInstr with
SK_PermuteSingle shuffle kind.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38697
llvm-svn: 323430
Summary:
If the same value is going to be vectorized several times in the same
tree entry, this entry is considered to be a gather entry and cost of
this gather is counter as cost of InsertElementInstrs for each gathered
value. But we can consider these elements as ShuffleInstr with
SK_PermuteSingle shuffle kind.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38697
llvm-svn: 323348
Summary:
If the same value is going to be vectorized several times in the same
tree entry, this entry is considered to be a gather entry and cost of
this gather is counter as cost of InsertElementInstrs for each gathered
value. But we can consider these elements as ShuffleInstr with
SK_PermuteSingle shuffle kind.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38697
llvm-svn: 323246
Summary:
If the vectorized tree has truncate to minimum required bit width and
the vector type of the cast operation after the truncation is the same
as the vector type of the cast operands, count cost of the vector cast
operation as 0, because this cast will be later removed.
Also, if the vectorization tree root operations are integer cast operations, do not consider them as candidates for truncation. It will just create extra number of the same vector/scalar operations, which will be removed by instcombiner.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, mkuper, hfinkel, mssimpso
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41948
llvm-svn: 322946
Summary: Sometimes vectorization of insertelement instructions with extractelement operands may produce an extra shuffle operation, if these operands are in the reverse order. Patch tries to improve this situation by the reordering of the operands to remove this extra shuffle operation.
Reviewers: mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, spatel
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33954
llvm-svn: 322579
Summary:
This method is supposed to be called for IVs that have casts in their use-def
chains that are completely ignored after vectorization under PSE. However, for
truncates of such IVs the same InductionDescriptor is used during
creation/widening of both original IV based on PHINode and new IV based on
TruncInst.
This leads to unintended second call to recordVectorLoopValueForInductionCast
with a VectorLoopVal set to the newly created IV for a trunc and causes an
assert due to attempt to store new information for already existing entry in the
map. This is wrong and should not be done.
Fixes PR35773.
Reviewers: dorit, Ayal, mssimpso
Reviewed By: dorit
Subscribers: RKSimon, dim, dcaballe, hsaito, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41913
llvm-svn: 322473
Summary:
Fixes the bug with incorrect handling of InsertValue|InsertElement
instrucions in SLP vectorizer. Currently, we may use incorrect
ExtractElement instructions as the operands of the original
InsertValue|InsertElement instructions.
Reviewers: mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41767
llvm-svn: 321994
Summary:
If the vectorized value is marked as extra reduction argument, its users
are not considered as external users. Patch fixes this.
Reviewers: mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41786
llvm-svn: 321993
The approach was never discussed, I wasn't able to reproduce this
non-determinism, and the original author went AWOL.
After a discussion on the ML, Philip suggested to revert this.
llvm-svn: 321974
Another small step forward to move VPlan stuff outside of LoopVectorize.cpp.
VPlanBuilder.h is renamed to LoopVectorizationPlanner.h
LoopVectorizationPlanner class is moved from LoopVectorize.cpp to
LoopVectorizationPlanner.h LoopVectorizationCostModel::VectorizationFactor
class is moved to LoopVectorizationPlanner.h (used by the planner class) ---
this needs further streamlining work in later patches and thus all I did was
take it out of the CostModel class and moved to the header file. The callback
function had to stay inside LoopVectorize.cpp since it calls an
InnerLoopVectorizer member function declared in it. Next Steps: Make
InnerLoopVectorizer, LoopVectorizationCostModel, and other classes more modular
and more aligned with VPlan direction, in small increments.
Previous step was: r320900 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D41045)
Patch by Hideki Saito, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41420
llvm-svn: 321962
canVectorize is only checking if the loop has a normalized pre-header if DoExtraAnalysis is true.
This doesn't make sense to me because reporting analysis information shouldn't alter legality
checks. This is probably the result of a last minute minor change before committing (?).
Patch by Diego Caballero.
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40973
llvm-svn: 321172
Changes to the original scalar loop during LV code gen cause the return value
of Legal->isConsecutivePtr() to be inconsistent with the return value during
legal/cost phases (further analysis and information of the bug is in D39346).
This patch is an alternative fix to PR34965 following the CM_Widen approach
proposed by Ayal and Gil in D39346. It extends InstWidening enum with
CM_Widen_Reverse to properly record the widening decision for consecutive
reverse memory accesses and, consequently, get rid of the
Legal->isConsetuviePtr() call in LV code gen. I think this is a simpler/cleaner
solution to PR34965 than the one in D39346.
Fixes PR34965.
Patch by Diego Caballero, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40742
llvm-svn: 320913
This is a small step forward to move VPlan stuff to where it should belong (i.e., VPlan.*):
1. VP*Recipe classes in LoopVectorize.cpp are moved to VPlan.h.
2. Many of VP*Recipe::print() and execute() definitions are still left in
LoopVectorize.cpp since they refer to things declared in LoopVectorize.cpp. To
be moved to VPlan.cpp at a later time.
3. InterleaveGroup class is moved from anonymous namespace to llvm namespace.
Referencing it in anonymous namespace from VPlan.h ended up in warning.
Patch by Hideki Saito, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41045
llvm-svn: 320900
In SLPVectorizer, the vector build instructions (insertvalue for aggregate type) is passed to BoUpSLP.buildTree, it is treated as UserIgnoreList, so later in cost estimation, the cost of these instructions are not counted.
For aggregate value, later usage are more likely to be done in scalar registers, either used as individual scalars or used as a whole for function call or return value. Ignore scalar extraction instructions may cause too aggressive vectorization for aggregate values, and slow down performance. So for vectorization of aggregate value, the scalar extraction instructions are required in cost estimation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41139
llvm-svn: 320736
D30041 extended SCEVPredicateRewriter to improve handling of Phi nodes whose
update chain involves casts; PSCEV can now build an AddRecurrence for some
forms of such phi nodes, under the proper runtime overflow test. This means
that we can identify such phi nodes as an induction, and the loop-vectorizer
can now vectorize such inductions, however inefficiently. The vectorizer
doesn't know that it can ignore the casts, and so it vectorizes them.
This patch records the casts in the InductionDescriptor, so that they could
be marked to be ignored for cost calculation (we use VecValuesToIgnore for
that) and ignored for vectorization/widening/scalarization (i.e. treated as
TriviallyDead).
In addition to marking all these casts to be ignored, we also need to make
sure that each cast is mapped to the right vector value in the vector loop body
(be it a widened, vectorized, or scalarized induction). So whenever an
induction phi is mapped to a vector value (during vectorization/widening/
scalarization), we also map the respective cast instruction (if exists) to that
vector value. (If the phi-update sequence of an induction involves more than one
cast, then the above mapping to vector value is relevant only for the last cast
of the sequence as we allow only the "last cast" to be used outside the
induction update chain itself).
This is the last step in addressing PR30654.
llvm-svn: 320672
Summary:
This patch tries to vectorize loads of consecutive memory accesses, accessed
in non-consecutive or jumbled way. An earlier attempt was made with patch D26905
which was reverted back due to some basic issue with representing the 'use mask' of
jumbled accesses.
This patch fixes the mask representation by recording the 'use mask' in the usertree entry.
Change-Id: I9fe7f5045f065d84c126fa307ef6ebe0787296df
Reviewers: mkuper, loladiro, Ayal, zvi, danielcdh
Reviewed By: Ayal
Subscribers: mgrang, dcaballe, hans, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36130
llvm-svn: 320548
VecValuesToIgnore holds values that will not appear in the vectorized loop.
We should therefore ignore their cost when VF > 1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40883
llvm-svn: 320463
As a new access is generated spanning across multiple fields, we need to
propagate alias info from all the fields to form the most generic alias info.
rdar://35602528
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40617
llvm-svn: 319979
It causes builds to fail with "Instruction does not dominate all uses" (PR35497).
> Patch tries to improve vectorization of the following code:
>
> void add1(int * __restrict dst, const int * __restrict src) {
> *dst++ = *src++;
> *dst++ = *src++ + 1;
> *dst++ = *src++ + 2;
> *dst++ = *src++ + 3;
> }
> Allows to vectorize even if the very first operation is not a binary add, but just a load.
>
> Fixed issues related to previous commit.
>
> Reviewers: spatel, mzolotukhin, mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, filcab, ABataev
>
> Reviewed By: ABataev, RKSimon
>
> Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28907
llvm-svn: 319550
Patch tries to improve vectorization of the following code:
void add1(int * __restrict dst, const int * __restrict src) {
*dst++ = *src++;
*dst++ = *src++ + 1;
*dst++ = *src++ + 2;
*dst++ = *src++ + 3;
}
Allows to vectorize even if the very first operation is not a binary add, but just a load.
Fixed issues related to previous commit.
Reviewers: spatel, mzolotukhin, mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, filcab, ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28907
llvm-svn: 319531
Summary:
First step in adding MemorySSA as dependency for loop pass manager.
Adding the dependency under a flag.
New pass manager: MSSA pointer in LoopStandardAnalysisResults can be null.
Legacy and new pass manager: Use cl::opt EnableMSSALoopDependency. Disabled by default.
Reviewers: sanjoy, davide, gberry
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40274
llvm-svn: 318772
properlyDominates() shouldn't be used as sort key. It causes different output between stdlibc++ and libc++.
Instead, I introduced RPOT. In most cases, it works for CSE.
llvm-svn: 318743
This patch adds a new abstraction layer to VPlan and leverages it to model the planned
instructions that manipulate masks (AND, OR, NOT), introduced during predication.
The new VPValue and VPUser classes model how data flows into, through and out
of a VPlan, forming the vertices of a planned Def-Use graph. The new
VPInstruction class is a generic single-instruction Recipe that models a
planned instruction along with its opcode, operands and users. See
VectorizationPlan.rst for more details.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38676
llvm-svn: 318645
Summary:
Added more remarks to SLP pass, in particular "missed" optimization remarks.
Also proposed several tests for new functionality.
Patch by Vladimir Miloserdov!
For reference you may look at: https://reviews.llvm.org/rL302811
Reviewers: anemet, fhahn
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: javed.absar, lattner, petecoup, yakush, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38367
llvm-svn: 318307
It crashes building sqlite; see reply on the llvm-commits thread.
> [SLPVectorizer] Failure to beneficially vectorize 'copyable' elements in integer binary ops.
>
> Patch tries to improve vectorization of the following code:
>
> void add1(int * __restrict dst, const int * __restrict src) {
> *dst++ = *src++;
> *dst++ = *src++ + 1;
> *dst++ = *src++ + 2;
> *dst++ = *src++ + 3;
> }
> Allows to vectorize even if the very first operation is not a binary add, but just a load.
>
> Fixed issues related to previous commit.
>
> Reviewers: spatel, mzolotukhin, mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, filcab, ABataev
>
> Reviewed By: ABataev, RKSimon
>
> Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28907
llvm-svn: 318239
Patch tries to improve vectorization of the following code:
void add1(int * __restrict dst, const int * __restrict src) {
*dst++ = *src++;
*dst++ = *src++ + 1;
*dst++ = *src++ + 2;
*dst++ = *src++ + 3;
}
Allows to vectorize even if the very first operation is not a binary add, but just a load.
Fixed issues related to previous commit.
Reviewers: spatel, mzolotukhin, mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, filcab, ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28907
llvm-svn: 318193
This patch is part of D38676.
The patch introduces two new Recipes to handle instructions whose vectorization
involves masking. These Recipes take VPlan-level masks in D38676, but still rely
on ILV's existing createEdgeMask(), createBlockInMask() in this patch.
VPBlendRecipe handles intra-loop phi nodes, which are vectorized as a sequence
of SELECTs. Its execute() code is refactored out of ILV::widenPHIInstruction(),
which now handles only loop-header phi nodes.
VPWidenMemoryInstructionRecipe handles load/store which are to be widened
(but are not part of an Interleave Group). In this patch it simply calls
ILV::vectorizeMemoryInstruction on execute().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39068
llvm-svn: 318149
Summary:
The analysis of the store sequence goes in straight order - from the
first store to the last. Bu the best opportunity for vectorization will
happen if we're going to use reverse order - from last store to the
first. It may be best because usually users have some initialization
part + further processing and this first initialization may confuse
SLP vectorizer.
Reviewers: RKSimon, hfinkel, mkuper, spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39606
llvm-svn: 317821
This patch implements Chandler's idea [0] for supporting languages that
require support for infinite loops with side effects, such as Rust, providing
part of a solution to bug 965 [1].
Specifically, it adds an `llvm.sideeffect()` intrinsic, which has no actual
effect, but which appears to optimization passes to have obscure side effects,
such that they don't optimize away loops containing it. It also teaches
several optimization passes to ignore this intrinsic, so that it doesn't
significantly impact optimization in most cases.
As discussed on llvm-dev [2], this patch is the first of two major parts.
The second part, to change LLVM's semantics to have defined behavior
on infinite loops by default, with a function attribute for opting into
potential-undefined-behavior, will be implemented and posted for review in
a separate patch.
[0] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-July/088103.html
[1] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=965
[2] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-October/118632.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38336
llvm-svn: 317729
Patch tries to improve vectorization of the following code:
void add1(int * __restrict dst, const int * __restrict src) {
*dst++ = *src++;
*dst++ = *src++ + 1;
*dst++ = *src++ + 2;
*dst++ = *src++ + 3;
}
Allows to vectorize even if the very first operation is not a binary add, but just a load.
Fixed PR34619 and other issues related to previous commit.
Reviewers: spatel, mzolotukhin, mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, filcab, ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28907
llvm-svn: 317618
As discussed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-November/107104.html
and again more recently:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-October/118118.html
...this is a step in cleaning up our fast-math-flags implementation in IR to better match
the capabilities of both clang's user-visible flags and the backend's flags for SDNode.
As proposed in the above threads, we're replacing the 'UnsafeAlgebra' bit (which had the
'umbrella' meaning that all flags are set) with a new bit that only applies to algebraic
reassociation - 'AllowReassoc'.
We're also adding a bit to allow approximations for library functions called 'ApproxFunc'
(this was initially proposed as 'libm' or similar).
...and we're out of bits. 7 bits ought to be enough for anyone, right? :) FWIW, I did
look at getting this out of SubclassOptionalData via SubclassData (spacious 16-bits),
but that's apparently already used for other purposes. Also, I don't think we can just
add a field to FPMathOperator because Operator is not intended to be instantiated.
We'll defer movement of FMF to another day.
We keep the 'fast' keyword. I thought about removing that, but seeing IR like this:
%f.fast = fadd reassoc nnan ninf nsz arcp contract afn float %op1, %op2
...made me think we want to keep the shortcut synonym.
Finally, this change is binary incompatible with existing IR as seen in the
compatibility tests. This statement:
"Newer releases can ignore features from older releases, but they cannot miscompile
them. For example, if nsw is ever replaced with something else, dropping it would be
a valid way to upgrade the IR."
( http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html#ir-backwards-compatibility )
...provides the flexibility we want to make this change without requiring a new IR
version. Ie, we're not loosening the FP strictness of existing IR. At worst, we will
fail to optimize some previously 'fast' code because it's no longer recognized as
'fast'. This should get fixed as we audit/squash all of the uses of 'isFast()'.
Note: an inter-dependent clang commit to use the new API name should closely follow
commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39304
llvm-svn: 317488
Summary: There are certain requirements for debug location of debug intrinsics, e.g. the scope of the DILocalVariable should be the same as the scope of its debug location. As a result, we should not add discriminator encoding for debug intrinsics.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, bjope, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39343
llvm-svn: 316703
Summary:
We no longer add vectors of pointers as candidates for
load/store vectorization. It does not seem to work anyway,
but without this patch we can end up in asserts when trying
to create casts between an integer type and the pointer of
vectors type.
The test case I've added used to assert like this when trying to
cast between i64 and <2 x i16*>:
opt: ../lib/IR/Instructions.cpp:2565: Assertion `castIsValid(op, S, Ty) && "Invalid cast!"' failed.
#0 PrintStackTraceSignalHandler(void*)
#1 SignalHandler(int)
#2 __restore_rt
#3 __GI_raise
#4 __GI_abort
#5 __GI___assert_fail
#6 llvm::CastInst::Create(llvm::Instruction::CastOps, llvm::Value*, llvm::Type*, llvm::Twine const&, llvm::Instruction*)
#7 llvm::IRBuilder<llvm::ConstantFolder, llvm::IRBuilderDefaultInserter>::CreateBitOrPointerCast(llvm::Value*, llvm::Type*, llvm::Twine const&)
#8 Vectorizer::vectorizeStoreChain(llvm::ArrayRef<llvm::Instruction*>, llvm::SmallPtrSet<llvm::Instruction*, 16u>*)
Reviewers: arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: nhaehnle, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39296
llvm-svn: 316665
Summary:
The code comments indicate that no effort has been spent on
handling load/stores when the size isn't a multiple of the
byte size correctly. However, the code only avoided types
smaller than 8 bits. So for example a load of an i28 could
still be considered as a candidate for vectorization.
This patch adjusts the code to behave according to the code
comment.
The test case used to hit the following assert when
trying to use "cast" an i32 to i28 using CreateBitOrPointerCast:
opt: ../lib/IR/Instructions.cpp:2565: Assertion `castIsValid(op, S, Ty) && "Invalid cast!"' failed.
#0 PrintStackTraceSignalHandler(void*)
#1 SignalHandler(int)
#2 __restore_rt
#3 __GI_raise
#4 __GI_abort
#5 __GI___assert_fail
#6 llvm::CastInst::Create(llvm::Instruction::CastOps, llvm::Value*, llvm::Type*, llvm::Twine const&, llvm::Instruction*)
#7 llvm::IRBuilder<llvm::ConstantFolder, llvm::IRBuilderDefaultInserter>::CreateBitOrPointerCast(llvm::Value*, llvm::Type*, llvm::Twine const&)
#8 (anonymous namespace)::Vectorizer::vectorizeLoadChain(llvm::ArrayRef<llvm::Instruction*>, llvm::SmallPtrSet<llvm::Instruction*, 16u>*)
Reviewers: arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39295
llvm-svn: 316663
parameterized emit() calls
Summary: This is not functional change to adopt new emit() API added in r313691.
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38285
llvm-svn: 315476
When ignoring a load that participates in an interleaved group, make sure to
move a cast that needs to sink after it.
Testcase derived from reproducer of PR34743.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38338
llvm-svn: 314986
Instead of trying to keep LastWidenRecipe updated after creating each recipe,
have tryToWiden() retrieve the last recipe of the current VPBasicBlock and check
if it's a VPWidenRecipe when attempting to extend its range. This ensures that
such extensions, optimized to maintain the original instruction order, do so
only when the instructions are to maintain their relative order. The latter does
not always hold, e.g., when a cast needs to sink to unravel first order
recurrence (r306884).
Testcase derived from reproducer of PR34711.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38339
llvm-svn: 314981
All the buildbots are red, e.g.
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-aarch64-lld/builds/2436/
> Summary:
> This patch tries to vectorize loads of consecutive memory accesses, accessed
> in non-consecutive or jumbled way. An earlier attempt was made with patch D26905
> which was reverted back due to some basic issue with representing the 'use mask' of
> jumbled accesses.
>
> This patch fixes the mask representation by recording the 'use mask' in the usertree entry.
>
> Change-Id: I9fe7f5045f065d84c126fa307ef6ebe0787296df
>
> Reviewers: mkuper, loladiro, Ayal, zvi, danielcdh
>
> Reviewed By: Ayal
>
> Subscribers: hans, mzolotukhin
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36130
llvm-svn: 314824
Summary:
This patch tries to vectorize loads of consecutive memory accesses, accessed
in non-consecutive or jumbled way. An earlier attempt was made with patch D26905
which was reverted back due to some basic issue with representing the 'use mask' of
jumbled accesses.
This patch fixes the mask representation by recording the 'use mask' in the usertree entry.
Change-Id: I9fe7f5045f065d84c126fa307ef6ebe0787296df
Reviewers: mkuper, loladiro, Ayal, zvi, danielcdh
Reviewed By: Ayal
Subscribers: hans, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36130
llvm-svn: 314806
When type shrinking reductions, we should insert the truncations and extends at
the end of the loop latch block. Previously, these instructions were inserted
at the end of the loop header block. The difference is only a problem for loops
with predicated instructions (e.g., conditional stores and instructions that
may divide by zero). For these instructions, we create new basic blocks inside
the vectorized loop, which cause the loop header and latch to no longer be the
same block. This should fix PR34687.
Reference: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34687
llvm-svn: 314542
Summary:
And now that we no longer have to explicitly free() the Loop instances, we can
(with more ease) use the destructor of LoopBase to do what LoopBase::clear() was
doing.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38201
llvm-svn: 314375
reductions.
If both operands of the newly created SelectInst are Undefs the
resulting operation is also Undef, not SelectInst. It may cause crashes
when trying to propagate IR flags because function expects exactly
SelectInst instruction, nothing else.
llvm-svn: 314323
This broke the buildbots, e.g.
http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/test-llvm-i686-linux-RA/builds/391
> Summary:
> This patch tries to vectorize loads of consecutive memory accesses, accessed
> in non-consecutive or jumbled way. An earlier attempt was made with patch D26905
> which was reverted back due to some basic issue with representing the 'use mask'
> jumbled accesses.
>
> This patch fixes the mask representation by recording the 'use mask' in the usertree entry.
>
> Change-Id: I9fe7f5045f065d84c126fa307ef6ebe0787296df
>
> Subscribers: mzolotukhin
>
> Reviewed By: ayal
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36130
>
> Review comments updated accordingly
>
> Change-Id: I22ab0a8a9bac9d49d74baa81a08e1e486f5e75f0
>
> Added a TODO for sortLoadAccesses API
>
> Change-Id: I3c679bf1865422d1b45e17ea28f1992bca660b58
>
> Modified the TODO for sortLoadAccesses API
>
> Change-Id: Ie64a66cb5f9e2a7610438abb0e750c6e090f9565
>
> Review comment update for using OpdNum to insert the mask in respective location
>
> Change-Id: I016d0c1b29874e979efc0205bbf078991f92edce
>
> Fixes '-Wsign-compare warning' in LoopAccessAnalysis.cpp and code rebase
>
> Change-Id: I64b2ea5e68c1d7b6a028f5ef8251c5a97333f89b
llvm-svn: 313781
Summary:
This patch tries to vectorize loads of consecutive memory accesses, accessed
in non-consecutive or jumbled way. An earlier attempt was made with patch D26905
which was reverted back due to some basic issue with representing the 'use mask'
jumbled accesses.
This patch fixes the mask representation by recording the 'use mask' in the usertree entry.
Change-Id: I9fe7f5045f065d84c126fa307ef6ebe0787296df
Subscribers: mzolotukhin
Reviewed By: ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36130
Review comments updated accordingly
Change-Id: I22ab0a8a9bac9d49d74baa81a08e1e486f5e75f0
Added a TODO for sortLoadAccesses API
Change-Id: I3c679bf1865422d1b45e17ea28f1992bca660b58
Modified the TODO for sortLoadAccesses API
Change-Id: Ie64a66cb5f9e2a7610438abb0e750c6e090f9565
Review comment update for using OpdNum to insert the mask in respective location
Change-Id: I016d0c1b29874e979efc0205bbf078991f92edce
Fixes '-Wsign-compare warning' in LoopAccessAnalysis.cpp and code rebase
Change-Id: I64b2ea5e68c1d7b6a028f5ef8251c5a97333f89b
llvm-svn: 313771
Summary:
This patch tries to vectorize loads of consecutive memory accesses, accessed
in non-consecutive or jumbled way. An earlier attempt was made with patch D26905
which was reverted back due to some basic issue with representing the 'use mask' of
jumbled accesses.
This patch fixes the mask representation by recording the 'use mask' in the usertree entry.
Change-Id: I9fe7f5045f065d84c126fa307ef6ebe0787296df
Reviewers: mkuper, loladiro, Ayal, zvi, danielcdh
Reviewed By: Ayal
Subscribers: mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36130
Commit after rebase for patch D36130
Change-Id: I8add1c265455669ef288d880f870a9522c8c08ab
llvm-svn: 313736
In the lambda we are now returning the remark by value so we need to preserve
its type in the insertion operator. This requires making the insertion
operator generic.
I've also converted a few cases to use the new API. It seems to work pretty
well. See the LoopUnroller for a slightly more interesting case.
llvm-svn: 313691
CostModel.
The original patch added support for horizontal min/max reductions to
the SLP vectorizer.
This patch causes LLVM to miscompile fairly simple signed min
reductions. I have attached a test progrom to http://llvm.org/PR34635
that shows the behavior change after this patch. We found this in a test
for the open source Eigen library, but also in other code.
Unfortunately, the revert is moderately challenging. It required
reverting:
r313042: [SLP] Test with multiple uses of conditional op and wrong parent.
r312853: [SLP] Fix buildbots, NFC.
r312793: [SLP] Fix the warning about paths not returning the value, NFC.
r312791: [SLP] Support for horizontal min/max reduction.
And even then, I had to completely skip reverting the changes to TTI and
CostModel because r312832 rewrote so much of this code. Plus, the cost
modeling changes aren implicated in the miscompile, so they should be
fine and will just not be used until this gets re-introduced.
llvm-svn: 313409
It enables OptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis and MachineOptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis to return true not only for -fsave-optimization-record but when specific remarks are requested with
command line options.
The diagnostic handler used to be callback now this patch adds a class
DiagnosticHandler. It has virtual method to provide custom diagnostic handler
and methods to control which particular remarks are enabled.
However LLVM-C API users can still provide callback function for diagnostic handler.
llvm-svn: 313390
It enables OptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis and MachineOptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis to return true not only for -fsave-optimization-record but when specific remarks are requested with
command line options.
The diagnostic handler used to be callback now this patch adds a class
DiagnosticHandler. It has virtual method to provide custom diagnostic handler
and methods to control which particular remarks are enabled.
However LLVM-C API users can still provide callback function for diagnostic handler.
llvm-svn: 313382
Patch tries to improve vectorization of the following code:
void add1(int * __restrict dst, const int * __restrict src) {
*dst++ = *src++;
*dst++ = *src++ + 1;
*dst++ = *src++ + 2;
*dst++ = *src++ + 3;
}
Allows to vectorize even if the very first operation is not a binary add, but just a load.
Reviewers: spatel, mzolotukhin, mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon, filcab, ABataev, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28907
llvm-svn: 313348
This patch fixes pr34283, which exposed that the computation of
maximum legal width for vectorization was wrong, because it relied
on MaxInterleaveFactor to obtain the maximum stride used in the loop,
however not all strided accesses in the loop have an interleave-group
associated with them.
Instead of recording the maximum stride in the loop, which can be over
conservative (e.g. if the access with the maximum stride is not involved
in the dependence limitation), this patch tracks the actual maximum legal
width imposed by accesses that are involved in dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37507
llvm-svn: 313237
These are changes to reduce redundant computations when calculating a
feasible vectorization factor:
1. early return when target has no vector registers
2. don't compute register usage for the default VF.
Suggested during review for D37702.
llvm-svn: 313176
When converting a PHI into a series of 'select' instructions to combine the
incoming values together according their edge masks, initialize the first
value to the incoming value In0 of the first predecessor, instead of
generating a redundant assignment 'select(Cond[0], In0, In0)'. The latter
fails when the Cond[0] mask is null, representing a full mask, which can
happen only when there's a single incoming value.
No functional changes intended nor expected other than surviving null Cond[0]'s.
This fix follows D35725, which introduced using null to represent full masks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37619
llvm-svn: 313119
Summary:
When the MaxVectorSize > ConstantTripCount, we should just clamp the
vectorization factor to be the ConstantTripCount.
This vectorizes loops where the TinyTripCountThreshold >= TripCount < MaxVF.
Earlier we were finding the maximum vector width, which could be greater than
the trip count itself. The Loop vectorizer does all the work for generating a
vectorizable loop, but in the end we would always choose the scalar loop (since
the VF > trip count). This allows us to choose the VF keeping in mind the trip
count if available.
This is a fix on top of rL312472.
Reviewers: Ayal, zvi, hfinkel, dneilson
Reviewed by: Ayal
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37702
llvm-svn: 313046
SLP vectorizer supports horizontal reductions for Add/FAdd binary
operations. Patch adds support for horizontal min/max reductions.
Function getReductionCost() is split to getArithmeticReductionCost() for
binary operation reductions and getMinMaxReductionCost() for min/max
reductions.
Patch fixes PR26956.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27846
llvm-svn: 312791
Summary:
Improve how MaxVF is computed while taking into account that MaxVF should not be larger than the loop's trip count.
Other than saving on compile-time by pruning the possible MaxVF candidates, this patch fixes pr34438 which exposed the following flow:
1. Short trip count identified -> Don't bail out, set OptForSize:=True to avoid tail-loop and runtime checks.
2. Compute MaxVF returned 16 on a target supporting AVX512.
3. OptForSize -> choose VF:=MaxVF.
4. Bail out because TripCount = 8, VF = 16, TripCount % VF !=0 means we need a tail loop.
With this patch step 2. will choose MaxVF=8 based on TripCount.
Reviewers: Ayal, dorit, mkuper, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37425
llvm-svn: 312472
Summary:
LoopVectorizer is creating casts between vec<ptr> and vec<float> types
on ARM when compiling OpenCV. Since, tIs is illegal to directly cast a
floating point type to a pointer type even if the types have same size
causing a crash. Fix the crash using a two-step casting by bitcasting
to integer and integer to pointer/float.
Fixes PR33804.
Reviewers: mkuper, Ayal, dlj, rengolin, srhines
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: aemerson, kristof.beyls, mkazantsev, Meinersbur, rengolin, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35498
llvm-svn: 312331
As suggested in D37121, here's a wrapper for removeFromParent() + insertAfter(),
but implemented using moveBefore() for symmetry/efficiency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37239
llvm-svn: 312001
Original commit r311077 of D32871 was reverted in r311304 due to failures
reported in PR34248.
This recommit fixes PR34248 by restricting the packing of predicated scalars
into vectors only when vectorizing, avoiding doing so when unrolling w/o
vectorizing. Added a test derived from the reproducer of PR34248.
llvm-svn: 311849
Added a separate metadata to indicate when the loop
has already been vectorized instead of setting width and count to 1.
Patch written by Divya Shanmughan and Aditya Kumar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36220
llvm-svn: 311281
VPlan is an ongoing effort to refactor and extend the Loop Vectorizer. This
patch introduces the VPlan model into LV and uses it to represent the vectorized
code and drive the generation of vectorized IR.
In this patch VPlan models the vectorized loop body: the vectorized control-flow
is represented using VPlan's Hierarchical CFG, with predication refactored from
being a post-vectorization-step into a vectorization planning step modeling
if-then VPRegionBlocks, and generating code inline with non-predicated code. The
vectorized code within each VPBasicBlock is represented as a sequence of
Recipes, each responsible for modelling and generating a sequence of IR
instructions. To keep the size of this commit manageable the Recipes in this
patch are coarse-grained and capture large chunks of LV's code-generation logic.
The constructed VPlans are dumped in dot format under -debug.
This commit retains current vectorizer output, except for minor instruction
reorderings; see associated modifications to lit tests.
For further details on the VPlan model see docs/Proposals/VectorizationPlan.rst
and its references.
Authors: Gil Rapaport and Ayal Zaks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32871
llvm-svn: 311077
Two minor savings: avoid copying the SinkAfter map and avoid moving a cast if it
is not needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36408
llvm-svn: 310910
This change let us schedule a bundle with different opcodes in it, for example : [ load, add, add, add ]
Reviewers: mkuper, RKSimon, ABataev, mzolotukhin, spatel, filcab
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36518
llvm-svn: 310847
Summary:
When vectorizing fcmps we can trip on incorrect cast assertion when setting the
FastMathFlags after generating the vectorized FCmp.
This can happen if the FCmp can be folded to true or false directly. The fix
here is to set the FastMathFlag using the FastMathFlagBuilder *before* creating
the FCmp Instruction. This is what's done by other optimizations such as
InstCombine.
Added a test case which trips on cast assertion without this patch.
Reviewers: Ayal, mssimpso, mkuper, gilr
Reviewed by: Ayal, mssimpso
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36244
llvm-svn: 310389
Patch tries to improve two-pass vectorization analysis, existing in SLP vectorizer. What it does:
1. Defines key nodes, that are the vectorization roots. Previously vectorization started if StoreInst or ReturnInst is found. For now, the vectorization started for all Instructions with no users and void types (Terminators, StoreInst) + CallInsts.
2. CmpInsts, InsertElementInsts and InsertValueInsts are stored in the
array. This array is processed only after the vectorization of the
first-after-these instructions key node is finished. Vectorization goes
in reverse order to try to vectorize as much code as possible.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, Ayal, mkuper, gilr, hfinkel, RKSimon
Subscribers: ashahid, anemet, RKSimon, mssimpso, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29826
llvm-svn: 310260
Summary:
Patch tries to improve two-pass vectorization analysis, existing in SLP vectorizer. What it does:
1. Defines key nodes, that are the vectorization roots. Previously vectorization started if StoreInst or ReturnInst is found. For now, the vectorization started for all Instructions with no users and void types (Terminators, StoreInst) + CallInsts.
2. CmpInsts, InsertElementInsts and InsertValueInsts are stored in the array. This array is processed only after the vectorization of the first-after-these instructions key node is finished. Vectorization goes in reverse order to try to vectorize as much code as possible.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, Ayal, mkuper, gilr, hfinkel, RKSimon
Subscribers: ashahid, anemet, RKSimon, mssimpso, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29826
llvm-svn: 310255
Summary:
Currently most of the time vectors of extractelement instructions are
treated as scalars that must be gathered into vectors. But in some
cases, like when we have extractelement instructions from single vector
with different constant indeces or from 2 vectors of the same size, we
can treat this operations as shuffle of a single vector or blending of 2
vectors.
```
define <2 x i8> @g(<2 x i8> %x, <2 x i8> %y) {
%x0 = extractelement <2 x i8> %x, i32 0
%y1 = extractelement <2 x i8> %y, i32 1
%x0x0 = mul i8 %x0, %x0
%y1y1 = mul i8 %y1, %y1
%ins1 = insertelement <2 x i8> undef, i8 %x0x0, i32 0
%ins2 = insertelement <2 x i8> %ins1, i8 %y1y1, i32 1
ret <2 x i8> %ins2
}
```
can be converted to something like
```
define <2 x i8> @g(<2 x i8> %x, <2 x i8> %y) {
%1 = shufflevector <2 x i8> %x, <2 x i8> %y, <2 x i32> <i32 0, i32 3>
%2 = mul <2 x i8> %1, %1
ret <2 x i8> %2
}
```
Currently this type of conversion is considered as high cost
transformation.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, delena, mkuper, hfinkel, RKSimon
Subscribers: ashahid, RKSimon, spatel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30200
llvm-svn: 309812
The Loop Vectorizer generates redundant operations when manipulating masks:
AND with true, OR with false, compare equal to true. Instead of relying on
a subsequent pass to clean them up, this patch avoids generating them.
Use null (no-mask) to represent all-one full masks, instead of a constant
all-one vector, following the convention of masked gathers and scatters.
Preparing for a follow-up VPlan patch in which these mask manipulating
operations are modeled using recipes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35725
llvm-svn: 309558
Summary:
After some changes in SLP vectorizer we missed some additional checks to
limit the instructions for vectorization. We should not perform analysis
of the instructions if the parent of instruction is not the same as the
parent of the first instruction in the tree or it was analyzed already.
Subscribers: mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34881
llvm-svn: 309425
Generate a single test to decide if there are enough iterations to jump to the
vectorized loop, or else go to the scalar remainder loop. This test compares the
Scalar Trip Count: if STC < VF * UF go to the scalar loop. If
requiresScalarEpilogue() holds, at-least one iteration must remain scalar; the
rest can be used to form vector iterations. So in this case the test checks
instead if (STC - 1) < VF * UF by comparing STC <= VF * UF, and going to the
scalar loop if so. Otherwise the vector loop is entered for at-least one vector
iteration.
This test covers the case where incrementing the backedge-taken count will
overflow leading to an incorrect trip count of zero. In this (rare) case we will
also avoid the vector loop and jump to the scalar loop.
This patch simplifies the existing tests and effectively removes the basic-block
originally named "min.iters.checked", leaving the single test in block
"vector.ph".
Original observation and initial patch by Evgeny Stupachenko.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34150
llvm-svn: 308421
Summary:
vectorizer-maximize-bandwidth is generally useful in terms of performance. I've tested the impact of changing this to default on speccpu benchmarks on sandybridge machines. The result shows non-negative impact:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 26.84 -0.31%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 46.19 +0.89%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 42.92 -0.44%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 38.57 -2.25%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 24.54 -0.76%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.08 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 47.58 -0.99%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.06 +1.87%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 22.65 -0.12%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 33.69 +4.97%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.43 +1.70%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 23.02 -0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.57 -0.43%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 40.35 +0.27%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.96 +0.06%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.4 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 27.91 -0.08%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 57.47 -0.20%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.52 +1.35%
geometric mean +0.29%
The regression on 453.povray seems real, but is due to secondary effects as all hot functions are bit-identical with and without the flag.
I started this patch to consult upstream opinions on this. It will be greatly appreciated if the community can help test the performance impact of this change on other architectures so that we can decided if this should be target-dependent.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mkuper, davidxl, chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: rengolin, sanjoy, javed.absar, bjope, dorit, magabari, RKSimon, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33341
llvm-svn: 306933
Check if a single cast is preventing handling a first-order-recurrence Phi,
because the scheduling constraints it imposes on the first-order-recurrence
shuffle are infeasible; but they can be made feasible by moving the cast
downwards. Record such casts and move them when vectorizing the loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33058
llvm-svn: 306884
It may be detrimental to vectorize loops with very small trip count, as various
costs of the vectorized loop body as well as enclosing overheads including
runtime tests and scalar iterations may outweigh the gains of vectorizing. The
current cost model measures the cost of the vectorized loop body only, expecting
it will amortize other costs, and loops with known or expected very small trip
counts are not vectorized at all. This patch allows loops with very small trip
counts to be vectorized, but under OptForSize constraints, which ensure the cost
of the loop body is dominant, having no runtime guards nor scalar iterations.
Patch inspired by D32451.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34373
llvm-svn: 306803
It served us well, helped kick-start much of the vectorization efforts
in LLVM, etc. Its time has come and past. Back in 2014:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2014-November/079091.html
Time to actually let go and move forward. =]
I've updated the release notes both about the removal and the
deprecation of the corresponding C API.
llvm-svn: 306797
r306381 caused PR33613, by reversing the order in which insertelements were
generated per unroll part. This patch fixes PR33613 by retraining this order,
placing each set of insertelements per part immediately after the last scalar
being packed for this part. Includes a test case derived from PR33613.
Reference: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33613
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34760
llvm-svn: 306575
Undoing revert 306338 after fixed bug: add metadata to the load instead of the
reverse shuffle added to it, retaining the original ValueMap implementation.
llvm-svn: 306381
Summary:
vectorizer-maximize-bandwidth is generally useful in terms of performance. I've tested the impact of changing this to default on speccpu benchmarks on sandybridge machines. The result shows non-negative impact:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 26.84 -0.31%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 46.19 +0.89%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 42.92 -0.44%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 38.57 -2.25%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 24.54 -0.76%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.08 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 47.58 -0.99%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.06 +1.87%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 22.65 -0.12%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 33.69 +4.97%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.43 +1.70%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 23.02 -0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.57 -0.43%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 40.35 +0.27%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.96 +0.06%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.4 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 27.91 -0.08%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 57.47 -0.20%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.52 +1.35%
geometric mean +0.29%
The regression on 453.povray seems real, but is due to secondary effects as all hot functions are bit-identical with and without the flag.
I started this patch to consult upstream opinions on this. It will be greatly appreciated if the community can help test the performance impact of this change on other architectures so that we can decided if this should be target-dependent.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mkuper, davidxl, chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: rengolin, sanjoy, javed.absar, bjope, dorit, magabari, RKSimon, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33341
llvm-svn: 306336
Instead of providing access to the internal MapStorage holding all Values
associated with a given Key, used for setting or resetting them all together,
ValueMap keeps its MapStorage internal; its new interface allows getting,
setting or resetting a single Value, per part or per part-and-lane.
Follows the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D32871.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34473
llvm-svn: 306331
Summary:
vectorizer-maximize-bandwidth is generally useful in terms of performance. I've tested the impact of changing this to default on speccpu benchmarks on sandybridge machines. The result shows non-negative impact:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 26.84 -0.31%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 46.19 +0.89%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 42.92 -0.44%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 38.57 -2.25%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 24.54 -0.76%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.08 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 47.58 -0.99%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.06 +1.87%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 22.65 -0.12%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 33.69 +4.97%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.43 +1.70%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 23.02 -0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.57 -0.43%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 40.35 +0.27%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.96 +0.06%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.4 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 27.91 -0.08%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 57.47 -0.20%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.52 +1.35%
geometric mean +0.29%
The regression on 453.povray seems real, but is due to secondary effects as all hot functions are bit-identical with and without the flag.
I started this patch to consult upstream opinions on this. It will be greatly appreciated if the community can help test the performance impact of this change on other architectures so that we can decided if this should be target-dependent.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mkuper, davidxl, chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: rengolin, sanjoy, javed.absar, bjope, dorit, magabari, RKSimon, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33341
llvm-svn: 305960
Summary:
Existing heuristic uses the ratio between the function entry
frequency and the loop invocation frequency to find cold loops. However,
even if the loop executes frequently, if it has a small trip count per
each invocation, vectorization is not beneficial. On the other hand,
even if the loop invocation frequency is much smaller than the function
invocation frequency, if the trip count is high it is still beneficial
to vectorize the loop.
This patch uses estimated trip count computed from the profile metadata
as a primary metric to determine coldness of the loop. If the estimated
trip count cannot be computed, it falls back to the original heuristics.
Reviewers: Ayal, mssimpso, mkuper, danielcdh, wmi, tejohnson
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Subscribers: tejohnson, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32451
llvm-svn: 305729
If we're shrinking a binary operation, it may be the case that the new
operations wraps where the old didn't. If this happens, the behavior
should be well-defined. So, we can't always carry wrapping flags with us
when we shrink operations.
If we do, we get incorrect optimizations in cases like:
void foo(const unsigned char *from, unsigned char *to, int n) {
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
to[i] = from[i] - 128;
}
which gets optimized to:
void foo(const unsigned char *from, unsigned char *to, int n) {
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
to[i] = from[i] | 128;
}
Because:
- InstCombine turned `sub i32 %from.i, 128` into
`add nuw nsw i32 %from.i, 128`.
- LoopVectorize vectorized the add to be `add nuw nsw <16 x i8>` with a
vector full of `i8 128`s
- InstCombine took advantage of the fact that the newly-shrunken add
"couldn't wrap", and changed the `add` to an `or`.
InstCombine seems happy to figure out whether we can add nuw/nsw on its
own, so I just decided to drop the flags. There are already a number of
places in LoopVectorize where we rely on InstCombine to clean up.
llvm-svn: 305053
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.
I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.
This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.
Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).
llvm-svn: 304787
Following the request made in https://reviews.llvm.org/D32871,
scalarizeInstruction() which is no longer overridden by InnerLoopUnroller is
hereby made non-virtual in InnerLoopVectorizer.
Should have been part of r297580 originally.
llvm-svn: 304685
Fixed some comments, added an additional description of the algorithms,
improved readability of the code.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33320
llvm-svn: 304616
Summary:
Fixed some comments, added an additional description of the algorithms,
improved readability of the code.
Reviewers: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33320
llvm-svn: 304593
r303763 caused build failures in some out-of-tree tests due to an assertion in
TTI. The original patch updated cost estimates for induction variable update
instructions marked for scalarization. However, it didn't consider that the
incoming value of an induction variable phi node could be a cast instruction.
This caused queries for cast instruction costs with a mix of vector and scalar
types. This patch includes a fix for cast instructions and the test case from
PR33193.
The fix was suggested by Jonas Paulsson <paulsson@linux.vnet.ibm.com>.
Reference: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33193
Original Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33457
llvm-svn: 304235
For non-uniform instructions marked for scalarization, we should update
`VectorTy` when computing instruction costs to reflect the scalar type. In
addition to determining instruction costs, this type is also used to signal
that all instructions in the loop will be scalarized. This currently affects
memory instructions and non-pointer induction variables and their updates. (We
also mark GEPs scalar after vectorization, but their cost is computed together
with memory instructions.) For scalarized induction updates, this patch also
scales the scalar cost by the vectorization factor, corresponding to each
induction step.
llvm-svn: 303763
The loop vectorizer usually vectorizes any instruction it can and then
extracts the elements for a scalarized use. On SystemZ, all elements
containing addresses must be extracted into address registers (GRs). Since
this extraction is not free, it is better to have the address in a suitable
register to begin with. By forcing address arithmetic instructions and loads
of addresses to be scalar after vectorization, two benefits result:
* No need to extract the register
* LSR optimizations trigger (LSR isn't handling vector addresses currently)
Benchmarking show improvements on SystemZ with this new behaviour.
Any other target could try this by returning false in the new hook
prefersVectorizedAddressing().
Review: Renato Golin, Elena Demikhovsky, Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32422
llvm-svn: 303744
The default behavior of -Rpass-analysis=loop-vectorizer is to report only the
first reason encountered for not vectorizing, if one is found, at which time the
vectorizer aborts its handling of the loop. This patch allows multiple reasons
for not vectorizing to be identified and reported, at the potential expense of
additional compile-time, under allowExtraAnalysis which can currently be turned
on by Clang's -fsave-optimization-record and opt's -pass-remarks-missed.
Removed from LoopVectorizationLegality::canVectorize() the redundant checking
and reporting if we CantComputeNumberOfIterations, as LAI::canAnalyzeLoop() also
does that. This redundancy is caught by a lit test once multiple reasons are
reported.
Patch initially developed by Dror Barak.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33396
llvm-svn: 303613
Summary:
Implements PR889
Removing the virtual table pointer from Value saves 1% of RSS when doing
LTO of llc on Linux. The impact on time was positive, but too noisy to
conclusively say that performance improved. Here is a link to the
spreadsheet with the original data:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1F4FHir0qYnV0MEp2sYYp_BuvnJgWlWPhWOwZ6LbW7W4/edit?usp=sharing
This change makes it invalid to directly delete a Value, User, or
Instruction pointer. Instead, such code can be rewritten to a null check
and a call Value::deleteValue(). Value objects tend to have their
lifetimes managed through iplist, so for the most part, this isn't a big
deal. However, there are some places where LLVM deletes values, and
those places had to be migrated to deleteValue. I have also created
llvm::unique_value, which has a custom deleter, so it can be used in
place of std::unique_ptr<Value>.
I had to add the "DerivedUser" Deleter escape hatch for MemorySSA, which
derives from User outside of lib/IR. Code in IR cannot include MemorySSA
headers or call the MemoryAccess object destructors without introducing
a circular dependency, so we need some level of indirection.
Unfortunately, no class derived from User may have any virtual methods,
because adding a virtual method would break User::getHungOffOperands(),
which assumes that it can find the use list immediately prior to the
User object. I've added a static_assert to the appropriate OperandTraits
templates to help people avoid this trap.
Reviewers: chandlerc, mehdi_amini, pete, dberlin, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: krytarowski, eraman, george.burgess.iv, mzolotukhin, Prazek, nlewycky, hans, inglorion, pcc, tejohnson, dberlin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31261
llvm-svn: 303362
ARM Neon has native support for half-sized vector registers (64 bits). This
is beneficial for example for 2D and 3D graphics. This patch adds the option
to lower MinVecRegSize from 128 via a TTI in the SLP Vectorizer.
*** Performance Analysis
This change was motivated by some internal benchmarks but it is also
beneficial on SPEC and the LLVM testsuite.
The results are with -O3 and PGO. A negative percentage is an improvement.
The testsuite was run with a sample size of 4.
** SPEC
* CFP2006/482.sphinx3 -3.34%
A pretty hot loop is SLP vectorized resulting in nice instruction reduction.
This used to be a +22% regression before rL299482.
* CFP2000/177.mesa -3.34%
* CINT2000/256.bzip2 +6.97%
My current plan is to extend the fix in rL299482 to i16 which brings the
regression down to +2.5%. There are also other problems with the codegen in
this loop so there is further room for improvement.
** LLVM testsuite
* SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/ReedSolomon -10.75%
There are multiple small SLP vectorizations outside the hot code. It's a bit
surprising that it adds up to 10%. Some of this may be code-layout noise.
* MultiSource/Benchmarks/VersaBench/beamformer/beamformer -8.40%
The opt-viewer screenshot can be seen at F3218284. We start at a colder store
but the tree leads us into the hottest loop.
* MultiSource/Applications/lambda-0.1.3/lambda -2.68%
* MultiSource/Benchmarks/Bullet/bullet -2.18%
This is using 3D vectors.
* SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/Shootout-C++-lists +6.67%
Noise, binary is unchanged.
* MultiSource/Benchmarks/Ptrdist/anagram/anagram +4.90%
There is an additional SLP in the cold code. The test runs for ~1sec and
prints out over 2000 lines. This is most likely noise.
* MultiSource/Applications/aha/aha +1.63%
* MultiSource/Applications/JM/lencod/lencod +1.41%
* SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/richards_benchmark +1.15%
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31965
llvm-svn: 303116
This patch adds min/max population count, leading/trailing zero/one bit counting methods.
The min methods return answers based on bits that are known without considering unknown bits. The max methods give answers taking into account the largest count that unknown bits could give.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32931
llvm-svn: 302925
The approach I followed was to emit the remark after getTreeCost concludes
that SLP is profitable. I initially tried emitting them after the
vectorizeRootInstruction calls in vectorizeChainsInBlock but I vaguely
remember missing a few cases for example in HorizontalReduction::tryToReduce.
ORE is placed in BoUpSLP so that it's available from everywhere (notably
HorizontalReduction::tryToReduce).
We use the first instruction in the root bundle as the locator for the remark.
In order to get a sense how far the tree is spanning I've include the size of
the tree in the remark. This is not perfect of course but it gives you at
least a rough idea about the tree. Then you can follow up with -view-slp-tree
to really see the actual tree.
llvm-svn: 302811
Introduce LoopVectorizationPlanner.executePlan(), replacing ILV.vectorize() and
refactoring ILV.vectorizeLoop(). Method collectDeadInstructions() is moved from
ILV to LVP. These changes facilitate building VPlans and using them to generate
code, following https://reviews.llvm.org/D28975 and its tentative breakdown.
Method ILV.createEmptyLoop() is renamed ILV.createVectorizedLoopSkeleton() to
improve clarity; it's contents remain intact.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32200
llvm-svn: 302790
The AArch64 instruction set has a few "widening" instructions (e.g., uaddl,
saddl, uaddw, etc.) that take one or more doubleword operands and produce
quadword results. The operands are automatically sign- or zero-extended as
appropriate. However, in LLVM IR, these extends are explicit. This patch
updates TTI to consider these widening instructions as single operations whose
cost is attached to the arithmetic instruction. It marks extends that are part
of a widening operation "free" and applies a sub-target specified overhead
(zero by default) to the arithmetic instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32706
llvm-svn: 302582
Summary:
In first order recurrence vectorization, when the previous value is a phi node, we need to
set the insertion point to the first non-phi node.
We can have the previous value being a phi node, due to the generation of new
IVs as part of trunc optimization [1].
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/rL294967
Reviewers: mssimpso, mkuper
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32969
llvm-svn: 302532
- This change allows targets to opt-in to using them instead of the log2
shufflevector algorithm.
- The SLP and Loop vectorizers have the common code to do shuffle reductions
factored out into LoopUtils, and now have a unified interface for generating
reductions regardless of the preference of the target. LoopUtils now uses TTI
to determine what kind of reductions the target wants to handle.
- For CodeGen, basic legalization support is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30086
llvm-svn: 302514
This patch introduces a new KnownBits struct that wraps the two APInt used by computeKnownBits. This allows us to treat them as more of a unit.
Initially I've just altered the signatures of computeKnownBits and InstCombine's simplifyDemandedBits to pass a KnownBits reference instead of two separate APInt references. I'll do similar to the SelectionDAG version of computeKnownBits/simplifyDemandedBits as a separate patch.
I've added a constructor that allows initializing both APInts to the same bit width with a starting value of 0. This reduces the repeated pattern of initializing both APInts. Once place default constructed the APInts so I added a default constructor for those cases.
Going forward I would like to add more methods that will work on the pairs. For example trunc, zext, and sext occur on both APInts together in several places. We should probably add a clear method that can be used to clear both pieces. Maybe a method to check for conflicting information. A method to return (Zero|One) so we don't write it out everywhere. Maybe a method for (Zero|One).isAllOnesValue() to determine if all bits are known. I'm sure there are many other methods we can come up with.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32376
llvm-svn: 301432
Commits were:
"Use WeakVH instead of WeakTrackingVH in AliasSetTracker's UnkownInsts"
"Add a new WeakVH value handle; NFC"
"Rename WeakVH to WeakTrackingVH; NFC"
The changes assumed pointers are 8 byte aligned on all architectures.
llvm-svn: 301429
Summary:
I plan to use WeakVH to mean "nulls itself out on deletion, but does
not track RAUW" in a subsequent commit.
Reviewers: dblaikie, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: arsenm, mehdi_amini, mcrosier, mzolotukhin, jfb, llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32266
llvm-svn: 301424
This patch uses various APInt methods to reduce temporary APInt creation.
This should be all of the unrelated cleanups that got buried in D32376(creating a KnownBits struct) as well as some pointed out by Simon during the review of that. Plus a few improvements to use counting instead of masking.
I've left out any places where we do something like (KnownZero & KnownOne) != 0 as I plan to add a helper method to KnownBits to ask that question and didn't want to thrash that code an additional time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32495
llvm-svn: 301338
This patch is part of D28975's breakdown.
Genreating the control-flow to guard predicated instructions modified to
only use SplitBlockAndInsertIfThen() for producing the if-then construct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32224
llvm-svn: 301293
Phi nodes in non-header blocks are converted to select instructions after
if-conversion. This patch updates the cost model to account for the selects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31906
llvm-svn: 300980
In tryToVectorizeList, under a very limited circumstance (when entered
from tryToVectorizePair), the values may be reordered (swapped) and the
SLP tree is built with the new order. This extends that to the case when
starting from phis in vectorizeChainsInBlock when there are exactly two
phis. The textual order of phi nodes shouldn't really matter. Without
this change, the loop body in the accompnaying test case is fully vectorized
when we swap the orde of the phis but not with this order. While this
doesn't solve the phi-ordering problem in a general way (for more than 2
phis), this is simple fix that piggybacks on an existing mechanism and
is useful in cases like multiplying two complex numbers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32065
llvm-svn: 300574
This patch is part of D28975's breakdown.
Add caching for block masks similar to the cache already used for edge masks,
replacing generation per user with reusing the first generated value which
dominates all uses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32054
llvm-svn: 300557
This patch is part of D28975's breakdown - no change in output intended.
LV's code currently assumes the vectorized loop is a single basic block up
until predicateInstructions() is called. This patch removes two manifestations
of this assumption (loop phi incoming values, dominator tree update) by
replacing the use of vectorLoopBody with the vectorized loop's latch/header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32040
llvm-svn: 300310
Summary:
In first order recurrences where phi's are used outside the loop,
we should generate an additional vector.extract of the second last element from
the vectorized phi update.
This is because we require the phi itself (which is the value at the second last
iteration of the vector loop) and not the phi's update within the loop.
Also fix the code gen when we just unroll, but don't vectorize.
Fixes PR32396.
Reviewers: mssimpso, mkuper, anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31979
llvm-svn: 300238
Refactoring InnerLoopVectorizer's vectorizeBlockInLoop() to provide
vectorizeInstruction(). Aligning DeadInstructions with its only user.
Facilitates driving the transformation by VPlan - follows
https://reviews.llvm.org/D28975 and its tentative breakdown.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31997
llvm-svn: 300183
In getEntryCost(), make the scalar type for a compare instruction that of the
operands, not i1. This is needed in order to call getCmpSelInstrCost() for a
compare in a sensible way, the same way as the LoopVectorizer does.
New test: test/Transforms/SLPVectorizer/SystemZ/SLP-cmp-cost-query.ll
Review: Matthew Simpson
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31601
llvm-svn: 300061
The cost for a branch after vectorization is very different depending on if
the vectorizer will if-convert the block (branch is eliminated), or if
scalarized and predicated blocks will be produced (branch duplicated before
each block). There is also the case of remaining scalar branches, such as the
back-edge branch.
This patch handles these cases differently with TTI based cost estimates.
Review: Matthew Simpson
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31175
llvm-svn: 300058
Since SystemZ supports vector element load/store instructions, there is no
need for extracts/inserts if a vector load/store gets scalarized.
This patch lets Target specify that it supports such instructions by means of
a new TTI hook that defaults to false.
The use for this is in the LoopVectorizer getScalarizationOverhead() method,
which will with this patch produce a smaller sum for a vector load/store on
SystemZ.
New test: test/Transforms/LoopVectorize/SystemZ/load-store-scalarization-cost.ll
Review: Adam Nemet
https://reviews.llvm.org/D30680
llvm-svn: 300056
getArithmeticInstrCost(), getShuffleCost(), getCastInstrCost(),
getCmpSelInstrCost(), getVectorInstrCost(), getMemoryOpCost(),
getInterleavedMemoryOpCost() implemented.
Interleaved access vectorization enabled.
BasicTTIImpl::getCastInstrCost() improved to check for legal extending loads,
in which case the cost of the z/sext instruction becomes 0.
Review: Ulrich Weigand, Renato Golin.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29631
llvm-svn: 300052
In the vectorization of first order recurrence, we vectorize such
that the last element in the vector will be the one extracted to pass into the
scalar remainder loop. However, this is not true when there is a phi (other
than the primary induction variable) is used outside the loop.
In such a case, we need the value from the second last iteration (i.e.
the phi value), not the last iteration (which would be the phi update).
I've added a test case for this. Also see PR32396.
A follow up patch would generate the correct code gen for such cases,
and turn this vectorization on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31910
Reviewers: mssimpso
llvm-svn: 299985
This patch reapplies r298620. The original patch was reverted because of two
issues. First, the patch exposed a bug in InstCombine that caused the Chromium
builds to fail (PR32414). This issue was fixed in r299017. Second, the patch
introduced a bug in the vectorizer's scalars analysis that caused test suite
builds to fail on SystemZ. The scalars analysis was too aggressive and marked a
memory instruction scalar, even though it was going to be vectorized. This
issue has been fixed in the current patch and several new test cases for the
scalars analysis have been added.
llvm-svn: 299770
The vectorizer tries to replace truncations of induction variables with new
induction variables having the smaller type. After r295063, this optimization
was applied to all integer induction variables, including non-primary ones.
When optimizing the truncation of a non-primary induction variable, we still
need to transform the new induction so that it has the correct start value.
This should fix PR32419.
Reference: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32419
llvm-svn: 298882
Reason: breaks linking Chromium with LLD + ThinLTO (a pass crashes)
LLVM bug: https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=32413
Original change description:
[LV] Vectorize GEPs
This patch adds support for vectorizing GEPs. Previously, we only generated
vector GEPs on-demand when creating gather or scatter operations. All GEPs from
the original loop were scalarized by default, and if a pointer was to be stored
to memory, we would have to build up the pointer vector with insertelement
instructions.
With this patch, we will vectorize all GEPs that haven't already been marked
for scalarization.
The patch refines collectLoopScalars to more exactly identify the scalar GEPs.
The function now more closely resembles collectLoopUniforms. And the patch
moves vector GEP creation out of vectorizeMemoryInstruction and into the main
vectorization loop. The vector GEPs needed for gather and scatter operations
will have already been generated before vectoring the memory accesses.
Original Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30710
llvm-svn: 298735
This patch adds support for vectorizing GEPs. Previously, we only generated
vector GEPs on-demand when creating gather or scatter operations. All GEPs from
the original loop were scalarized by default, and if a pointer was to be stored
to memory, we would have to build up the pointer vector with insertelement
instructions.
With this patch, we will vectorize all GEPs that haven't already been marked
for scalarization.
The patch refines collectLoopScalars to more exactly identify the scalar GEPs.
The function now more closely resembles collectLoopUniforms. And the patch
moves vector GEP creation out of vectorizeMemoryInstruction and into the main
vectorization loop. The vector GEPs needed for gather and scatter operations
will have already been generated before vectoring the memory accesses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30710
llvm-svn: 298620
The code for generating scalar base pointers in vectorizeMemoryInstruction is
not needed. We currently scalarize all GEPs and maintain the scalarized values
in VectorLoopValueMap. The GEP cloning in this unneeded code is the same as
that in scalarizeInstruction. The test cases that changed as a result of this
patch changed because we were able to reuse the scalarized GEP that we
previously generated instead of cloning a new one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30587
llvm-svn: 298615
This patch refactors the PHisToFix loop as follows:
- The loop itself now resides in its own method.
- The new method iterates on scalar-loop's header; the PHIsToFix map formerly
propagated as an output parameter and filled during phi widening is removed.
- The code handling reductions is moved into its own method, similar to the
existing fixFirstOrderRecurrence().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30755
llvm-svn: 297740
Refactoring Cost Model's selectVectorizationFactor() so that it handles only the
selection of the best VF from a pre-computed range of candidate VF's, extracting
early-exit criteria and the computation of a MaxVF upper-bound to other methods,
all driven by a newly introduced LoopVectorizationPlanner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30653
llvm-svn: 297737
getIntrinsicInstrCost() used to only compute scalarization cost based on types.
This patch improves this so that the actual arguments are checked when they are
available, in order to handle only unique non-constant operands.
Tests updates:
Analysis/CostModel/X86/arith-fp.ll
Transforms/LoopVectorize/AArch64/interleaved_cost.ll
Transforms/LoopVectorize/ARM/interleaved_cost.ll
The improvement in getOperandsScalarizationOverhead() to differentiate on
constants made it necessary to update the interleaved_cost.ll tests even
though they do not relate to intrinsics.
Review: Hal Finkel
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29540
llvm-svn: 297705
This commit is a follow-up on r297580. It fixes the FIXME added temporarily
by that commit to keep the removal of Unroller's specialized version of
scalarizeInstruction() an NFC. See https://reviews.llvm.org/D30715 for details.
llvm-svn: 297610
Unroller's specialized scalarizeInstruction() is mostly duplicating Vectorizer's
variant. OTOH Vectorizer's scalarizeInstruction() already supports the special
case of VF==1 except for avoiding mask-bit extraction in that case. This patch
removes Unroller's specialized version in favor of a unified method.
The only functional difference between the two variants seems to be setting
memcheck metadata for loads and stores only in Vectorizer's variant, which is a
bug in Unroller. To keep this patch an NFC the unified method doesn't set
memcheck metadata for VF==1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30715
llvm-svn: 297580
This reverts r293386, r294027, r294029 and r296411.
Turns out the SLP tree isn't actually a "tree" and we don't handle
accessing the same packet of loads in several different orders well,
causing miscompiles.
Revert until we can fix this properly.
llvm-svn: 297493
Summary:
Similar to SmallPtrSet, this makes find and count work with both const
referneces and const pointers.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30713
llvm-svn: 297424
Analyzing larger trees is extremely difficult with the current debug output so
this adds GraphTraits and DOTGraphTraits on top of the VectorizableTree data
structure. We can now display the SLP trees with Graphviz as in
https://reviews.llvm.org/F3132765.
I decorated the graph where a value needs to be gathered for one reason or
another. These are the red nodes.
There are other improvement I am planning to make as I work through my case
here. For example, I would also like to mark nodes that need to be extracted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30731
llvm-svn: 297303
Because IRBuilder performs constant-folding, it's not guaranteed that an
instruction in the original loop map to an instruction in the vector loop. It
could map to a constant vector instead. The handling of first-order recurrences
was incorrectly making this assumption when setting the IRBuilder's insert
point.
llvm-svn: 297302
When expanding the set of uniform instructions beyond the seed instructions
(e.g., consecutive pointers), we mark a new instruction uniform if all its
loop-varying users are uniform. We should also allow users that are consecutive
or interleaved memory accesses. This fixes cases where we have an instruction
that is used as the pointer operand of a consecutive access but also used by a
non-memory instruction that later becomes uniform as part of the expansion.
llvm-svn: 297179
for VectorizeTree() API.This API uses it for proper mask computation to be used in shufflevector IR.
The fix is to compute the mask for out of order memory accesses while building the vectorizable tree
instead of actual vectorization of vectorizable tree.It also needs to recompute the proper Lane for
external use of vectorizable scalars based on shuffle mask.
Reviewers: mkuper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30159
Change-Id: Ide8773ce0ad3562f3cf4d1a0ad0f487e2f60ce5d
llvm-svn: 296863
When computing the smallest and largest types for selecting the maximum
vectorization factor, we currently ignore loads and stores of pointer types if
the memory access is non-consecutive. We do this because such accesses must be
scalarized regardless of vectorization factor, and thus shouldn't be considered
when determining the factor. This patch makes this check less aggressive by
also considering non-consecutive accesses that may be vectorized, such as
interleaved accesses. Because we don't know at the time of the check if an
accesses will certainly be vectorized (this is a cost model decision given a
particular VF), we consider all accesses that can potentially be vectorized.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30305
llvm-svn: 296747
Summary:
The SLP vectorizer should propagate IR-level optimization hints/flags
(nsw, nuw, exact, fast-math) when converting scalar horizontal
reductions instructions into vectors, just like for other vectorized
instructions.
It doe not include IR propagation for extra arguments, we need to handle
original scalar operations for extra args to propagate correct flags.
Reviewers: mkuper, mzolotukhin, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30418
llvm-svn: 296614
Summary:
We should preserve IR flags for extra args. These IR flags should be
taken from original scalar operations, not from the reduction
operations.
Reviewers: mkuper, mzolotukhin, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30447
llvm-svn: 296613
Summary:
If horizontal reduction tree starts from the binary operation that is
used in PHI node, but this PHI is not used in horizontal reduction, we
may end up with extra addition of this PHI node after vectorization.
Here is an example:
```
%phi = phi i32 [ %tmp, %end], ...
...
%tmp = add i32 %tmp1, %tmp2
end:
```
after vectorization we always have something like:
```
%phi = phi i32 [ %tmp, %end], ...
...
%red = extractelement <8 x 32> %vec.red, 0
%tmp = add i32 %red, %phi
end:
```
even if `%phi` is not used in reduction tree. Patch considers these PHI
nodes as extra arguments and considers them in the final result iff they
really used in reduction.
Reviewers: mkuper, hfinkel, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30409
llvm-svn: 296606
The practice in LV is that we emit analysis remarks and then finally report
either a missed or applied remark on the final decision whether vectorization
is taking place. On this code path, we were closing with an analysis remark.
llvm-svn: 296578
for VectorizeTree() API.This API uses it for proper mask computation to be used in shufflevector IR.
The fix is to compute the mask for out of order memory accesses while building the vectorizable tree
instead of actual vectorization of vectorizable tree.
Reviewers: mkuper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30159
Change-Id: Id1e287f073fa4959713ba545fa4254db5da8b40d
llvm-svn: 296575
This patch merges the existing floating-point induction variable widening code
into the integer induction variable widening code, creating a single set of
functions for both kinds of inductions. The primary motivation for doing this
is to enable vector phi node creation for floating-point induction variables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30211
llvm-svn: 296145
result
Summary:
If the same value is used several times as an extra value, SLP
vectorizer takes it into account only once instead of actual number of
using.
For example:
```
int val = 1;
for (int y = 0; y < 8; y++) {
for (int x = 0; x < 8; x++) {
val = val + input[y * 8 + x] + 3;
}
}
```
We have 2 extra rguments: `1` - initial value of horizontal reduction
and `3`, which is added 8*8 times to the reduction. Before the patch we
added `1` to the reduction value and added once `3`, though it must be
added 64 times.
Reviewers: mkuper, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30262
llvm-svn: 295972
result
Summary:
If the same value is used several times as an extra value, SLP
vectorizer takes it into account only once instead of actual number of
using.
For example:
```
int val = 1;
for (int y = 0; y < 8; y++) {
for (int x = 0; x < 8; x++) {
val = val + input[y * 8 + x] + 3;
}
}
```
We have 2 extra rguments: `1` - initial value of horizontal reduction
and `3`, which is added 8*8 times to the reduction. Before the patch we
added `1` to the reduction value and added once `3`, though it must be
added 64 times.
Reviewers: mkuper, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30262
llvm-svn: 295956
result
Summary:
If the same value is used several times as an extra value, SLP
vectorizer takes it into account only once instead of actual number of
using.
For example:
```
int val = 1;
for (int y = 0; y < 8; y++) {
for (int x = 0; x < 8; x++) {
val = val + input[y * 8 + x] + 3;
}
}
```
We have 2 extra rguments: `1` - initial value of horizontal reduction
and `3`, which is added 8*8 times to the reduction. Before the patch we
added `1` to the reduction value and added once `3`, though it must be
added 64 times.
Reviewers: mkuper, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30262
llvm-svn: 295949
Implement isLegalToVectorizeLoadChain for AMDGPU to avoid
producing private address spaces accesses that will need to be
split up later. This was doing the wrong thing in the case
where the queried chain was an even number of elements.
A possible <4 x i32> store was being split into
store <2 x i32>
store i32
store i32
rather than
store <2 x i32>
store <2 x i32>
when legal.
llvm-svn: 295933
Summary:
If the same value is used several times as an extra value, SLP
vectorizer takes it into account only once instead of actual number of
using.
For example:
```
int val = 1;
for (int y = 0; y < 8; y++) {
for (int x = 0; x < 8; x++) {
val = val + input[y * 8 + x] + 3;
}
}
```
We have 2 extra rguments: `1` - initial value of horizontal reduction
and `3`, which is added 8*8 times to the reduction. Before the patch we
added `1` to the reduction value and added once `3`, though it must be
added 64 times.
Reviewers: mkuper, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30262
llvm-svn: 295868
Prevent memory objects of different address spaces to be part of
the same load/store groups when analysing interleaved accesses.
This is fixing pr31900.
Reviewers: HaoLiu, mssimpso, mkuper
Reviewed By: mssimpso, mkuper
Subscribers: llvm-commits, efriedma, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29717
This reverts r295042 (re-applies r295038) with an additional fix for the
buildbot problem.
llvm-svn: 295858
We previously only created a vector phi node for an induction variable if its
step had a constant integer type. However, the step actually only needs to be
loop-invariant. We only handle inductions having loop-invariant steps, so this
patch should enable vector phi node creation for all integer induction
variables that will be vectorized.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29956
llvm-svn: 295456
This reapplies commit r294967 with a fix for the execution time regressions
caught by the clang-cmake-aarch64-quick bot. We now extend the truncate
optimization to non-primary induction variables only if the truncate isn't
already free.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29847
llvm-svn: 295063
back into a vector
Previously the cost of the existing ExtractElement/ExtractValue
instructions was considered as a dead cost only if it was detected that
they have only one use. But these instructions may be considered
dead also if users of the instructions are also going to be vectorized,
like:
```
%x0 = extractelement <2 x float> %x, i32 0
%x1 = extractelement <2 x float> %x, i32 1
%x0x0 = fmul float %x0, %x0
%x1x1 = fmul float %x1, %x1
%add = fadd float %x0x0, %x1x1
```
This can be transformed to
```
%1 = fmul <2 x float> %x, %x
%2 = extractelement <2 x float> %1, i32 0
%3 = extractelement <2 x float> %1, i32 1
%add = fadd float %2, %3
```
because though `%x0` and `%x1` have 2 users each other, these users are
part of the vectorized tree and we can consider these `extractelement`
instructions as dead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29900
llvm-svn: 295056
Prevent memory objects of different address spaces to be part of
the same load/store groups when analysing interleaved accesses.
This is fixing pr31900.
Reviewers: HaoLiu, mssimpso, mkuper
Reviewed By: mssimpso, mkuper
Subscribers: llvm-commits, efriedma, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29717
llvm-svn: 295038
This reverts commit r294967. This patch caused execution time slowdowns in a
few LLVM test-suite tests, as reported by the clang-cmake-aarch64-quick bot.
I'm reverting to investigate.
llvm-svn: 294973
This patch extends the optimization of truncations whose operand is an
induction variable with a constant integer step. Previously we were only
applying this optimization to the primary induction variable. However, the cost
model assumes the optimization is applied to the truncation of all integer
induction variables (even regardless of step type). The transformation is now
applied to the other induction variables, and I've updated the cost model to
ensure it is better in sync with the transformation we actually perform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29847
llvm-svn: 294967
reductions.
Currently, LLVM supports vectorization of horizontal reduction
instructions with initial value set to 0. Patch supports vectorization
of reduction with non-zero initial values. Also, it supports a
vectorization of instructions with some extra arguments, like:
```
float f(float x[], int a, int b) {
float p = a % b;
p += x[0] + 3;
for (int i = 1; i < 32; i++)
p += x[i];
return p;
}
```
Patch allows vectorization of this kind of horizontal reductions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29727
llvm-svn: 294934
Summary:
This patch starts the implementation as discuss in the following RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/106532.html
When optimization duplicates code that will scale down the execution count of a basic block, we will record the duplication factor as part of discriminator so that the offline process tool can find the duplication factor and collect the accurate execution frequency of the corresponding source code. Two important optimization that fall into this category is loop vectorization and loop unroll. This patch records the duplication factor for these 2 optimizations.
The recording will be guarded by a flag encode-duplication-in-discriminators, which is off by default.
Reviewers: probinson, aprantl, davidxl, hfinkel, echristo
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, anemet, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26420
llvm-svn: 294782
We previously only created a vector phi node for an induction variable if its
type matched the type of the canonical induction variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29776
llvm-svn: 294755
Making the cost model selecting between Interleave, GatherScatter or Scalar vectorization form of memory instruction.
The right decision should be done for non-consecutive memory access instrcuctions that may have more than one vectorization solution.
This patch includes the following changes:
- Cost Model calculates the cost of Load/Store vector form and choose the better option between Widening, Interleave, GatherScactter and Scalarization. Cost Model keeps the widening decision.
- Arrays of Uniform and Scalar values are moved from Legality to Cost Model.
- Cost Model collects Uniforms and Scalars per VF. The collection is based on CM decision map of Loadis/Stores vectorization form.
- Vectorization of memory instruction is performed according to the CM decision.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27919
llvm-svn: 294503
This breaks when one of the extra values is also a scalar that
participates in the same vectorization tree which we'll end up
reducing.
llvm-svn: 294245
Currently LLVM supports vectorization of horizontal reduction
instructions with initial value set to 0. Patch supports vectorization
of reduction with non-zero initial values. Also it supports a
vectorization of instructions with some extra arguments, like:
float f(float x[], int a, int b) {
float p = a % b;
p += x[0] + 3;
for (int i = 1; i < 32; i++)
p += x[i];
return p;
}
Patch allows vectorization of this kind of horizontal reductions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28961
llvm-svn: 293994
This patch moves some helper functions related to interleaved access
vectorization out of LoopVectorize.cpp and into VectorUtils.cpp. We would like
to use these functions in a follow-on patch that improves interleaved load and
store lowering in (ARM/AArch64)ISelLowering.cpp. One of the functions was
already duplicated there and has been removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29398
llvm-svn: 293788
By calling getScalarizationOverhead with the CallInst instead of the types of
its arguments, we make sure that only unique call arguments are added to the
scalarization cost.
getScalarizationOverhead() is extended to handle calls by only passing on the
actual call arguments (which is not all the operands).
This also eliminates a wrapper function with the same name.
review: Hal Finkel
llvm-svn: 293459
The jumbled scalar loads will be sorted while building the tree and these accesses will be marked to generate shufflevector after the vectorized load with proper mask.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mssimpso, mkuper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26905
Change-Id: I9c0c8e6f91a00076a7ee1465440a3f6ae092f7ad
llvm-svn: 293386
Some checks in SLP horizontal reduction analysis function are performed
several times, though it is enough to perform these checks only once
during an initial attempt at adding candidate for the reduction
instruction/reduced value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29175
llvm-svn: 293274
change the set of uniform instructions in the loop causing an assert
failure.
The problem is that the legalization checking also builds data
structures mapping various facts about the loop body. The immediate
cause was the set of uniform instructions. If these then change when
LCSSA is formed, the data structures would already have been built and
become stale. The included test case triggered an assert in loop
vectorize that was reduced out of the new PM's pipeline.
The solution is to form LCSSA early enough that no information is cached
across the changes made. The only really obvious position is outside of
the main logic to vectorize the loop. This also has the advantage of
removing one case where forming LCSSA could mutate the loop but we
wouldn't track that as a "Changed" state.
If it is significantly advantageous to do some legalization checking
prior to this, we can do a more careful positioning but it seemed best
to just back off to a safe position first.
llvm-svn: 293168
Refactoring to remove duplications of this method.
New method getOperandsScalarizationOverhead() that looks at the present unique
operands and add extract costs for them. Old behaviour was to just add extract
costs for one operand of the type always, which still happens in
getArithmeticInstrCost() if no operands are provided by the caller.
This is a good start of improving on this, but there are more places
that can be improved by using getOperandsScalarizationOverhead().
Review: Hal Finkel
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29017
llvm-svn: 293155
instructions.
If number of instructions in horizontal reduction list is not power of 2
then only PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfInstructions) last elements are actually
vectorized, other instructions remain scalar. Patch tries to vectorize
the remaining elements either.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28959
llvm-svn: 293042
Removed data members ReduxWidth and MinVecRegSize + some C++11 stylish
improvements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29010
llvm-svn: 292899
This changes the vectorizer to explicitly use the loopsimplify and lcssa utils,
instead of "requiring" the transformations as if they were analyses.
This is not NFC, since it changes the LCSSA behavior - we no longer run LCSSA
for all loops, but rather only for the loops we expect to modify.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28868
llvm-svn: 292456
We currently check whether a reduction has a single outside user. We don't
really need to require that - we just need to make sure a single value is
used externally. The number of external users of that value shouldn't actually
matter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28830
llvm-svn: 292424
If a memory instruction will be vectorized, but it's pointer operand is
non-consecutive-like, the instruction is a gather or scatter operation. Its
pointer operand will be non-uniform. This should fix PR31671.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31671
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28819
llvm-svn: 292254
a function's CFG when that CFG is unchanged.
This allows transformation passes to simply claim they preserve the CFG
and analysis passes to check for the CFG being preserved to remove the
fanout of all analyses being listed in all passes.
I've gone through and removed or cleaned up as many of the comments
reminding us to do this as I could.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28627
llvm-svn: 292054
The removed assert seems bogus - it's perfectly legal for the roots of the
vectorized subtrees to be equal even if the original scalar values aren't,
if the original scalars happen to be equivalent.
This fixes PR31599.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28539
llvm-svn: 291692
updated instructions:
pmulld, pmullw, pmulhw, mulsd, mulps, mulpd, divss, divps, divsd, divpd, addpd and subpd.
special optimization case which replaces pmulld with pmullw\pmulhw\pshuf seq.
In case if the real operands bitwidth <= 16.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28104
llvm-svn: 291657
arguments much like the CGSCC pass manager.
This is a major redesign following the pattern establish for the CGSCC layer to
support updates to the set of loops during the traversal of the loop nest and
to support invalidation of analyses.
An additional significant burden in the loop PM is that so many passes require
access to a large number of function analyses. Manually ensuring these are
cached, available, and preserved has been a long-standing burden in LLVM even
with the help of the automatic scheduling in the old pass manager. And it made
the new pass manager extremely unweildy. With this design, we can package the
common analyses up while in a function pass and make them immediately available
to all the loop passes. While in some cases this is unnecessary, I think the
simplicity afforded is worth it.
This does not (yet) address loop simplified form or LCSSA form, but those are
the next things on my radar and I have a clear plan for them.
While the patch is very large, most of it is either mechanically updating loop
passes to the new API or the new testing for the loop PM. The code for it is
reasonably compact.
I have not yet updated all of the loop passes to correctly leverage the update
mechanisms demonstrated in the unittests. I'll do that in follow-up patches
along with improved FileCheck tests for those passes that ensure things work in
more realistic scenarios. In many cases, there isn't much we can do with these
until the loop simplified form and LCSSA form are in place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28292
llvm-svn: 291651
This patch delays the fix-up step for external induction variable users until
after the dominator tree has been properly updated. This should fix PR30742.
The SCEVExpander in InductionDescriptor::transform can generate code in the
wrong location if the dominator tree is not up-to-date. We should work towards
keeping the dominator tree up-to-date throughout the transformation.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30742
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28168
llvm-svn: 291462
This code seems to be target dependent which may not be the same for all targets.
Passed the decision whether the given stride is complex or not to the target by sending stride information via SCEV to getAddressComputationCost instead of 'IsComplex'.
Specifically at X86 targets we dont see any significant address computation cost in case of the strided access in general.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27518
llvm-svn: 291106
This patch reapplies r289863. The original patch was reverted because it
exposed a bug causing the loop vectorizer to crash in the Python runtime on
PPC. The underlying issue was fixed with r289958.
llvm-svn: 289975
After r288909, instructions feeding predicated instructions may be scalarized
if profitable. Since these instructions will remain scalar, we shouldn't
attempt to type-shrink them. We should only truncate vector types to their
minimal bit widths. This bug was exposed by enabling the vectorization of loops
containing conditional stores by default.
llvm-svn: 289958
stores by default
This uncovers a crasher in the loop vectorizer on PPC when building the
Python runtime. I'll send the testcase to the review thread for the
original commit.
llvm-svn: 289934
This patch sets the default value of the "-enable-cond-stores-vec" command line
option to "true".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27814
llvm-svn: 289863
After r289755, the AssumptionCache is no longer needed. Variables affected by
assumptions are now found by using the new operand-bundle-based scheme. This
new scheme is more computationally efficient, and also we need much less
code...
llvm-svn: 289756
We currently check if the exact trip count is known and is smaller than the
"tiny loop" bound. We should be checking the maximum bound on the trip count
instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27690
llvm-svn: 289583
This patch ensures the correct minimum bit width during type-shrinking.
Previously when type-shrinking, we always sign-extended values back to their
original width. However, if we are going to sign-extend, and the sign bit is
unknown, we have to increase the minimum bit width by one bit so the
sign-extend will fill the upper bits correctly. If the sign bit is known to be
zero, we can perform a zero-extend instead. This should fix PR31243.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31243
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27466
llvm-svn: 289470
When trying to vectorize trees that start at insertelement instructions
function tryToVectorizeList() uses vectorization factor calculated as
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize. But sometimes it does not work as tree
cost for this fixed vectorization factor is too high.
Patch tries to improve the situation. It tries different vectorization
factors from max(PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfVectorizedValues),
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize) to MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize and tries
to choose the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27215
llvm-svn: 289043
This patch attempts to scalarize the operand expressions of predicated
instructions if they were conditionally executed in the original loop. After
scalarization, the expressions will be sunk inside the blocks created for the
predicated instructions. The transformation essentially performs
un-if-conversion on the operands.
The cost model has been updated to determine if scalarization is profitable. It
compares the cost of a vectorized instruction, assuming it will be
if-converted, to the cost of the scalarized instruction, assuming that the
instructions corresponding to each vector lane will be sunk inside a predicated
block, possibly avoiding execution. If it's more profitable to scalarize the
entire expression tree feeding the predicated instruction, the expression will
be scalarized; otherwise, it will be vectorized. We only consider the cost of
the entire expression to accurately estimate the cost of the required
insertelement and extractelement instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26083
llvm-svn: 288909
This reverts commit r288497, as it broke the AArch64 build of Compiler-RT's
builtins (twice: once in r288412 and once in r288497). We should investigate
this offline.
llvm-svn: 288508
When trying to vectorize trees that start at insertelement instructions
function tryToVectorizeList() uses vectorization factor calculated as
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize. But sometimes it does not work as tree
cost for this fixed vectorization factor is too high.
Patch tries to improve the situation. It tries different vectorization
factors from max(PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfVectorizedValues),
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize) to MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize and tries
to choose the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27215
llvm-svn: 288497
When trying to vectorize trees that start at insertelement instructions
function tryToVectorizeList() uses vectorization factor calculated as
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize. But sometimes it does not work as tree
cost for this fixed vectorization factor is too high.
Patch tries to improve the situation. It tries different vectorization
factors from max(PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfVectorizedValues),
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize) to MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize and tries
to choose the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27215
llvm-svn: 288412
Currently when cost of scalar operations is evaluated the vector type is
used for scalar operations. Patch fixes this issue and fixes evaluation
of the vector operations cost.
Several test showed that vector cost model is too optimistic. It
allowed vectorization of 8 or less add/fadd operations, though scalar
code is faster. Actually, only for 16 or more operations vector code
provides better performance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26277
llvm-svn: 288398
Currently SLP vectorizer tries to vectorize a binary operation and dies
immediately after unsuccessful the first unsuccessfull attempt. Patch
tries to improve the situation, trying to vectorize all binary
operations of all children nodes in the binop tree.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25517
llvm-svn: 288115
Summary:
The "getVectorizablePrefix" method would give up if it found an aliasing load for a store chain.
In practice, the aliasing load can be treated as a memory barrier and all stores that precede it
are a valid vectorizable prefix.
Issue found by volkan in D26962. Testcase is a pruned version of the one in the original patch.
Reviewers: jlebar, arsenm, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, wdng, nhaehnle, anna, volkan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27008
llvm-svn: 287781
This patch updates a bunch of places where add_dependencies was being explicitly called to add dependencies on intrinsics_gen to instead use the DEPENDS named parameter. This cleanup is needed for a patch I'm working on to add a dependency debugging mode to the build system.
llvm-svn: 287206
The register usage algorithm incorrectly treats instructions whose value is
not used within the loop (e.g. those that do not produce a value).
The algorithm first calculates the usages within the loop. It iterates over
the instructions in order, and records at which instruction index each use
ends (in fact, they're actually recorded against the next index, as this is
when we want to delete them from the open intervals).
The algorithm then iterates over the instructions again, adding each
instruction in turn to a list of open intervals. Instructions are then
removed from the list of open intervals when they occur in the list of uses
ended at the current index.
The problem is, instructions which are not used in the loop are skipped.
However, although they aren't used, the last use of a value may have been
recorded against that instruction index. In this case, the use is not deleted
from the open intervals, which may then bump up the estimated register usage.
This patch fixes the issue by simply moving the "is used" check after the loop
which erases the uses at the current index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26554
llvm-svn: 286969
This is PR28376.
Unfortunately given the current structure of optimization diagnostics we
lack the capability to tell whether the user has
passed -Rpass-analysis=loop-vectorize since this is local to the
front-end (BackendConsumer::OptimizationRemarkHandler).
So rather than printing this even if the user has already
passed -Rpass-analysis, this patch just punts and stops recommending
this option. I don't think that getting this right is worth the
complexity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26563
llvm-svn: 286662
possible pointer-wrap-around concerns, in some cases.
Before this patch, collectConstStridedAccesses (part of interleaved-accesses
analysis) called getPtrStride with [Assume=false, ShouldCheckWrap=true] when
examining all candidate pointers. This is too conservative. Instead, this
patch makes collectConstStridedAccesses use an optimistic approach, calling
getPtrStride with [Assume=true, ShouldCheckWrap=false], and then, once the
candidate interleave groups have been formed, revisits the pointer-wrapping
analysis but only where it matters: namely, in groups that have gaps, and where
the gaps are not at the very end of the group (in which case the loop is
peeled). This second time getPtrStride is called with [Assume=false,
ShouldCheckWrap=true], but this could further be improved to using Assume=true,
once we also add the logic to track that we are not going to meet the scev
runtime checks threshold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25276
llvm-svn: 285517
After successfull horizontal reduction vectorization attempt for PHI node
vectorizer tries to update root binary op by combining vectorized tree
and the ReductionPHI node. But during vectorization this ReductionPHI
can be vectorized itself and replaced by the `undef` value, while the
instruction itself is marked for deletion. This 'marked for deletion'
PHI node then can be used in new binary operation, causing "Use still
stuck around after Def is destroyed" crash upon PHI node deletion.
Also the test is fixed to make it perform actual testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25671
llvm-svn: 285286
When we predicate an instruction (div, rem, store) we place the instruction in
its own basic block within the vectorized loop. If a predicated instruction has
scalar operands, it's possible to recursively sink these scalar expressions
into the predicated block so that they might avoid execution. This patch sinks
as much scalar computation as possible into predicated blocks. We previously
were able to sink such operands only if they were extractelement instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25632
llvm-svn: 285097
Some instructions from the original loop, when vectorized, can become trivially
dead. This happens because of the way we structure the new loop. For example,
we create new induction variables and induction variable "steps" in the new
loop. Thus, when we go to vectorize the original induction variable update, it
may no longer be needed due to the instructions we've already created. This
patch prevents us from creating these redundant instructions. This reduces code
size before simplification and allows greater flexibility in code generation
since we have fewer unnecessary instruction uses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25631
llvm-svn: 284631
This patch modifies the cost calculation of predicated instructions (div and
rem) to avoid the accumulation of rounding errors due to multiple truncating
integer divisions. The calculation for predicated stores will be addressed in a
follow-on patch since we currently don't scale the cost of predicated stores by
block probability.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25333
llvm-svn: 284123
Previously, we marked the branch conditions of latch blocks uniform after
vectorization if they were instructions contained in the loop. However, if a
condition instruction has users other than the branch, it may not remain
uniform. This patch ensures the conditions we mark uniform are only used by the
branch. This should fix PR30627.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30627
llvm-svn: 283563
unrolling.
The next code is not vectorized by the SLPVectorizer:
```
int test(unsigned int *p) {
int sum = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 8; i++)
sum += p[i];
return sum;
}
```
During optimization this loop is fully unrolled and SLPVectorizer is
unable to vectorize it. Patch tries to fix this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24796
llvm-svn: 283535
The vectorizer already holds a pointer to one cost model artifact in a member
variable (i.e., MinBWs). As we add more, it will be easier to communicate these
artifacts to the vectorizer if we simply pass a pointer to the cost model
instead.
llvm-svn: 283373
The vectorizer already holds a pointer to the legality analysis in a member
variable, so it makes sense that we would pass it in the constructor.
llvm-svn: 283368
This patch refactors the cost estimation of scalarized loads and stores to
reuse getScalarizationOverhead for the cost of the extractelement and
insertelement instructions we might create. The existing code accounted for
this cost, but it was functionally equivalent to the helper function.
llvm-svn: 283364
The cost model has to estimate the probability of executing predicated blocks.
However, we currently always assume predicated blocks have a 50% chance of
executing (this value is hardcoded in several places throughout the code).
Since we always use the same value, this patch adds a helper function for
getting this uniform probability. The function simplifies some comments and
makes our assumptions more clear. In the future, we may want to extend this
with actual block probability information if it's available.
llvm-svn: 283354
This patch adds a single helper function for checking if an instruction will be
scalarized with predication. Such instructions include conditional stores and
instructions that may divide by zero. Existing checks have been updated to use
the new function.
llvm-svn: 283350
Summary: Added 6 new target hooks for the vectorizer in order to filter types, handle size constraints and decide how to split chains.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, mzolotukhin, wdng, llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24727
llvm-svn: 283099
When building the steps for scalar induction variables, we previously attempted
to determine if all the scalar users of the induction variable were uniform. If
they were, we would only emit the step corresponding to vector lane zero. This
optimization was too aggressive. We generally don't know the entire set of
induction variable users that will be scalar. We have
isScalarAfterVectorization, but this is only a conservative estimate of the
instructions that will be scalarized. Thus, an induction variable may have
scalar users that aren't already known to be scalar. To avoid emitting unused
steps, we can only check that the induction variable is uniform. This should
fix PR30542.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30542
llvm-svn: 282863
(Recommit after making sure IsVerbose gets properly initialized in
DiagnosticInfoOptimizationBase. See previous commit that takes care of
this.)
OptimizationRemarkAnalysis directly takes the role of the report that is
generated by LAA.
Then we need the magic to be able to turn an LAA remark into an LV
remark. This is done via a new OptimizationRemark ctor.
llvm-svn: 282813
OptimizationRemarkAnalysis directly takes the role of the report that is
generated by LAA.
Then we need the magic to be able to turn an LAA remark into an LV
remark. This is done via a new OptimizationRemark ctor.
llvm-svn: 282758
The last one remaining after which emitAnalysis can be removed is when
we convert the LAA's report to a vectorization report. This requires
converting LAA to the new interface first.
llvm-svn: 282726
This patch ensures that we actually scalarize instructions marked scalar after
vectorization. Previously, such instructions may have been vectorized instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23889
llvm-svn: 282418
If we identify an instruction as uniform after vectorization, we know that we
should only use the value corresponding to the first vector lane of each unroll
iteration. However, when scalarizing such instructions, we still produce values
for the other vector lanes. This patch prevents us from generating the unused
scalars.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24275
llvm-svn: 282087
Simplified GEP cloning in vectorizeMemoryInstruction().
Added an assertion that checks consecutive GEP, which should have only one loop-variant operand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24557
llvm-svn: 281851
This patch moves the processing of pointer induction variables in
collectLoopUniforms from the consecutive pointer phase of the analysis to the
phi node phase. Previously, if a pointer induction variable was used by both a
scalarized non-memory instruction as well as a vectorized memory instruction,
we would incorrectly identify the pointer as uniform. Pointer induction
variables should be treated the same as other phi nodes. That is, they are
uniform if all users of the induction variable and induction variable update
are uniform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24511
llvm-svn: 281485
The test case included in r280979 wasn't checking what it was supposed to be
checking for the predicated store case. Fixing the test revealed that the
multi-use case (when a pointer is used by both vectorized and scalarized memory
accesses) wasn't being handled properly. We can't skip over
non-consecutive-like pointers since they may have looked consecutive-like with
a different memory access.
llvm-svn: 280992
Previously, all consecutive pointers were marked uniform after vectorization.
However, if a consecutive pointer is used by a memory access that is eventually
scalarized, the pointer won't remain uniform after all. An example is
predicated stores. Even though a predicated store may be consecutive, it will
still be scalarized, making it's pointer operand non-uniform.
This patch updates the logic in collectLoopUniforms to consider the cases where
a memory access may be scalarized. If a memory access may be scalarized, its
pointer operand is not marked uniform. The determination of whether a given
memory instruction will be scalarized or not has been moved into a common
function that is used by the vectorizer, cost model, and legality analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24271
llvm-svn: 280979
Summary:
LSV replaces multiple adjacent loads with one vectorized load and a
bunch of extractelement instructions. This patch makes the
extractelement instructions' names match those of the original loads,
for (hopefully) improved readability.
Reviewers: asbirlea, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23748
llvm-svn: 280818
Inheriting from std::iterator uses more boiler-plate than manual
typedefs. Avoid that in both ilist_iterator and
MachineInstrBundleIterator.
This has the side effect of removing ilist_iterator from certain ADL
lookups in namespace std; calls to std::next need to be qualified by
"std::" that didn't have to before. The one case of this in-tree was
operating on a temporary, so I used the more compact operator++.
llvm-svn: 280570
For uniform instructions, we're only required to generate a scalar value for
the first vector lane of each unroll iteration. Thus, if we have a reverse
interleaved group, computing the member index off the scalar GEP corresponding
to the last vector lane of its pointer operand technically makes the GEP
non-uniform. We should compute the member index off the first scalar GEP
instead.
I've added the updated member index computation to the existing reverse
interleaved group test.
llvm-svn: 280497
We can now maintain scalar values in VectorLoopValueMap. Thus, we no longer
have to create temporary vectors with insertelement instructions when handling
pointer induction variables. This case was mistakenly missed from r279649 when
refactoring the other scalarization code.
llvm-svn: 280405
This patch moves the allocation of VectorParts for PHI nodes into the actual
PHI widening code. Previously, we allocated these VectorParts in
vectorizeBlockInLoop, and passed them by reference to widenPHIInstruction. Upon
returning, we would then map the VectorParts in VectorLoopValueMap. This
behavior is problematic for the cases where we only want to generate a scalar
version of a PHI node. For example, if in the future we only generate a scalar
version of an induction variable, we would end up inserting an empty vector
entry into the map once we return to vectorizeBlockInLoop. We now no longer
need to pass VectorParts to the various PHI widening functions, and we can keep
VectorParts allocation as close as possible to the point at which they are
actually mapped in VectorLoopValueMap.
llvm-svn: 280390
Passing the types/opcode check still doesn't guarantee we'll actually vectorize.
Therefore, just make it clear we're attempting to vectorize.
llvm-svn: 280263
Summary:
LSV was using two vector sets (heads and tails) to track pairs of adjiacent position to vectorize.
A recent optimization is trying to obtain the longest chain to vectorize and assumes the positions
in heads(H) and tails(T) match, which is not the case is there are multiple tails for the same head.
e.g.:
i1: store a[0]
i2: store a[1]
i3: store a[1]
Leads to:
H: i1
T: i2 i3
Instead of:
H: i1 i1
T: i2 i3
So the positions for instructions that follow i3 will have different indexes in H/T.
This patch resolves PR29148.
This issue also surfaced the fact that if the chain is too long, and TLI
returns a "not-fast" answer, the whole chain will be abandoned for
vectorization, even though a smaller one would be beneficial.
Added a testcase and FIXME for this.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm, jlebar
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24057
llvm-svn: 280179
We don't need to limit predication to blocks that have a single incoming
edge, we just need to use the right mask.
This fixes PR30172.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24009
llvm-svn: 280148
Reverse iterators to doubly-linked lists can be simpler (and cheaper)
than std::reverse_iterator. Make it so.
In particular, change ilist<T>::reverse_iterator so that it is *never*
invalidated unless the node it references is deleted. This matches the
guarantees of ilist<T>::iterator.
(Note: MachineBasicBlock::iterator is *not* an ilist iterator, but a
MachineInstrBundleIterator<MachineInstr>. This commit does not change
MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator, but it does update
MachineBasicBlock::reverse_instr_iterator. See note at end of commit
message for details on bundle iterators.)
Given the list (with the Sentinel showing twice for simplicity):
[Sentinel] <-> A <-> B <-> [Sentinel]
the following is now true:
1. begin() represents A.
2. begin() holds the pointer for A.
3. end() represents [Sentinel].
4. end() holds the poitner for [Sentinel].
5. rbegin() represents B.
6. rbegin() holds the pointer for B.
7. rend() represents [Sentinel].
8. rend() holds the pointer for [Sentinel].
The changes are #6 and #8. Here are some properties from the old
scheme (which used std::reverse_iterator):
- rbegin() held the pointer for [Sentinel] and rend() held the pointer
for A;
- operator*() cost two dereferences instead of one;
- converting from a valid iterator to its valid reverse_iterator
involved a confusing increment; and
- "RI++->erase()" left RI invalid. The unintuitive replacement was
"RI->erase(), RE = end()".
With vector-like data structures these properties are hard to avoid
(since past-the-beginning is not a valid pointer), and don't impose a
real cost (since there's still only one dereference, and all iterators
are invalidated on erase). But with lists, this was a poor design.
Specifically, the following code (which obviously works with normal
iterators) now works with ilist::reverse_iterator as well:
for (auto RI = L.rbegin(), RE = L.rend(); RI != RE;)
fooThatMightRemoveArgFromList(*RI++);
Converting between iterator and reverse_iterator for the same node uses
the getReverse() function.
reverse_iterator iterator::getReverse();
iterator reverse_iterator::getReverse();
Why doesn't iterator <=> reverse_iterator conversion use constructors?
In order to catch and update old code, reverse_iterator does not even
have an explicit conversion from iterator. It wouldn't be safe because
there would be no reasonable way to catch all the bugs from the changed
semantic (see the changes at call sites that are part of this patch).
Old code used this API:
std::reverse_iterator::reverse_iterator(iterator);
iterator std::reverse_iterator::base();
Here's how to update from old code to new (that incorporates the
semantic change), assuming I is an ilist<>::iterator and RI is an
ilist<>::reverse_iterator:
[Old] ==> [New]
reverse_iterator(I) (--I).getReverse()
reverse_iterator(I) ++I.getReverse()
--reverse_iterator(I) I.getReverse()
reverse_iterator(++I) I.getReverse()
RI.base() (--RI).getReverse()
RI.base() ++RI.getReverse()
--RI.base() RI.getReverse()
(++RI).base() RI.getReverse()
delete &*RI, RE = end() delete &*RI++
RI->erase(), RE = end() RI++->erase()
=======================================
Note: bundle iterators are out of scope
=======================================
MachineBasicBlock::iterator, also known as
MachineInstrBundleIterator<MachineInstr>, is a wrapper to represent
MachineInstr bundles. The idea is that each operator++ takes you to the
beginning of the next bundle. Implementing a sane reverse iterator for
this is harder than ilist. Here are the options:
- Use std::reverse_iterator<MBB::i>. Store a handle to the beginning of
the next bundle. A call to operator*() runs a loop (usually
operator--() will be called 1 time, for unbundled instructions).
Increment/decrement just works. This is the status quo.
- Store a handle to the final node in the bundle. A call to operator*()
still runs a loop, but it iterates one time fewer (usually
operator--() will be called 0 times, for unbundled instructions).
Increment/decrement just works.
- Make the ilist_sentinel<MachineInstr> *always* store that it's the
sentinel (instead of just in asserts mode). Then the bundle iterator
can sniff the sentinel bit in operator++().
I initially tried implementing the end() option as part of this commit,
but updating iterator/reverse_iterator conversion call sites was
error-prone. I have a WIP series of patches that implements the final
option.
llvm-svn: 280032
After r279649 when getting a vector value from VectorLoopValueMap, we create an
insertelement sequence on-demand if the value has been scalarized instead of
vectorized. We previously inserted this insertelement sequence before the
value's first vector user. However, this insert location is problematic if that
user is the phi node of a first-order recurrence. With this patch, we move the
insertelement sequence after the last scalar instruction we created when
scalarizing the value. Thus, the value's vector definition in the new loop will
immediately follow its scalar definitions. This should fix PR30183.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30183
llvm-svn: 280001
This patch unifies the data structures we use for mapping instructions from the
original loop to their corresponding instructions in the new loop. Previously,
we maintained two distinct maps for this purpose: WidenMap and ScalarIVMap.
WidenMap maintained the vector values each instruction from the old loop was
represented with, and ScalarIVMap maintained the scalar values each scalarized
induction variable was represented with. With this patch, all values created
for the new loop are maintained in VectorLoopValueMap.
The change allows for several simplifications. Previously, when an instruction
was scalarized, we had to insert the scalar values into vectors in order to
maintain the mapping in WidenMap. Then, if a user of the scalarized value was
also scalar, we had to extract the scalar values from the temporary vector we
created. We now aovid these unnecessary scalar-to-vector-to-scalar conversions.
If a scalarized value is used by a scalar instruction, the scalar value is used
directly. However, if the scalarized value is needed by a vector instruction,
we generate the needed insertelement instructions on-demand.
A common idiom in several locations in the code (including the scalarization
code), is to first get the vector values an instruction from the original loop
maps to, and then extract a particular scalar value. This patch adds
getScalarValue for this purpose along side getVectorValue as an interface into
VectorLoopValueMap. These functions work together to return the requested
values if they're available or to produce them if they're not.
The mapping has also be made less permissive. Entries can be added to
VectorLoopValue map with the new initVector and initScalar functions.
getVectorValue has been modified to return a constant reference to the mapped
entries.
There's no real functional change with this patch; however, in some cases we
will generate slightly different code. For example, instead of an insertelement
sequence following the definition of an instruction, it will now precede the
first use of that instruction. This can be seen in the test case changes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23169
llvm-svn: 279649
div/rem instructions in basic blocks that require predication currently prevent
vectorization. This patch extends the existing mechanism for predicating stores
to handle other instructions and leverages it to predicate divs and rems.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22918
llvm-svn: 279620
The test case included with r279125 exposed an existing signed integer
overflow. Since getTreeCost can return INT_MAX, we can't sum this cost together
with other costs, such as getReductionCost.
This patch removes the possibility of assigning a cost of INT_MAX. Since we
were previously using INT_MAX as an indicator for "should not vectorize", we
now explicitly check this condition with "isTreeTinyAndNotFullyVectorizable"
before computing a cost.
This patch adds a run-line to the test case used for r279125 that ensures we
don't vectorize. Previously, this line would vectorize the test case by chance
due to undefined behavior in the cost calculation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23723
llvm-svn: 279562
The test case included in r279125 exposed existing undefined behavior in the
SLP vectorizer that it did not introduce. This patch reapplies the original
patch, but modifies the test case to avoid hitting the undefined behavior. This
allows us to close PR28330 while keeping the UBSan bot happy. The undefined
behavior the original test uncovered will be addressed in a follow-on patch.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28330
llvm-svn: 279370
We abort building vectorizable trees in some cases (e.g., if the maximum
recursion depth is reached, if the region size is too large, etc.). If this
happens for a reduction, we can be left with a root entry that needs to be
gathered. For these cases, we need make sure we actually set VectorizedValue to
the resulting vector.
This patch ensures we properly set VectorizedValue, and it also ensures the
insertelement sequence generated for the gathers is inserted at the correct
location.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28330
Differential Revison: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23410
llvm-svn: 279125
Summary: I later (after r278573) found that LoopIterator.h has some overlapping with LoopBodyTraits. It's good to use LoopBodyTraits because a *Traits struct is algorithm independent.
Reviewers: anemet, nadav, mkuper
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23529
llvm-svn: 278996
Summary:
In getVectorizablePrefix, this is less efficient (because we have to
iterate over the BB twice), but boy is it simpler. Given how much
trouble we've had here, I think the simplicity gain is worthwhile.
In reorder(), this is actually more efficient, as
DominatorTree::dominates iterates over the BB from the beginning when
the two instructions are in the same BB.
Reviewers: asbirlea
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23472
llvm-svn: 278580
InnerLoopVectorizer shouldn't handle a loop with cycles inside the loop
body, even if that cycle isn't a natural loop.
Fixes PR28541.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22952
llvm-svn: 278573
Shifts with a uniform but non-constant count were considered very expensive to
vectorize, because the splat of the uniform count and the shift would tend to
appear in different blocks. That made the splat invisible to ISel, and we'd
scalarize the shift at codegen time.
Since r201655, CodeGenPrepare sinks those splats to be next to their use, and we
are able to select the appropriate vector shifts. This updates the cost model to
to take this into account by making shifts by a uniform cheap again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23049
llvm-svn: 277782
Summary:
TargetBaseAlign is no longer required since LSV checks if target allows misaligned accesses.
A constant defining a base alignment is still needed for stack accesses where alignment can be adjusted.
Previous patch (D22936) was reverted because tests were failing. This patch also fixes the cause of those failures:
- x86 failing tests either did not have the right target, or the right alignment.
- NVPTX failing tests did not have the right alignment.
- AMDGPU failing test (merge-stores) should allow vectorization with the given alignment but the target info
considers <3xi32> a non-standard type and gives up early. This patch removes the condition and only checks
for a maximum size allowed and relies on the next condition checking for %4 for correctness.
This should be revisited to include 3xi32 as a MVT type (on arsenm's non-immediate todo list).
Note that checking the sizeInBits for a MVT is undefined (leads to an assertion failure),
so we need to create an EVT, hence the interface change in allowsMisaligned to include the Context.
Reviewers: arsenm, jlebar, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23068
llvm-svn: 277735
Update comment for isOutOfScope and add a testcase for uniform value being used
out of scope.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23073
llvm-svn: 277515
This patch enables the vectorizer to generate both scalar and vector versions
of an integer induction variable for a given loop. Previously, we only
generated a scalar induction variable if we knew all its users were going to be
scalar. Otherwise, we generated a vector induction variable. In the case of a
loop with both scalar and vector users of the induction variable, we would
generate the vector induction variable and extract scalar values from it for
the scalar users. With this patch, we now generate both versions of the
induction variable when there are both scalar and vector users and select which
version to use based on whether the user is scalar or vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22869
llvm-svn: 277474
This patch refactors the logic in collectLoopUniforms and
collectValuesToIgnore, untangling the concepts of "uniform" and "scalar". It
adds isScalarAfterVectorization along side isUniformAfterVectorization to
distinguish the two. Known scalar values include those that are uniform,
getelementptr instructions that won't be vectorized, and induction variables
and induction variable update instructions whose users are all known to be
scalar.
This patch includes the following functional changes:
- In collectLoopUniforms, we mark uniform the pointer operands of interleaved
accesses. Although non-consecutive, these pointers are treated like
consecutive pointers during vectorization.
- In collectValuesToIgnore, we insert a value into VecValuesToIgnore if it
isScalarAfterVectorization rather than isUniformAfterVectorization. This
differs from the previous functionaly in that we now add getelementptr
instructions that will not be vectorized into VecValuesToIgnore.
This patch also removes the ValuesNotWidened set used for induction variable
scalarization since, after the above changes, it is now equivalent to
isScalarAfterVectorization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22867
llvm-svn: 277460
Summary:
TargetBaseAlign is no longer required since LSV checks if target allows misaligned accesses.
A constant defining a base alignment is still needed for stack accesses where alignment can be adjusted.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, jlebar
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22936
llvm-svn: 277038
Summary:
Given the crash in D22878, this patch converts the load/store vectorizer
to use explicit Instruction*s wherever possible. This is an overall
simplification and should be an improvement in safety, as we have fewer
naked cast<>s, and now where we use Value*, we really mean something
different from Instruction*.
This patch also gets rid of some cast<>s around Value*s returned by
Builder. Given that Builder constant-folds everything, we can't assume
much about what we get out of it.
One downside of this patch is that we have to copy our chain before
calling propagateMetadata. But I don't think this is a big deal, as our
chains are very small (usually 2 or 4 elems).
Reviewers: asbirlea
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22887
llvm-svn: 276938
Summary:
When we ask the builder to create a bitcast on a constant, we get back a
constant, not an instruction.
Reviewers: asbirlea
Subscribers: jholewinski, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22878
llvm-svn: 276922
Allowed loop vectorization with secondary FP IVs. Like this:
float *A;
float x = init;
for (int i=0; i < N; ++i) {
A[i] = x;
x -= fp_inc;
}
The auto-vectorization is possible when the induction binary operator is "fast" or the function has "unsafe" attribute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21330
llvm-svn: 276554
When vectorizing a tree rooted at a store bundle, we currently try to sort the
stores before building the tree, so that the stores can be vectorized. For other
trees, the order of the root bundle - which determines the order of all other
bundles - is arbitrary. That is bad, since if a leaf bundle of consecutive loads
happens to appear in the wrong order, we will not vectorize it.
This is partially mitigated when the root is a binary operator, by trying to
build a "reversed" tree when that's considered profitable. This patch extends the
workaround we have for binops to trees rooted in a horizontal reduction.
This fixes PR28474.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22554
llvm-svn: 276477
This patch moves the update instruction for vectorized integer induction phi
nodes to the end of the latch block. This ensures consistent placement of all
induction updates across all the kinds of int inductions we create (scalar,
splat vector, or vector phi).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22416
llvm-svn: 276339
The earlier change added hotness attribute to missed-optimization
remarks. This follows up with the analysis remarks (the ones explaining
the reason for the missed optimization).
llvm-svn: 276192
Summary:
Previously we wouldn't move loads/stores across instructions that had
side-effects, where that was defined as may-write or may-throw. But
this is not sufficiently restrictive: Stores can't safely be moved
across instructions that may load.
This patch also adds a DEBUG check that all instructions in our chain
are either loads or stores.
Reviewers: asbirlea
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski, arsenm, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22547
llvm-svn: 276171
Summary:
Previously if we had a chain that contained a side-effecting
instruction, we wouldn't vectorize it at all. Now we'll vectorize
everything that comes before the side-effecting instruction.
Reviewers: asbirlea
Subscribers: arsenm, jholewinski, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22536
llvm-svn: 276170
Summary:
getVectorizablePrefix previously didn't work properly in the face of
aliasing loads/stores. It unwittingly assumed that the loads/stores
appeared in the BB in address order. If they didn't, it would do the
wrong thing.
Reviewers: asbirlea, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22535
llvm-svn: 276072
Summary:
Previously, the insertion point for stores was the last instruction in
Chain *before calling getVectorizablePrefixEndIdx*. Thus if
getVectorizablePrefixEndIdx didn't return Chain.size(), we still would
insert at the last instruction in Chain.
This patch changes our internal API a bit in an attempt to make it less
prone to this sort of error. As a result, we end up recalculating the
Chain's boundary instructions, but I think worrying about the speed hit
of this is a premature optimization right now.
Reviewers: asbirlea, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22534
llvm-svn: 276056
Summary:
The DEBUG message was hard to read because two Values were being printed
on the same line with only the delimiter "aliases". This change makes
us print each Value on its own line.
Reviewers: asbirlea
Subscribers: llvm-commits, arsenm, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22533
llvm-svn: 276055
For instructions in uniform set, they will not have vector versions so
add them to VecValuesToIgnore.
For induction vars, those only used in uniform instructions or consecutive
ptrs instructions have already been added to VecValuesToIgnore above. For
those induction vars which are only used in uniform instructions or
non-consecutive/non-gather scatter ptr instructions, the related phi and
update will also be added into VecValuesToIgnore set.
The change will make the vector RegUsages estimation less conservative.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20474
The recommit fixed the testcase global_alias.ll.
llvm-svn: 275936
For instructions in uniform set, they will not have vector versions so
add them to VecValuesToIgnore.
For induction vars, those only used in uniform instructions or consecutive
ptrs instructions have already been added to VecValuesToIgnore above. For
those induction vars which are only used in uniform instructions or
non-consecutive/non-gather scatter ptr instructions, the related phi and
update will also be added into VecValuesToIgnore set.
The change will make the vector RegUsages estimation less conservative.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20474
llvm-svn: 275912
This patch swaps A and B in the interleaved access analysis and clarifies
related comments. The algorithm is more intuitive if we let access A precede
access B in program order rather than the reverse. This change was requested in
the review of D19984.
llvm-svn: 275567
We now collect all accesses with a constant stride, not just the ones with a
stride greater than one. This change was requested in the review of D19984.
llvm-svn: 275473
This patch allows the formation of interleaved access groups in loops
containing predicated blocks. However, the predicated accesses are prevented
from forming groups.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19694
llvm-svn: 275471
This patch prevents increases in the number of instructions, pre-instcombine,
due to induction variable scalarization. An increase in instructions can lead
to an increase in the compile-time required to simplify the induction
variables. We now maintain a new map for scalarized induction variables to
prevent us from converting between the scalar and vector forms.
This patch should resolve compile-time regressions seen after r274627.
llvm-svn: 275419
Summary:
LSV used to abort vectorizing a chain for interleaved load/store accesses that alias.
Allow a valid prefix of the chain to be vectorized, mark just the prefix and retry vectorizing the remaining chain.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, jlebar, arsenm
Subscribers: mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22119
llvm-svn: 275317
The LCSSA pass itself will not generate several redundant PHI nodes in a single
exit block. However, such redundant PHI nodes don't violate LCSSA form, and may
be introduced by passes that preserve LCSSA, and/or preserved by the LCSSA pass
itself. So, assuming a single PHI node per exit block is not safe.
llvm-svn: 275217