LLVM's coding guideline suggests to not use @brief for one-sentence doxygen
comments to improve readability. Switch this once and for all to ensure people
do not copy @brief comments from other parts of Polly, when writing new code.
llvm-svn: 280468
This is a regular maintenance update to ensure the latest version of isl is
tested.
Interesting Changes:
- AST nodes and expressions are now printed as YAML
llvm-svn: 274614
llvm commonly adds a comment to the closing brace of a namespace to indicate
which namespace is closed. clang-tidy provides with llvm-namespace-comment
a handy tool to check for this habit. We use it to ensure we consitently use
namespace comments in Polly.
There are slightly different styles in how namespaces are closed in LLVM. As
there is no large difference between the different comment styles we go for the
style clang-tidy suggests by default.
To reproduce this fix run:
for i in `ls tools/polly/lib/*/*.cpp`; \
clang-tidy -checks='-*,llvm-namespace-comment' -p build $i -fix \
-header-filter=".*"; \
done
This cleanup was suggested by Eugene Zelenko <eugene.zelenko@gmail.com> in
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21488 and was split out to increase readability.
llvm-svn: 273621
The recent expression type changes still need more discussion, which will happen
on phabricator or on the mailing list. The precise list of commits reverted are:
- "Refactor division generation code"
- "[NFC] Generate runtime checks after the SCoP"
- "[FIX] Determine insertion point during SCEV expansion"
- "Look through IntToPtr & PtrToInt instructions"
- "Use minimal types for generated expressions"
- "Temporarily promote values to i64 again"
- "[NFC] Avoid unnecessary comparison for min/max expressions"
- "[Polly] Fix -Wunused-variable warnings (NFC)"
- "[NFC] Simplify min/max expression generation"
- "Simplify the type adjustment in the IslExprBuilder"
Some of them are just reverted as we would otherwise get conflicts. I will try
to re-commit them if possible.
llvm-svn: 272483
We now generate runtime checks __after__ the SCoP code generation and
not before, though they are still inserted at the same position int
the code. This allows to modify the runtime check during SCoP code
generation.
llvm-svn: 271894
Created a new pass ScopInfoRegionPass. As name suggests, it is a
region pass and it is there to preserve compatibility with our
existing Polly passes. ScopInfoRegionPass will return a SCoP object
for a valid region while the creation of the SCoP stays in the
ScopInfo class.
Contributed-by: Utpal Bora <cs14mtech11017@iith.ac.in>
Reviewed-by: Tobias Grosser <tobias@grosser.es>,
Johannes Doerfert <doerfert@cs.uni-saarland.de>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20770
llvm-svn: 271259
Min/max expressions are easier to read and can in some cases also result in
more concise IR that is generated as the min/max --- when lowered to a
cmp+select pattern -- commonly has a simpler condition then the ternary
condition isl would normally generate.
llvm-svn: 268855
In order to speed up compile time and to avoid random timeouts we now
separately track assumptions and restrictions. In this context
assumptions describe parameter valuations we need and restrictions
describe parameter valuations we do not allow. During AST generation
we create a runtime check for both, whereas the one for the
restrictions is negated before a conjunction is build.
Except the In-Bounds assumptions we currently only track restrictions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17247
llvm-svn: 262328
This allows to construct run-time checks for a scop without having to generate
a full AST. This is currently not taken advantage of in Polly itself, but
external users may benefit from this feature.
llvm-svn: 262009
This allows other passes and transformations to use some of the existing AST
building infrastructure. This is not yet used in Polly itself.
llvm-svn: 261496
After we moved isl_ctx into Scop, we need to free the isl_ctx after
freeing all isl objects, which requires the ScopInfo pass to be freed
at last. But this is not guaranteed by the PassManager, and we need
extra code to free the isl_ctx at the right time.
We introduced a shared pointer to manage the isl_ctx, and distribute
it to all analyses that create isl objects. As such, whenever we free
an analyses with the shared_ptr (and also free the isl objects which
are created by the analyses), we decrease the (shared) reference
counter of the shared_ptr by 1. Whenever the reference counter reach
0 in the releaseMemory function of an analysis, that analysis will
be the last one that hold any isl objects, and we can safely free the
isl_ctx with that analysis.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17241
llvm-svn: 261100
We remove -polly-detect-unprofitable and -polly-no-early-exit. Both have been
superseeded by -polly-process-unprofitable and were only kept as aliases for
our buildbots to continue to work. As all buildbots have been moved to the new
options, we can now remove the old ones for good.
llvm-svn: 251787
This single option replaces -polly-detect-unprofitable and -polly-no-early-exit
and is supposed to be the only option that disables compile-time heuristics that
aim to bail out early on scops that are believed to not benefit from Polly
optimizations.
Suggested-by: Johannes Doerfert
llvm-svn: 249426
Instead of generating code for an empty assumed context we bail out
early. As the number of assumptions we generate increases this becomes
more and more important. Additionally, this change will allow us to
hide internal contexts that are only used in runtime checks e.g., a
boundary context with constraints not suited for simplifications.
llvm-svn: 245540
The July issue of TOPLAS contains a 50 page discussion of the AST generation
techniques used in Polly. This discussion gives not only an in-depth
description of how we (re)generate an imperative AST from our polyhedral based
mathematical program description, but also gives interesting insights about:
- Schedule trees: A tree-based mathematical program description that enables us
to perform loop transformations on an abstract level, while issues like the
generation of the correct loop structure and loop bounds will be taken care of
by our AST generator.
- Polyhedral unrolling: We discuss techniques that allow the unrolling of
non-trivial loops in the context of parameteric loop bounds, complex tile
shapes and conditionally executed statements. Such unrolling support enables
the generation of predicated code e.g. in the context of GPGPU computing.
- Isolation for full/partial tile separation: We discuss native support for
handling full/partial tile separation and -- in general -- native support for
isolation of boundary cases to enable smooth code generation for core
computations.
- AST generation with modulo constraints: We discuss how modulo mappings are
lowered to efficient C/LLVM code.
- User-defined constraint sets for run-time checks We discuss how arbitrary
sets of constraints can be used to automatically create run-time checks that
ensure a set of constrainst actually hold. This feature is very useful to
verify at run-time various assumptions that have been taken program
optimization.
Polyhedral AST generation is more than scanning polyhedra
Tobias Grosser, Sven Verdoolaege, Albert Cohen
ACM Transations on Programming Languages and Systems (TOPLAS), 37(4), July 2015
llvm-svn: 245157
It is common practice to keep constructors lightweight. The reasons
include:
- The vtable during the constructor's execution is set to the static
type of the object, not to the vtable of the derived class. That is,
method calls behave differently in constructors and ordinary methods.
This way it is possible to call unimplemented methods of abstract
classes, which usually results in a segmentation fault.
- If an exception is thrown in the constructor, the destructor is not
called, potentially leaking memory.
- Code in constructors cannot be called in a regular way, e.g. from
non-constructor methods of derived classes.
- Because it is common practice, people may not expect the constructor
to do more than initializing data and skip them when looking for bugs.
Not all of these are applicable to LLVM (e.g. exceptions are disabled).
This patch refactors out the computational work in the constructors of
Scop and IslAst into regular init functions and introduces static
create-functions as replacement.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11491
Reviewers: grosser, jdoerfert
llvm-svn: 243677
As specified in PR23888, run-time alias check generation is expensive
in terms of compile-time. This reduces the compile time by computing
minimal/maximal access only once for each base pointer
Contributed-by: Pratik Bhatu <cs12b1010@iith.ac.in>
llvm-svn: 243024
Instead of flat schedules, we now use so-called schedule trees to represent the
execution order of the statements in a SCoP. Schedule trees make it a lot easier
to analyze, understand and modify properties of a schedule, as specific nodes
in the tree can be choosen and possibly replaced.
This patch does not yet fully move our DependenceInfo pass to schedule trees,
as some additional performance analysis is needed here. (In general schedule
trees should be faster in compile-time, as the more structured representation
is generally easier to analyze and work with). We also can not yet perform the
reduction analysis on schedule trees.
For more information regarding schedule trees, please see Section 6 of
https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/497238
llvm-svn: 242130
Upcoming revisions of isl require us to include header files explicitly, which
have previously been already transitively included. Before we add them, we sort
the existing includes.
Thanks to Chandler for sort_includes.py. A simple, but very convenient script.
llvm-svn: 236930
The new Dependences struct in the DependenceInfo holds all information
that was formerly part of the DependenceInfo. It also provides the
same interface for the user to access this information.
This is another step to a more general ScopPass interface that does
allow multiple SCoPs to be "in flight".
llvm-svn: 231327
We rename the Dependences pass to DependenceInfo as a first step to a
caching pass policy. The new DependenceInfo pass will later provide
"Dependences" for a SCoP.
To keep consistency the test folder is renamed too.
llvm-svn: 231308
isl recently introduced a new interface to create run-time checks from
constraint sets. Use this interface to simplify our run-time check generation.
llvm-svn: 230640
This allows us to skip ast and code generation if we did not optimize
a SCoP and will not generate parallel or alias annotations. The
initial heuristic to exit is simple but allows improvements later on.
All failing test cases have been modified to disable early exit, thus
to keep their coverage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7254
llvm-svn: 228851
Instead of parallelizing every parallel outermost loop, we now use a very
minimalistic cost model. Specifically, we assume innermost loops are not
worth parallelising and all non-innermost loops are.
When parallelizing all loops in LNT we got several slowdowns/timeouts due to
us parallelizing innermost loops that are executed only a couple of times
(number of iterations not known statically). With this basic heuristic enabled
LNT does not show any more timeouts, while several interesting loops are still
parallelized.
There are many ways to obtain an improved heuristic. Constructing such an
improvide heuristic from a position of minimal slow-down and zero code size
increase seems to be the best, as it allows us to track progress on LNT.
llvm-svn: 222096
We introduces a new flag -polly-parallel and use it to annotate the for-nodes in
the isl ast that we want to execute thread parallel (e.g., using OpenMP). We
previously already emmitted openmp annotations, but we did this for various
kinds of parallel loops, including some which we can not run in parallel.
With this patch we now have three annotations:
1) #pragma known-parallel [reduction]
2) #pragma omp for
3) #pragma simd
meaning:
1) loop has no loop carried dependences
2) loop will be executed thread-parallel
3) loop can possibly be vectorized
This patch introduces 1) and reduces the use of 2) to only the cases where we
will actually generate thread parallel code.
It is in preparation of openmp code generation in our isl backend.
Legacy:
- We also have a command line option -enable-polly-openmp. This option controls
the OpenMP code generation in CLooG. It will become an alias of
-polly-parallel after the CLooG code generation has been dropped.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6142
llvm-svn: 221479
This makes sure we consistently use dbgs() when printing debug output.
Previously, the code just mixed calls to isl_*_dump() with printing to dbgs()
and was relying for both methods to interact in predictable ways (same output
stream, no unexpected reordering of outputs).
llvm-svn: 220443
This change will build all alias groups (minimal/maximal accesses
to possible aliasing base pointers) we have to check before
we can assume an alias free environment. It will also use these
to create Runtime Alias Checks (RTC) in the ISL code generation
backend, thus allow us to optimize SCoPs despite possibly aliasing
pointers when this backend is used.
This feature will be enabled for the isl code generator, e.g.,
--polly-code-generator=isl, but disabled for:
- The cloog code generator (still the default).
- The case delinearization is enabled.
- The case non-affine accesses are allowed.
llvm-svn: 218046
During the IslAst parallelism check also compute the minimal dependency
distance and store it in the IstAst for node.
Reviewer: sebpop
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4987
llvm-svn: 217729
There was a bug in the IslAst which caused that no more outermost
parallel loops were detected/checked after a parallel outermost loop
of depth 1.
+ Test case attached
llvm-svn: 217452
+ Remove the class IslGenerator which duplicates the functionality of
IslExprBuilder.
+ Use the IslExprBuilder to create code for memory access relations.
+ Also handle array types during access creation.
+ Enable scev codegen for one of the transformed memory access tests,
thus access creation without canonical induction variables available.
+ Update one test case to the new output.
llvm-svn: 214659
+ Split all reduction dependences and map them to the causing memory accesses.
+ Print the types & base addresses of broken reductions for each "reduction
parallel" marked loop (OpenMP style).
+ 3 test cases to show how reductions are now represented in the isl ast.
The mapping "(ast) loops -> broken reductions" is also needed to find the
memory accesses we need to privatize in a loop.
llvm-svn: 214489
The functions isParallel, isInnermostParallel and IsOutermostParallel in
IslAstInfo will now return true even in the presence of broken reductions.
To compensate for this change the negated result of isReductionParallel can
be used.
llvm-svn: 214488
+ Perform the parallelism check on the innermost loop only once.
+ Inline the markOpenmpParallel function.
+ Rename all IslAstUserPayload * into Payload to make it consistent.
llvm-svn: 214448