llvm-project/llvm/test/Analysis/DDG/basic-a.ll

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Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; RUN: opt < %s -disable-output "-passes=print<ddg>" 2>&1 | FileCheck %s
; CHECK-LABEL: 'DDG' for loop 'test1.for.body':
; CHECK: Node Address:[[PI:0x[0-9a-f]*]]:pi-block
; CHECK-NEXT: --- start of nodes in pi-block ---
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N1:0x[0-9a-f]*]]:single-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %i.02 = phi i64 [ %inc, %test1.for.body ], [ 0, %test1.for.body.preheader ]
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N2:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N2]]:single-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %inc = add i64 %i.02, 1
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N1]]
; CHECK-NEXT: --- end of nodes in pi-block ---
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N3:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N4:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N5:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N5]]:multi-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %exitcond = icmp ne i64 %inc, %n
; CHECK-NEXT: br i1 %exitcond, label %test1.for.body, label %for.end.loopexit
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:none!
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N4]]:single-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %arrayidx1 = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %a, i64 %i.02
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N6:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N3]]:multi-instruction
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %b, i64 %i.02
; CHECK-NEXT: %0 = load float, float* %arrayidx, align 4
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N7:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N8:0x[0-9a-f]*]]:single-instruction
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %conv = uitofp i64 %n to float
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N7]]
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N7]]:single-instruction
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %add = fadd float %0, %conv
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N6]]
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N6]]:single-instruction
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: store float %add, float* %arrayidx1, align 4
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:none!
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
;; No memory dependencies.
;; void test1(unsigned long n, float * restrict a, float * restrict b) {
;; for (unsigned long i = 0; i < n; i++)
;; a[i] = b[i] + n;
;; }
define void @test1(i64 %n, float* noalias %a, float* noalias %b) {
entry:
%exitcond1 = icmp ne i64 0, %n
br i1 %exitcond1, label %test1.for.body, label %for.end
test1.for.body: ; preds = %entry, %test1.for.body
%i.02 = phi i64 [ %inc, %test1.for.body ], [ 0, %entry ]
%arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %b, i64 %i.02
%0 = load float, float* %arrayidx, align 4
%conv = uitofp i64 %n to float
%add = fadd float %0, %conv
%arrayidx1 = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %a, i64 %i.02
store float %add, float* %arrayidx1, align 4
%inc = add i64 %i.02, 1
%exitcond = icmp ne i64 %inc, %n
br i1 %exitcond, label %test1.for.body, label %for.end
for.end: ; preds = %test1.for.body, %entry
ret void
}
; CHECK-LABEL: 'DDG' for loop 'test2.for.body':
; CHECK: Node Address:[[PI:0x[0-9a-f]*]]:pi-block
; CHECK-NEXT: --- start of nodes in pi-block ---
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N1:0x[0-9a-f]*]]:single-instruction
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %i.02 = phi i64 [ %inc, %test2.for.body ], [ 0, %test2.for.body.preheader ]
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N2:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N2]]:single-instruction
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %inc = add i64 %i.02, 1
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N1]]
; CHECK-NEXT: --- end of nodes in pi-block ---
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N3:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N4:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N5:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N6:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N6]]:multi-instruction
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %exitcond = icmp ne i64 %inc, %n
; CHECK-NEXT: br i1 %exitcond, label %test2.for.body, label %for.end.loopexit
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:none!
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N5]]:single-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %arrayidx2 = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %a, i64 %i.02
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N7:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N4]]:multi-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %arrayidx1 = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %a, i64 %i.02
; CHECK-NEXT: %1 = load float, float* %arrayidx1, align 4
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N8:0x[0-9a-f]*]]
; CHECK-NEXT: [memory] to [[N7]]
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N3]]:multi-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %b, i64 %i.02
; CHECK-NEXT: %0 = load float, float* %arrayidx, align 4
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N8]]
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N8]]:single-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: %add = fadd float %0, %1
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:
; CHECK-NEXT: [def-use] to [[N7]]
; CHECK: Node Address:[[N7]]:single-instruction
; CHECK-NEXT: Instructions:
; CHECK-NEXT: store float %add, float* %arrayidx2, align 4
; CHECK-NEXT: Edges:none!
Data Dependence Graph Basics Summary: This is the first patch in a series of patches that will implement data dependence graph in LLVM. Many of the ideas used in this implementation are based on the following paper: D. J. Kuck, R. H. Kuhn, D. A. Padua, B. Leasure, and M. Wolfe (1981). DEPENDENCE GRAPHS AND COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS. This patch contains support for a basic DDGs containing only atomic nodes (one node for each instruction). The edges are two fold: def-use edges and memory-dependence edges. The implementation takes a list of basic-blocks and only considers dependencies among instructions in those basic blocks. Any dependencies coming into or going out of instructions that do not belong to those basic blocks are ignored. The algorithm for building the graph involves the following steps in order: 1. For each instruction in the range of basic blocks to consider, create an atomic node in the resulting graph. 2. For each node in the graph establish def-use edges to/from other nodes in the graph. 3. For each pair of nodes containing memory instruction(s) create memory edges between them. This part of the algorithm goes through the instructions in lexicographical order and creates edges in reverse order if the sink of the dependence occurs before the source of it. Authored By: bmahjour Reviewer: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu, xtian, dmgreen, kbarton, jdoerfert Reviewed By: Meinersbur, fhahn, myhsu Subscribers: ychen, arphaman, simoll, a.elovikov, mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, wuzish, llvm-commits, jsji, Whitney, etiotto Tag: #llvm Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65350 llvm-svn: 372238
2019-09-19 01:43:45 +08:00
;; Loop-independent memory dependencies.
;; void test2(unsigned long n, float * restrict a, float * restrict b) {
;; for (unsigned long i = 0; i < n; i++)
;; a[i] = b[i] + a[i];
;; }
define void @test2(i64 %n, float* noalias %a, float* noalias %b) {
entry:
%exitcond1 = icmp ne i64 0, %n
br i1 %exitcond1, label %test2.for.body, label %for.end
test2.for.body: ; preds = %entry, %test2.for.body
%i.02 = phi i64 [ %inc, %test2.for.body ], [ 0, %entry ]
%arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %b, i64 %i.02
%0 = load float, float* %arrayidx, align 4
%arrayidx1 = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %a, i64 %i.02
%1 = load float, float* %arrayidx1, align 4
%add = fadd float %0, %1
%arrayidx2 = getelementptr inbounds float, float* %a, i64 %i.02
store float %add, float* %arrayidx2, align 4
%inc = add i64 %i.02, 1
%exitcond = icmp ne i64 %inc, %n
br i1 %exitcond, label %test2.for.body, label %for.end
for.end: ; preds = %test2.for.body, %entry
ret void
}