llvm-project/llvm/test/Other/new-pm-thinlto-defaults.ll

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[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; The IR below was crafted so as:
; 1) To have a loop, so we create a loop pass manager
; 2) To be "immutable" in the sense that no pass in the standard
; pipeline will modify it.
; Since no transformations take place, we don't expect any analyses
; to be invalidated.
; Any invalidation that shows up here is a bug, unless we started modifying
; the IR, in which case we need to make it immutable harder.
;
; Prelink pipelines:
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto-pre-link<O1>,name-anon-globals' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-O1,CHECK-PRELINK-O,CHECK-PRELINK-O-NODIS,CHECK-PRELINK-O1
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto-pre-link<O2>,name-anon-globals' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-O2,CHECK-PRELINK-O,CHECK-PRELINK-O-NODIS,CHECK-PRELINK-O2
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto-pre-link<O3>,name-anon-globals' -S -passes-ep-pipeline-start='no-op-module' %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-O3,CHECK-PRELINK-O,CHECK-PRELINK-O-NODIS,CHECK-PRELINK-O3,CHECK-EP-PIPELINE-START
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto-pre-link<Os>,name-anon-globals' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-Os,CHECK-PRELINK-O,CHECK-PRELINK-O-NODIS,CHECK-PRELINK-Os
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto-pre-link<Oz>,name-anon-globals' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-Oz,CHECK-PRELINK-O,CHECK-PRELINK-O-NODIS,CHECK-PRELINK-Oz
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager -new-pm-debug-info-for-profiling \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto-pre-link<O2>,name-anon-globals' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-DIS,CHECK-O,CHECK-O2,CHECK-PRELINK-O,CHECK-PRELINK-O2
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
;
; Postlink pipelines:
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto<O1>' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-O1,CHECK-POSTLINK-O,CHECK-POSTLINK-O1
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto<O2>' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-O2,CHECK-POSTLINK-O,CHECK-POSTLINK-O2
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager -passes-ep-pipeline-start='no-op-module' \
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; RUN: -passes='thinlto<O3>' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-O3,CHECK-POSTLINK-O,CHECK-POSTLINK-O3
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto<Os>' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-Os,CHECK-POSTLINK-O,CHECK-POSTLINK-Os
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto<Oz>' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-Oz,CHECK-POSTLINK-O,CHECK-POSTLINK-Oz
; RUN: opt -disable-verify -debug-pass-manager -new-pm-debug-info-for-profiling \
; RUN: -passes='thinlto<O2>' -S %s 2>&1 \
; RUN: | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=CHECK-O,CHECK-O2,CHECK-POSTLINK-O,CHECK-POSTLINK-O2
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
;
[New PM] Introducing PassInstrumentation framework Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface" posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@ The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after, opt-bisect, time-passes etc. Here we get a basic implementation consisting of: * PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks and access to them. * PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks. * Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now. There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance, however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance (adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern). Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is. * Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses). * PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls. * Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or RepeatedPass::run. TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation. * PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly through PassInstrumentationCallbacks. * new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run * Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests. Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Made getName helper to return std::string (instead of StringRef initially) to fix asan builtbot failures on CGSCC tests. Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858 llvm-svn: 342664
2018-09-21 01:08:45 +08:00
; CHECK-O: Running analysis: PassInstrumentationAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Module pass manager run.
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: PassManager<{{.*}}Module{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Module pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ForceFunctionAttrsPass
; CHECK-EP-PIPELINE-START-NEXT: Running pass: NoOpModulePass
; CHECK-DIS-NEXT: Running pass: ModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor<{{.*}}AddDiscriminatorsPass{{.*}}>
; CHECK-DIS-NEXT: Running analysis: InnerAnalysisManagerProxy
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: PGOIndirectCallPromotion
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: ProfileSummaryAnalysis
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: InnerAnalysisManagerProxy
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: OptimizationRemarkEmitterAnalysis
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: PassInstrumentationAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: PassManager<{{.*}}Module{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Module pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InferFunctionAttrsPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: TargetLibraryAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor<{{.*}}PassManager{{.*}}>
; CHECK-PRELINK-O-NODIS-NEXT: Running analysis: InnerAnalysisManagerProxy
; CHECK-PRELINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: PassInstrumentationAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: TargetIRAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: AssumptionAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SROA
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: DominatorTreeAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: EarlyCSEPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: TargetLibraryAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LowerExpectIntrinsicPass
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running pass: CallSiteSplittingPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: IPSCCPPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: CalledValuePropagationPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: GlobalOptPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor<{{.*}}PromotePass>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: DeadArgumentEliminationPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor<{{.*}}PassManager{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-PRELINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: OptimizationRemarkEmitterAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: AAManager
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: RequireAnalysisPass<{{.*}}GlobalsAA
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: GlobalsAA
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: CallGraphAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: RequireAnalysisPass<{{.*}}ProfileSummaryAnalysis
; CHECK-PRELINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: ProfileSummaryAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ModuleToPostOrderCGSCCPassAdaptor<{{.*}}LazyCallGraph{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: InnerAnalysisManagerProxy
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: LazyCallGraphAnalysis
[New PM] Introducing PassInstrumentation framework Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface" posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@ The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after, opt-bisect, time-passes etc. Here we get a basic implementation consisting of: * PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks and access to them. * PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks. * Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now. There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance, however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance (adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern). Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is. * Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses). * PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls. * Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or RepeatedPass::run. TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation. * PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly through PassInstrumentationCallbacks. * new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run * Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests. Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Made getName helper to return std::string (instead of StringRef initially) to fix asan builtbot failures on CGSCC tests. Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858 llvm-svn: 342664
2018-09-21 01:08:45 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: PassInstrumentationAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting CGSCC pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InlinerPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: OuterAnalysisManagerProxy<{{.*}}LazyCallGraph{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: PostOrderFunctionAttrsPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running pass: ArgumentPromotionPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: CGSCCToFunctionPassAdaptor<{{.*}}PassManager{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SROA
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: EarlyCSEPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: MemorySSAAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SpeculativeExecutionPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: JumpThreadingPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: LazyValueAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: CorrelatedValuePropagationPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running pass: AggressiveInstCombinePass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-O1-NEXT: Running pass: LibCallsShrinkWrapPass
; CHECK-O2-NEXT: Running pass: LibCallsShrinkWrapPass
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running pass: LibCallsShrinkWrapPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: TailCallElimPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ReassociatePass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: RequireAnalysisPass<{{.*}}OptimizationRemarkEmitterAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor<{{.*}}LoopStandardAnalysisResults{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopSimplifyPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: LoopAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LCSSAPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: ScalarEvolutionAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: InnerAnalysisManagerProxy
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting Loop pass manager run.
[New PM] Introducing PassInstrumentation framework Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface" posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@ The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after, opt-bisect, time-passes etc. Here we get a basic implementation consisting of: * PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks and access to them. * PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks. * Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now. There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance, however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance (adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern). Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is. * Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses). * PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls. * Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or RepeatedPass::run. TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation. * PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly through PassInstrumentationCallbacks. * new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run * Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests. Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Made getName helper to return std::string (instead of StringRef initially) to fix asan builtbot failures on CGSCC tests. Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858 llvm-svn: 342664
2018-09-21 01:08:45 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: PassInstrumentationAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopInstSimplifyPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopSimplifyCFGPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopRotatePass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LICM
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: OuterAnalysisManagerProxy
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimpleLoopUnswitchPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished Loop pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor<{{.*}}LoopStandardAnalysisResults{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopSimplifyPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LCSSAPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting Loop pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: IndVarSimplifyPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopIdiomRecognizePass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopDeletionPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopFullUnrollPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished Loop pass manager run.
; CHECK-Os-NEXT: Running pass: MergedLoadStoreMotionPass
; CHECK-Os-NEXT: Running pass: GVN
; CHECK-Os-NEXT: Running analysis: MemoryDependenceAnalysis
; CHECK-Os-NEXT: Running analysis: PhiValuesAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-Oz-NEXT: Running pass: MergedLoadStoreMotionPass
; CHECK-Oz-NEXT: Running pass: GVN
; CHECK-Oz-NEXT: Running analysis: MemoryDependenceAnalysis
; CHECK-Oz-NEXT: Running analysis: PhiValuesAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O2-NEXT: Running pass: MergedLoadStoreMotionPass
; CHECK-O2-NEXT: Running pass: GVN
; CHECK-O2-NEXT: Running analysis: MemoryDependenceAnalysis
; CHECK-O2-NEXT: Running analysis: PhiValuesAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running pass: MergedLoadStoreMotionPass
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running pass: GVN
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running analysis: MemoryDependenceAnalysis
; CHECK-O3-NEXT: Running analysis: PhiValuesAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: MemCpyOptPass
; CHECK-O1-NEXT: Running analysis: MemoryDependenceAnalysis
; CHECK-O1-NEXT: Running analysis: PhiValuesAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SCCPPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: BDCEPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: DemandedBitsAnalysis
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: JumpThreadingPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: CorrelatedValuePropagationPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: DSEPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor<{{.*}}LICMPass{{.*}}>
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopSimplifyPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LCSSAPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ADCEPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: PostDominatorTreeAnalysis
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished CGSCC pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Module pass manager run.
; CHECK-PRELINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: GlobalOptPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: PassManager<{{.*}}Module{{.*}}>
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Module pass manager run.
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: GlobalOptPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: GlobalDCEPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: EliminateAvailableExternallyPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ReversePostOrderFunctionAttrsPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: RequireAnalysisPass<{{.*}}GlobalsAA
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ModuleToFunctionPassAdaptor<{{.*}}PassManager{{.*}}>
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: Float2IntPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor<{{.*}}LoopRotatePass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopSimplifyPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LCSSAPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopDistributePass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopVectorizePass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: BlockFrequencyAnalysis
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: BranchProbabilityAnalysis
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopLoadEliminationPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: LoopAccessAnalysis
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SLPVectorizerPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopUnrollPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running analysis: OuterAnalysisManagerProxy
[Unroll/UnrollAndJam/Vectorizer/Distribute] Add followup loop attributes. When multiple loop transformation are defined in a loop's metadata, their order of execution is defined by the order of their respective passes in the pass pipeline. For instance, e.g. #pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable) #pragma clang loop distribute(enable) is the same as #pragma clang loop distribute(enable) #pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable) and will try to loop-distribute before Unroll-And-Jam because the LoopDistribute pass is scheduled after UnrollAndJam pass. UnrollAndJamPass only supports one inner loop, i.e. it will necessarily fail after loop distribution. It is not possible to specify another execution order. Also,t the order of passes in the pipeline is subject to change between versions of LLVM, optimization options and which pass manager is used. This patch adds 'followup' attributes to various loop transformation passes. These attributes define which attributes the resulting loop of a transformation should have. For instance, !0 = !{!0, !1, !2} !1 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.enable"} !2 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.followup_inner", !3} !3 = !{!"llvm.loop.distribute.enable"} defines a loop ID (!0) to be unrolled-and-jammed (!1) and then the attribute !3 to be added to the jammed inner loop, which contains the instruction to distribute the inner loop. Currently, in both pass managers, pass execution is in a fixed order and UnrollAndJamPass will not execute again after LoopDistribute. We hope to fix this in the future by allowing pass managers to run passes until a fixpoint is reached, use Polly to perform these transformations, or add a loop transformation pass which takes the order issue into account. For mandatory/forced transformations (e.g. by having been declared by #pragma omp simd), the user must be notified when a transformation could not be performed. It is not possible that the responsible pass emits such a warning because the transformation might be 'hidden' in a followup attribute when it is executed, or it is not present in the pipeline at all. For this reason, this patche introduces a WarnMissedTransformations pass, to warn about orphaned transformations. Since this changes the user-visible diagnostic message when a transformation is applied, two test cases in the clang repository need to be updated. To ensure that no other transformation is executed before the intended one, the attribute `llvm.loop.disable_nonforced` can be added which should disable transformation heuristics before the intended transformation is applied. E.g. it would be surprising if a loop is distributed before a #pragma unroll_and_jam is applied. With more supported code transformations (loop fusion, interchange, stripmining, offloading, etc.), transformations can be used as building blocks for more complex transformations (e.g. stripmining+stripmining+interchange -> tiling). Reviewed By: hfinkel, dmgreen Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49281 Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55288 llvm-svn: 348944
2018-12-13 01:32:52 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: WarnMissedTransformationsPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstCombinePass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: RequireAnalysisPass<{{.*}}OptimizationRemarkEmitterAnalysis
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: FunctionToLoopPassAdaptor<{{.*}}LICMPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Starting llvm::Function pass manager run
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopSimplifyPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LCSSAPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: AlignmentFromAssumptionsPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: LoopSinkPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: InstSimplifyPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: DivRemPairsPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SimplifyCFGPass
Add a new pass to speculate around PHI nodes with constant (integer) operands when profitable. The core idea is to (re-)introduce some redundancies where their cost is hidden by the cost of materializing immediates for constant operands of PHI nodes. When the cost of the redundancies is covered by this, avoiding materializing the immediate has numerous benefits: 1) Less register pressure 2) Potential for further folding / combining 3) Potential for more efficient instructions due to immediate operand As a motivating example, consider the remarkably different cost on x86 of a SHL instruction with an immediate operand versus a register operand. This pattern turns up surprisingly frequently, but is somewhat rarely obvious as a significant performance problem. The pass is entirely target independent, but it does rely on the target cost model in TTI to decide when to speculate things around the PHI node. I've included x86-focused tests, but any target that sets up its immediate cost model should benefit from this pass. There is probably more that can be done in this space, but the pass as-is is enough to get some important performance on our internal benchmarks, and should be generally performance neutral, but help with more extensive benchmarking is always welcome. One awkward part is that this pass has to be scheduled after *everything* that can eliminate these kinds of redundancies. This includes SimplifyCFG, GVN, etc. I'm open to suggestions about better places to put this. We could in theory make it part of the codegen pass pipeline, but there doesn't really seem to be a good reason for that -- it isn't "lowering" in any sense and only relies on pretty standard cost model based TTI queries, so it seems to fit well with the "optimization" pipeline model. Still, further thoughts on the pipeline position are welcome. I've also only implemented this in the new pass manager. If folks are very interested, I can try to add it to the old PM as well, but I didn't really see much point (my use case is already switched over to the new PM). I've tested this pretty heavily without issue. A wide range of benchmarks internally show no change outside the noise, and I don't see any significant changes in SPEC either. However, the size class computation in tcmalloc is substantially improved by this, which turns into a 2% to 4% win on the hottest path through tcmalloc for us, so there are definitely important cases where this is going to make a substantial difference. Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37467 llvm-svn: 319164
2017-11-28 19:32:31 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: SpeculateAroundPHIsPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Function pass manager run.
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: CGProfilePass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: GlobalDCEPass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: ConstantMergePass
; CHECK-POSTLINK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Module pass manager run.
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Module pass manager run.
; CHECK-PRELINK-O-NEXT: Running pass: NameAnonGlobalPass
[PM/ThinLTO] Port the ThinLTO pipeline (both components) to the new PM. Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways. I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand. This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the restrictions that are imposed on them. I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial: 1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline). 2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler IMO. 3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But that seemed a bridge too far for this patch. If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely. I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as making updates to them clear. Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540 llvm-svn: 304407
2017-06-01 19:39:39 +08:00
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Running pass: PrintModulePass
; Make sure we get the IR back out without changes when we print the module.
; CHECK-O-LABEL: define void @foo(i32 %n) local_unnamed_addr {
; CHECK-O-NEXT: entry:
; CHECK-O-NEXT: br label %loop
; CHECK-O: loop:
; CHECK-O-NEXT: %iv = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %iv.next, %loop ]
; CHECK-O-NEXT: %iv.next = add i32 %iv, 1
; CHECK-O-NEXT: tail call void @bar()
; CHECK-O-NEXT: %cmp = icmp eq i32 %iv, %n
; CHECK-O-NEXT: br i1 %cmp, label %exit, label %loop
; CHECK-O: exit:
; CHECK-O-NEXT: ret void
; CHECK-O-NEXT: }
;
; CHECK-O-NEXT: Finished llvm::Module pass manager run.
declare void @bar() local_unnamed_addr
define void @foo(i32 %n) local_unnamed_addr {
entry:
br label %loop
loop:
%iv = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %iv.next, %loop ]
%iv.next = add i32 %iv, 1
tail call void @bar()
%cmp = icmp eq i32 %iv, %n
br i1 %cmp, label %exit, label %loop
exit:
ret void
}